78. XLIX. Sequence of Thought in (Gal_4:12-20)
XLIX. Sequence of Thought in (Galatians 4:12-20) The expression in this paragraph is rather disjointed and awkward. It can be best explained on the supposition that Paul is here catching up and turning to his own purposes certain phrases used by the Galatians. The meaning is: “I beseech you, brethren, set yourselves free, as I am, from the slavery of ritual, for I made myself as a Gentile
“You say with truth in your letter that you ‘do not wrong
“But I do not admit your explanation that you ‘are not wronging me’ now. You are indeed wronging me: you are troubling me (Galatians 6:17). What is the reason? Evidently you regard me as an enemy, that you treat me so. Is it because I spoke the truth to you on my second visit, and warned you of some faults among you, that you now look on me as an enemy?” The Galatians also seem to have conveyed to Paul their sense of the extreme zeal and interest that the Judaistic missionaries had shown in their welfare, and to have used the phrase “they take a keen interest in us” (
“I regret my absence and inability to show you face to face my interest in you; and I should think it good if there were always some one present with you to take such interest in you (provided it be in a good way), so that you should not be dependent on my presence for a true friend. My own children, I would I were present with you now, and speaking with the old tone of mutual affection, not in the tone you have forced on me; for I am troubled about you.” When the last sentence is read rightly, it is seen not to spring from some special cause, which makes it impossible for him to come to the Galatians now. He is not explaining that he cannot go to see them (as some commentators imagine). He is merely regretting that he is writing far away and in an unwonted tone. The messenger who carried his letter would announce his coming visit.
Read thus, as catching up the words and excuses of the Galatians, the paragraph ceases to be disjointed, and becomes simple. But whether the Galatians’ words were reported by Paul’s informant, or written in a letter by the Churches, is difficult to determine (§ LIX). Only the word “enemy” was evidently reported, not written, to Paul.
