
Text -- Galatians 2:20-21 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Gal 2:20 - -- I have been crucified with Christ ( Christōi sunestaurōmai ).
One of Paul’ s greatest mystical sayings. Perfect passive indicative of sustau...
I have been crucified with Christ (
One of Paul’ s greatest mystical sayings. Perfect passive indicative of

Robertson: Gal 2:20 - -- No longer I ( ouketi egō ).
So complete has become Paul’ s identification with Christ that his separate personality is merged into that of Chr...
No longer I (
So complete has become Paul’ s identification with Christ that his separate personality is merged into that of Christ. This language helps one to understand the victorious cry in Rom 7:25. It is the union of the vine and the branch (Joh 15:1-6).

Robertson: Gal 2:20 - -- Which is in the Son of God ( tēi tou huiou tou theou ).
The objective genitive, not the faith of the Son of God.
Which is in the Son of God (
The objective genitive, not the faith of the Son of God.

Robertson: Gal 2:20 - -- For me ( huper emou ).
Paul has the closest personal feeling toward Christ. "He appropriates to himself, as Chrysostom observes, the love which belon...
For me (
Paul has the closest personal feeling toward Christ. "He appropriates to himself, as Chrysostom observes, the love which belongs equally to the whole world. For Christ is indeed the personal friend of each man individually"(Lightfoot).

Robertson: Gal 2:21 - -- I do not make void the grace of God ( ouk athetō tēn charin tou theou ).
Common word in lxx and Polybius and on, to make ineffective (a privati...
I do not make void the grace of God (
Common word in lxx and Polybius and on, to make ineffective (

Robertson: Gal 2:21 - -- Then Christ died for nought ( ara Christos dōrean apethanen ).
Condition of first class, assumed as true. If one man apart from grace can win his o...
Then Christ died for nought (
Condition of first class, assumed as true. If one man apart from grace can win his own righteousness, any man can and should. Hence (
Vincent: Gal 2:20 - -- I am crucified with Christ ( Χριστῷ συνεσταύρωμαι )
This compound verb is used by Paul only here and Rom 6:6. In the gos...
I am crucified with Christ (
This compound verb is used by Paul only here and Rom 6:6. In the gospels, Mat 27:44; Mar 15:32; Joh 19:32. The statement explains how a believer dies to the law by means of the law itself. In the crucifixion of Christ as one accursed, the demand of the law was met (see Gal 3:13). Ethically, a believer is crucified with Christ (Rom 6:3-11; Phi 3:10; 1Co 15:31; 2Co 4:10), and thus the demand of the law is fulfilled in him likewise. Paul means that, " owing to his connection with the crucified, he was like him, legally impure, and was thus an outcast from the Jewish church." He became dead to the law by the law's own act. Of course a Jew would have answered that Christ was justly crucified. He would have said: " If you broke with the law because of your fellowship with Christ, it proved that both he and you were transgressors." But Paul is addressing Peter, who, in common with himself, believed on Christ (Gal 2:16).

Vincent: Gal 2:20 - -- I live; yet not I ( ζῶ δὲ οὐκέτι ἐγώ )
The semicolon after live in A.V. and Rev. should be removed. Rend: and it ...
I live; yet not I (
The semicolon after live in A.V. and Rev. should be removed. Rend: and it is no longer I that live , but Christ , etc . The new life of Christ followed his crucifixion, Rom 6:9-11. He who is crucified with Christ repeats this experience. He rises with Christ and shares his resurrection-life. The old man is crucified with Christ, and Christ is in him as the principle of his new life, Romans 4-11.

Vincent: Gal 2:20 - -- I now live
Emphasis on νῦν now , since the beginning of my Christian life, with an implied contrast with the life in the flesh before he ...
I now live
Emphasis on

Vincent: Gal 2:20 - -- By the faith of the Son of God ( ἐν πίστει τῇ τοῦ υἱοῦ τοῦ θεοῦ )
Better, as Rev., in faith , the ...
By the faith of the Son of God (
Better, as Rev., in faith , the faith which is in the Son of God . Thus the defining and explicative force of the article

Vincent: Gal 2:20 - -- And gave himself ( καὶ παραδόντος ἑαυτὸν )
Καὶ and has an explanatory force: loved me, and , as a proof ...
And gave himself (
" For God more bounteous was himself to give
To make man able to uplift himself,
Than if he only of himself had pardoned."
Dante, Paradiso , vii . 115-117

Vincent: Gal 2:21 - -- Frustrate ( ἀθετῶ )
Annul or invalidate. Comp. Mar 7:9; 1Co 1:19; Gal 3:15.

