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Text -- Galatians 4:16 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
4:16 So then, have I become your enemy by telling you the truth?
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Truth | Reproof | Minister | Love | Judaism | James, Epistle of | GALATIANS, EPISTLE TO THE | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Combined Bible , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College , McGarvey , Lapide

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Gal 4:16 - -- Your enemy ( echthros humōn ). Active sense of echthros , hater with objective genitive. They looked on Paul now as an enemy to them. So the Pharis...

Your enemy ( echthros humōn ).

Active sense of echthros , hater with objective genitive. They looked on Paul now as an enemy to them. So the Pharisees and Judaizers generally now regarded him.

Robertson: Gal 4:16 - -- Because I tell you the truth ( alētheuōn humin ). Present active participle of alētheuō , old verb from alēthēs , true. In N.T. only here...

Because I tell you the truth ( alētheuōn humin ).

Present active participle of alētheuō , old verb from alēthēs , true. In N.T. only here and Eph 4:15. "Speaking the truth."It is always a risky business to speak the truth, the whole truth. It may hit and hurt.

Vincent: Gal 4:16 - -- Therefore ( ὥστε ) Better, so then : seeing that your love for me has waned.

Therefore ( ὥστε )

Better, so then : seeing that your love for me has waned.

Vincent: Gal 4:16 - -- Your enemy ( ἐχθρὸς ὑμῶν ) Ἐχθρὸς enemy , in an active sense, as is shown by the next clause. Not passive, an obj...

Your enemy ( ἐχθρὸς ὑμῶν )

Ἐχθρὸς enemy , in an active sense, as is shown by the next clause. Not passive, an object of hatred , which would have the pronoun in the dative.

Vincent: Gal 4:16 - -- Because I tell you the truth ( ἀληθεύων ὑμῖν ) Ἀληθεύειν , only here and Eph 4:15, means to speak the tru...

Because I tell you the truth ( ἀληθεύων ὑμῖν )

Ἀληθεύειν , only here and Eph 4:15, means to speak the truth or to deal truly . The present participle refers to the same time as γέγονα I am become , the time of his second visit. The clause is usually construed as interrogative (A.V.). It is rather a direct statement with a slight interrogative suggestion. " So then, I am become your enemy, am I."

JFB: Gal 4:16 - -- Translate, "Am I then become your enemy (an enemy in your eyes) by telling you the truth" (Gal 2:5, Gal 2:14)? He plainly did not incur their enmity a...

Translate, "Am I then become your enemy (an enemy in your eyes) by telling you the truth" (Gal 2:5, Gal 2:14)? He plainly did not incur their enmity at his first visit, and the words here imply that he had since then, and before his now writing, incurred it: so that the occasion of his telling them the unwelcome truth, must have been at his second visit (Act 18:23, see my Introduction). The fool and sinner hate a reprover. The righteous love faithful reproof (Psa 141:5; Pro 9:8).

Clarke: Gal 4:16 - -- Am I therefore become your enemy - How is it that you are so much altered towards me, that you now treat me as an enemy, who formerly loved me with ...

Am I therefore become your enemy - How is it that you are so much altered towards me, that you now treat me as an enemy, who formerly loved me with the most fervent affection? Is it because I tell you the truth; that very truth for which you at first so ardently loved me?

Calvin: Gal 4:16 - -- 16.Am I therefore become your enemy? He now returns to speak about himself. It was entirely their own fault, he says, that they had changed their min...

16.Am I therefore become your enemy? He now returns to speak about himself. It was entirely their own fault, he says, that they had changed their minds. Though it is a common remark, that truth begets hatred, yet, except through the malice and wickedness of those who cannot endure to hear it, truth is never hateful. While he vindicates himself from any blame in the unhappy difference between them, he indirectly censures their ingratitude. Yet still his advice is friendly, not to reject, on rash or light grounds, the apostleship of one whom they had formerly considered to be worthy of their warmest love. What can be more unbecoming than that the hatred of truth should change enemies into friends? His aim then is, not so much to upbraid, as to move them to repentance.

TSK: Gal 4:16 - -- become : Gal 3:1-4; 1Ki 18:17, 1Ki 18:18, 1Ki 21:20, 1Ki 22:8, 1Ki 22:27; 2Ch 24:20-22, 2Ch 25:16; Psa 141:5; Pro 9:8; Joh 7:7, Joh 8:45 because : Gal...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Gal 4:16 - -- Am I therefore become your enemy ... - Is my telling you the truth in regard to the tendency of the doctrines which you have embraced, and the ...

