- Feb 12, 2009
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Read it again.
Your questions are answered there.
[quote=Clare73;61961317]
trivial elements = elemental forms of religion, whether those of the Jews (v.5, under the law) or
those of the Gentiles (v.8, under their former religious bondage)
of the world = these forms of religion do not come from the "new creation" (6:15), but the former creation
So which group is returning to their former trivial elements?
That is answered in v. 21: "Tell me, you who want to be under the law. . ."
Paul then gives an analogy of the law to Hagar, the slave, and concludes with: "Get rid of the slave woman (the law)
and her son (salvation by law-keeping), for the slave woman's son will never share in the inheritance
with the free woman's son (salvation by grace through faith in Jesus Christ).
Paul is treating of the law here, which is likewise treated of in Heb 7:18-19:
"The former regulation is set aside because it was weak and useless (for the law made nothing perfect/righteous),
and a better hope (new covenant) is introduced, by which we draw near to God." (Heb 7:18-19)
No, Heb 7:18-19 is referencing v.12:
"For when there is a change of the priesthood, there must also be a change of the law."
The subject of Heb 7:18-19 is pretty clear:
"The former regulation is set aside because it was weak and useless (for the law made nothing perfect/righteous)
and a better hope (new covenant of grace) is introduced"
So from Gal 4:21, we see that Paul is referring to the trivial elements of the Jews in Gal 4:9, which was the law,
[v.10, you are observing special days (Firstfruits, Trumpets, Atonement),
months (new moons), seasons (harvest feasts: Firstfruits, Weeks, Tabernacles), years (Sabbath years)]
and we see that the association of Gal 4:9 with Heb 7:18-19 is Biblically well founded.
In the faith,
Clare[/QUOTE]
still seems like you're mixing apples and oranges to me!
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