Vincent: Gal 2:21 - -- The grace of God ( τὴν χάριν τοῦ θεοῦ )
Χάρις is, primarily, that which gives joy (χαρά ). Its higher, Chr...
The grace of God (

Vincent: Gal 2:21 - -- Is dead ( ἀπέθανεν )
More correctly, died ; pointing to the historical incident.
Is dead (
More correctly, died ; pointing to the historical incident.

Vincent: Gal 2:21 - -- In vain ( δωρεὰν )
Groundlessly, without cause. See on 2Th 3:8. The sense here is not common. It is not found in Class., and in N.T. only...
In vain (
Groundlessly, without cause. See on 2Th 3:8. The sense here is not common. It is not found in Class., and in N.T. only Joh 15:25. In lxx, see Psalm 34:7, 19; 108:3; 118:161; 1 Samuel 19:5; Sir. 20:23; 29:6. Comp. Ignatius, Trall . v. Paul says: " I do not invalidate the grace of God in the offering of Christ, as one does who seeks to reestablish the law as a means of justification; for if righteousness comes through the law, there was no occasion for Christ to die."
Additional Note on Gal 2:14-21.
The course of thought in Paul's address to Peter is difficult to follow. It will help to simplify it if the reader will keep it before him that the whole passage is to be interpreted in the light of Peter's false attitude - as a remonstrance against a particular state of things.
The line of remonstrance is as follows. If you, Peter, being a Jew, do not live as a Jew, but as a Gentile, as you did when you ate with Gentiles, why do you, by your example in withdrawing from Gentile tables, constrain Gentile Christians to live as Jews, observing the separative ordinances of the Jewish law? This course is plainly inconsistent.
Even you and I, born Jews, and not Gentiles - sinners - denied the obligation of these ordinances by the act of believing on Jesus Christ. In professing this faith we committed ourselves to the principle that no one can be justified by the works of the law.
But it may be said that we were in no better case by thus abandoning the law and legal righteousness, since, in the very effort to be justified through Christ, we were shown to be sinners, and therefore in the same category with the Gentiles. Does it not then follow that Christ is proved to be a minister of sin in requiring us to abandon the law as a means of justification?
No. God forbid. It is true that, in seeking to be justified in Christ, we stood revealed as sinners, for it was Christ who showed us that we could not be justified by the works of the law; that all our legal strictness only left us sinners. But the inference is false that Christ is thereby shown to be a minister of sin.
For to say that Christ is a minister of sin, is to say that I, at his bidding, became a transgressor by abandoning the law, that the law is the only true standard and medium of righteousness. If I reassert the obligation of the law after denying that obligation, I thereby assert that I transgressed in abandoning it, and that Christ, who prompted and demanded this transgression, is a minister of sin.
But this I deny. The law is not the true standard and medium of righteousness. I did not transgress in abandoning it. Christ is not a minister of sin. For it was the law itself which compelled me to abandon the law. The law crucified Christ and thereby declared him accursed. In virtue of my moral fellowship with Christ, I was (ethically) crucified with him. The act of the law forced me to break with the law. Through the law I died to the law. Thus I came under a new principle of life. I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. If I should declare that righteousness is through the law, by reasserting the obligation of the law as you, Peter, have done, I should annul the grace of God as exhibited in the death of Christ: for in that case, Christ's death would be superfluous and useless. But I do not annul the grace of God.
Wesley: Gal 2:20 - -- The Apostle goes on to describe how he is freed from sin; how far he is from continuing therein.
The Apostle goes on to describe how he is freed from sin; how far he is from continuing therein.

Wesley: Gal 2:20 - -- Is a fountain of life in my inmost soul, from which all my tempers, words, and actions flow.
Is a fountain of life in my inmost soul, from which all my tempers, words, and actions flow.

Wesley: Gal 2:20 - -- Even in this mortal body, I live by faith in the Son of God - I derive every moment from that supernatural principle; from a divine evidence and convi...
Even in this mortal body, I live by faith in the Son of God - I derive every moment from that supernatural principle; from a divine evidence and conviction, that "he loved me, and delivered up himself for me."