Am I therefore become your enemy ... - Is my telling you the truth in regard to the tendency of the doctrines which you have embraced, and the character of those who have led you astray, and your own error, a proof that I have ceased to be your friend? How apt are we to feel that the man who tells us of our faults is our enemy! How apt are we to treat him coldly, and to "cut his acquaintance,"and to regard him with dislike! The reason is, he gives us pain; and we cannot have pain given to us, even by the stone against which we stumble, or by any of the brute creation, without momentary indignation, or regarding them for a time as our enemies. Besides, we do not like to have another person acquainted with our faults and our follies; and we naturally avoid the society of those who are thus acquainted with us. Such is human nature; and it requires no little grace for us to overcome this. and to regard the man who tells us of our faults, or the faults of our families, as our friend.

We love to be flattered, and to have our friends flattered; and we shrink with pain from any exposure, or any necessity for repentance. Hence, we become alienated from him who is faithful in reproving us for our faults. Hence, people become offended with their ministers when they reprove them for their sins. Hence, they become offended at the truth. Hence, they resist the influences of the Holy Spirit, whose office it is to bring the truth to the heart, and to reprove men for their sins. There is nothing more difficult than to regard with steady and unwavering affection the man who faithfully tells us the truth at all times, when that truth is painful. Yet he is our best friend. "Faithful are the wounds of a friend, but the kisses of an enemy are deceitful,"Pro 27:6. If I am in danger of falling down a precipice, he shows to me the purest friendship who tells me of it; if I am in danger of breathing the air of the pestilence, and it can be avoided, he shows to me pure kindness who tells me of it. So still more, if I am indulging in a course of conduct that may ruin me, or cherishing error that may endanger my salvation, he shows me the purest friendship who is most faithful in warning me, and apprising me of what must be the termination of my course.

Poole: Gal 4:16 - -- What hath now altered your mind, or made you have a worse opinion of me? Wherein have I offended you or done you any harm? I have done nothing but r...

What hath now altered your mind, or made you have a worse opinion of me? Wherein have I offended you or done you any harm? I have done nothing but revealed to you the truth of God; am I therefore become your enemy? Or do you account me your enemy on that account?

Haydock: Gal 4:13-16 - -- Through infirmity of the flesh....and your temptation in my flesh. St. Jerome thinks the apostle had some bodily infirmity upon him. St. John Chrys...

Through infirmity of the flesh....and your temptation in my flesh. St. Jerome thinks the apostle had some bodily infirmity upon him. St. John Chrysostom understands his poverty, and want, and persecutions, and that some were inclined to contemn him and his preaching on these accounts. Yet others among them did not esteem him less: they received him, respected him as an Angel of God, as Christ Jesus; they would have given him their eyes, as one may say, and all that was dear to them. He puts them in mind how happy then they thought themselves, and asketh why they are now so much changed? (Witham)

Gill: Gal 4:16 - -- Am I therefore become your enemy,.... Not that he was an enemy to them, he had the same cordial affection for them as ever; he had their true interest...

Am I therefore become your enemy,.... Not that he was an enemy to them, he had the same cordial affection for them as ever; he had their true interest at heart, and was diligently pursuing it; but they, through the insinuations of the false teachers, had entertained an ill opinion of him, and an aversion to him, and treated him as if he had been an enemy to them, and as if they had a real hatred of him: and that for no other reason, as he observes, but

because I tell you the truth; the Gospel so called, because it comes from the God of truth, is concerned with Christ, who is truth itself, and is dictated, revealed, and blessed by the Spirit of truth; and is opposed unto, and is distinct from the law, which is only an image and shadow, and not truth itself: it chiefly respects the great truths of salvation alone by Christ, and justification by his righteousness; and may also regard what he had said concerning the abrogation of the law, blaming them for the observance of it, and calling its institutions weak and beggarly elements; all which he told or spoke publicly, plainly, honestly, fully, and faithfully, boldly, constantly, and with all assurance, consistently, and in pure love to their souls; and yet it brought on him their anger and resentment. Telling the truth in such a manner often brings many enemies to the ministers of Christ; not only the men of the world, profane sinners, but professors of religion, and sometimes such who once loved and admired them.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Gal 4:16 Or “have I become your enemy because I am telling you the truth?” The participle ἀληθεύων (alhqeu...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Gal 4:1-31 - --1 We were under the law till Christ came, as the heir is under the guardian till he be of age.5 But Christ freed us from the law;7 therefore we are se...

Combined Bible: Gal 4:16 - --color="#000000"> 16. Am I therefore become your enemy, because I tell you the truth?      Paul's reason for praising th...

MHCC: Gal 4:12-18 - --The apostle desires that they would be of one mind with him respecting the law of Moses, as well as united with him in love. In reproving others, we s...

Matthew Henry: Gal 4:12-16 - -- That these Christians might be the more ashamed of their defection from the truth of the gospel which Paul had preached to them, he here reminds the...

Barclay: Gal 4:12-20 - --Paul makes not a theological but a personal appeal. He reminds them that for their sake he had become a Gentile; he had cut adrift from the traditio...

Constable: Gal 3:1--5:1 - --III. THEOLOGICAL AFFIRMATION OF SALVATION BY FAITH 3:1--4:31 Here begins the theological section of the epistle,...

Constable: Gal 4:1-31 - --B. Clarification of the doctrine ch. 4 In chapter 3 the Jews' preoccupation with the Law of Moses was fo...

Constable: Gal 4:12-20 - --2. The historical illustration 4:12-20 Paul appealed next to his past contacts with the Galatians and called on them to remember his visits to Galatia...

College: Gal 4:1-31 - --GALATIANS 4 3. The Full Rights of the Children (4:1-7) 1 What I am saying is that as long as the heir is a child, he is no different from a slave, a...

McGarvey: Gal 4:16 - --So then am I become your enemy, by telling you the truth? [I beseech you, brethren, become as I am, and be not Jews; for I forsook Judaism and became ...

Lapide: Gal 4:1-31 - --CHAPTER 4 SYNOPSIS OF THE CHAPTER i. He continues the argument of the preceding chapter that the Jews, like children and slaves, were under the Jew...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: Galatians (Book Introduction) The Epistle To The Galatians Probable Date a.d. 56 Or 57 By Way of Introduction It is a pity that we are not able to visualize more clearly the ...

JFB: Galatians (Book Introduction) THE internal and external evidence for Paul's authorship is conclusive. The style is characteristically Pauline. The superscription, and allusions to ...

JFB: Galatians (Outline) SUPERSCRIPTION. GREETINGS. THE CAUSE OF HIS WRITING IS THEIR SPEEDY FALLING AWAY FROM THE GOSPEL HE TAUGHT. DEFENSE OF HIS TEACHING: HIS APOSTOLIC CA...

TSK: Galatians (Book Introduction) The Galatians, or Gallograecians, were the descendants of Gauls, who migrated from their own country, and after a series of disasters, got possession ...

TSK: Galatians 4 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Gal 4:1, We were under the law till Christ came, as the heir is under the guardian till he be of age; Gal 4:5, But Christ freed us from t...

Poole: Galatians 4 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 4

MHCC: Galatians (Book Introduction) The churches in Galatia were formed partly of converted Jews, and partly of Gentile converts, as was generally the case. St. Paul asserts his apostoli...

MHCC: Galatians 4 (Chapter Introduction) (Gal 4:1-7) The folly of returning to legal observances for justification. (Gal 4:8-11) The happy change made in the Gentile believers. (Gal 4:12-18...

Matthew Henry: Galatians (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Epistle of St. Paul to the Galatians This epistle of Paul is directed not to the church or churches...

Matthew Henry: Galatians 4 (Chapter Introduction) The apostle, in this chapter, is still carrying on the same general design as in the former - to recover these Christians from the impressions made...

Barclay: Galatians (Book Introduction) A GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE LETTERS OF PAUL The Letters Of Paul There is no more interesting body of documents in the New Testament than the letter...

Barclay: Galatians 4 (Chapter Introduction) The Days Of Childhood (Gal_4:1-7) Progress In Reverse (Gal_4:8-11) Love's Appeal (Gal_4:12-20) An Old Story And A New Meaning (Gal_4:21-31; Gal_...

Constable: Galatians (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical Background "The most uncontroverted matter in the study of Gal...

Constable: Galatians (Outline)

Constable: Galatians Galatians Bibliography Allen, Kenneth W. "Justification by Faith." Bibliotheca Sacra 135:538 (April-June 1978):...

Haydock: Galatians (Book Introduction) THE EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL, THE APOSTLE, TO THE GALATIANS. INTRODUCTION. The Galatians, soon after St. Paul had preached the gospel to them, were...

Gill: Galatians (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO GALATIANS The persons to whom this epistle is written were not such who made up a single church only, in some certain town or city,...

Gill: Galatians 4 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO GALATIANS 4 In this chapter the apostle discourses concerning the abrogation of the ceremonial law, under which the Old Testament s...

College: Galatians (Book Introduction) FOREWORD Since the earliest days of the concept of a commentary series jointly authored by church of Christ and Christian church scholars, I have eag...

College: Galatians (Outline) OUTLINE I. AUTHORITY: The Apostolic Gospel - 1:1-2:21 A. Greeting - 1:1-5 B. Paul's Astonishment - 1:6-10 C. Paul's Call by God - 1:11-17 ...

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