In seeking to be justified by my own works.

Wesley: Gal 2:21 - -- The free love of God in Christ Jesus. But they do, who seek justification by the law.
The free love of God in Christ Jesus. But they do, who seek justification by the law.

If men might be justified by their obedience to the law, moral or ceremonial.

Wesley: Gal 2:21 - -- Without any necessity for it, since men might have been saved without his death; might by their own obedience have been both discharged from condemnat...
Without any necessity for it, since men might have been saved without his death; might by their own obedience have been both discharged from condemnation, and entitled to eternal life.
JFB: Gal 2:20 - -- Literally, "I have been crucified with Christ." This more particularizes the foregoing. "I am dead" (Gal 2:19; Phi 3:10).

JFB: Gal 2:20 - -- Greek, "nevertheless I live, no longer (indeed) I." Though crucified I live; (and this) no longer that old man such as I once was (compare Rom 7:17). ...
Greek, "nevertheless I live, no longer (indeed) I." Though crucified I live; (and this) no longer that old man such as I once was (compare Rom 7:17). No longer Saul the Jew (Gal 5:24; Col 3:11, but "another man"; compare 1Sa 10:6). ELLICOTT and others translate, "And it is no longer I that live, but Christ that liveth in me." But the plain antithesis between "crucified" and "live," requires the translation, "nevertheless."

As contrasted with my life before conversion.

JFB: Gal 2:20 - -- My life seems to be a mere animal life "in the flesh," but this is not my true life; "it is but the mask of life under which lives another, namely, Ch...
My life seems to be a mere animal life "in the flesh," but this is not my true life; "it is but the mask of life under which lives another, namely, Christ, who is my true life" [LUTHER].

JFB: Gal 2:20 - -- Greek, "IN faith (namely), that of (that is, which rests on) the Son of God." "In faith," answers by contrast to "in the flesh." Faith, not the flesh,...
Greek, "IN faith (namely), that of (that is, which rests on) the Son of God." "In faith," answers by contrast to "in the flesh." Faith, not the flesh, is the real element in which I live. The phrase, "the Son of God," reminds us that His Divine Sonship is the source of His life-giving power.

JFB: Gal 2:20 - -- His eternal gratuitous love is the link that unites me to the Son of God, and His "giving Himself for me," is the strongest proof of that love.
His eternal gratuitous love is the link that unites me to the Son of God, and His "giving Himself for me," is the strongest proof of that love.

I do not make it void, as thou, Peter, art doing by Judaizing.

Justifying the strong expression "frustrate," or "make void."

JFB: Gal 2:21 - -- Greek, "Christ died needlessly," or "without just cause." Christ's having died, shows that the law has no power to justify us; for if the law can just...
Greek, "Christ died needlessly," or "without just cause." Christ's having died, shows that the law has no power to justify us; for if the law can justify or make us righteous, the death of Christ is superfluous [CHRYSOSTOM].
Clarke: Gal 2:20 - -- I am crucified with Christ - The death of Christ on the cross has showed me that there is no hope of salvation by the law; I am therefore as truly d...
I am crucified with Christ - The death of Christ on the cross has showed me that there is no hope of salvation by the law; I am therefore as truly dead to all expectation of justification by the law, as Christ was dead when he gave up the ghost upon the cross. Through him alone I live - enjoy a present life, and have a prospect of future glory

Clarke: Gal 2:20 - -- Yet not I - It is not of my natural life I speak, nor of any spiritual things which I myself have procured; but Christ liveth in me. God made man to...
Yet not I - It is not of my natural life I speak, nor of any spiritual things which I myself have procured; but Christ liveth in me. God made man to be a habitation of his own Spirit: the law cannot live in me so as to give me a Divine life; it does not animate, but kill; but Christ lives in me; he is the soul of my soul; so that I now live to God. But this life I have by the faith of the Son of God - by believing on Christ as a sacrifice for sin; for he loved me, and because he did so he gave himself for me - made himself a sacrifice unto death, that I might be saved from the bitter pains of death eternal.

Clarke: Gal 2:21 - -- I do not frustrate - Ουκ αθετω· I do not contemn, despise, or render useless, the grace of God - the doctrine of Christ crucified; which ...
I do not frustrate -

Clarke: Gal 2:21 - -- For if righteousness - If justification and salvation come by an observance of the law, then Christ is dead in vain; his death is useless if an obse...
For if righteousness - If justification and salvation come by an observance of the law, then Christ is dead in vain; his death is useless if an observance of the law can save us; but no observance of the law can save us, and therefore there was an absolute necessity for the death of Christ
1. The account of the prevarication of Peter in the preceding chapter teaches us a most useful lesson. Let him who assuredly standeth take heed lest he fall. No person in a state of probation is infallible; a man may fall into sin every moment; and he will, if he do not walk with God. Worldly prudence and fleshly wisdom would have concealed this account of the prevarication of Peter; but God tells truth. This the fountain of it; and from him we are to expect not only nothing but the truth, but also the whole truth. If the Gospel were not of God we had never heard of the denial and prevarication of Peter, nor of the contention between Paul and Barnabas. And these accounts are recorded, not that men may justify or excuse their own delinquencies by them, but that they may avoid them; for he must be inexcusable who, with these histories before his eyes, ever denies his Master, or acts the part of a hypocrite. Had the apostles acted in concert to impose a forgery on the world as a Divine revelation, the imposture would have now come out. The falling out of the parties would have led to a discovery of the cheat. This relation, therefore, is an additional evidence of the truth of the Gospel
2. On, I through the law am dead to the law, etc., pious Quesnel makes the following useful reflections
"The ceremonial law, which is no more than a type and shadow of him, destroys itself by showing us Jesus Christ, who is the truth and the substance. The moral law, by leaving us under our own inability under sin and the curse, makes us perceive the necessity of the law of the heart, and of a Savior to give it. The law is for the old man, as to its terrible and servile part; and it was crucified and died with Christ upon the cross as well as the old man. The new man, and the new law, require a new sacrifice. What need has he of other sacrifices who has Jesus Christ? They in whom this sacrifice lives, do themselves live to God alone; but none can live to him except by faith; and this life of faith consists in dying with Christ to the things of the present world, and in expecting, as co-heirs with him, the blessings of the eternal world. And who can work all this in us but only he who lives in us? That man has arrived to a high degree of mortification, who can say Christ liveth in me, and I am crucified to the world. Such a one must have renounced not only earthly things, but his own self also.
3. Is there, or can there be, any well grounded hope of eternal life but what comes through the Gospel? In vain has the ingenuity of man tortured itself for more than 5000 years, to find out some method of mending the human heart: none has been discovered that even promised any thing likely to be effectual. The Gospel of Christ not only mends but completely cures and new makes infected nature. Who is duly apprised of the infinite excellency and importance of the Gospel? What was the world before its appearance? What would it be were this light extinguished? Blessed Lord! let neither infidelity nor false doctrine rise up to obscure this heavenly splendor!
Calvin: Gal 2:20 - -- 20.I am crucified with Christ. This explains the manner in which we, who are dead to the law, live to God. Ingrafted into the death of Christ, we der...
20.I am crucified with Christ. This explains the manner in which we, who are dead to the law, live to God. Ingrafted into the death of Christ, we derive from it a secret energy, as the twig does from the root. Again, the handwriting of the law,
“which was contrary to us, Christ has nailed to his cross.” (Col 2:14.)
Being then crucified with him, we are freed from all the curse and guilt of the law. He who endeavors to set aside that deliverance makes void the cross of Christ. But let us remember, that we are delivered from the yoke of the law, only by becoming one with Christ, as the twig draws its sap from the root, only by growing into one nature.
Nevertheless I live. To the feelings of man, the word Death is always unpleasant. Having said that we are “crucified with Christ,” he therefore adds, “that this makes us alive.”
Yet not I, but Christ liveth in me. This explains what he meant by “living to God.” He does not live by his own life, but is animated by the secret power of Christ; so that Christ may be said to live and grow in him; for, as the soul enlivens the body, so Christ imparts life to his members. It is a remarkable sentiment, that believers live out of themselves, that is, they live in Christ; which can only be accomplished by holding real and actual communication with him. Christ lives in us in two ways. The one life consists in governing us by his Spirit, and directing all our actions; the other, in making us partakers of his righteousness; so that, while we can do nothing of ourselves, we are accepted in the sight of God. The first relates to regeneration, the second to justification by free grace. This passage may be understood in the latter sense; but if it is thought better to apply it to both, I will cheerfully adopt that view.
And the life which I now live in the flesh. There is hardly a sentence here which has not been torn by a variety of interpretations. Some understand by the word flesh, the depravity of sinful nature; but Paul means by it simply the bodily life, and it is to this that the objection applies. “You live a bodily life; but while this corruptible body performs its functions, — while it is supported by eating and drinking, this is not the heavenly life of Christ. It is therefore an unreasonable paradox to assert, that, while you are openly living after the ordinary manner of men, your life is not your own.”
Paul replies, that it consists in faith; which intimates that it is a secret hidden from the senses of man. The life, therefore, which we attain by faith is not visible to the bodily eye, but is inwardly perceived in the conscience by the power of the Spirit; so that the bodily life does not prevent us from enjoying, by faith, a heavenly life.
“He hath made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus.” (Eph 2:6.)
Again,
“You are fellow-citizens with the saints and of the
household of God.” (Eph 2:19.)
And again,
“Our conversation is in heaven.” (Phi 3:20.)
Paul’s writings are full of similar assertions, that, while we live in the world, we at the same time live in heaven; not only because our Head is there, but because, in virtue of union, we enjoy a life in common with him. (Joh 14:23.)
Who loved me. This is added to express the power of faith; for it would immediately occur to any one, — whence does faith derive such power as to convey into our souls the life of Christ? He accordingly informs us, that the love of Christ, and his death, are the objects on which faith rests; for it is in this manner that the effect of faith must be judged. How comes it that we live by the faith of Christ? Because “he loved us, and gave himself for us.” The love of Christ led him to unite himself to us, and he completed the union by his death. By giving himself for us, he suffered in our own person; as, on the other hand, faith makes us partakers of every thing which it finds in Christ. The mention of love is in accordance with the saying of the apostle John,
“Not that we loved God, but he anticipated us by his love.”
(1Jo 4:10)
For if any merit of ours had moved him to redeem us, this reason would have been stated; but now Paul ascribes the whole to love: it is therefore of free grace. Let us observe the order: “He loved us, and gave himself for us.” As if he had said, “He had no other reason for dying, but because he loved us,” and that “when we were enemies,” (Rom 5:10,) as he argues in another Epistle.
He gave himself No words can properly express what this means; for who can find language to declare the excellency of the Son of God? Yet he it is who gave himself as a price for our redemption. Atonement, cleansing, satisfaction, and all the benefits which we derive from the death of Christ, are here represented. 51 The words for me, are very emphatic. It will not be enough for any man to contemplate Christ as having died for the salvation of the world, unless he has experienced the consequences of this death, and is enabled to claim it as his own. 52

Calvin: Gal 2:21 - -- 21.I do not reject There is great emphasis in this expression; for how dreadful is the ingratitude manifested in despising the grace of God, so inval...
21.I do not reject There is great emphasis in this expression; for how dreadful is the ingratitude manifested in despising the grace of God, so invaluable in itself, and obtained at such a price! Yet this heinous offense is charged against the false apostles, who were not satisfied with having Christ alone, but introduced some other aids towards obtaining salvation. For, if we do not renounce all other hopes, and embrace Christ alone, we reject the grace of God. And what resource is left to the man, who “puts from him” the grace of God, “and judges himself unworthy of everlasting life?” (Act 13:46.)
Christ is dead in vain 53 There would then have been no value in the death of Christ; or, Christ would have died without any reward; for the reward of his death is, that he has reconciled us to the Father by making an atonement for our sins. Hence it follows, that we are justified by his grace, and, therefore, not by works. The Papists explain this in reference to the ceremonial law; but who does not see that it applies to the whole law? If we could produce a righteousness of our own, then Christ has suffered in vain; for the intention of his sufferings was to procure it for us, and what need was there that a work which we could accomplish for ourselves should be obtained from another? If the death of Christ be our redemption, then we were captives; if it be satisfaction, we were debtors; if it be atonement, we were guilty; if it be cleansing, we were unclean. On the contrary, he who ascribes to works his sanctification, pardon, atonement, righteousness, or deliverance, makes void the death of Christ.
This argument, we shall perhaps be told, is of no weight against those who propose to unite the grace of Christ with works; which, it is universally admitted, was done by the false apostles. The two doctrines, it is alleged, stand together, that righteousness is by the law, and that we are redeemed by the death of Christ. True; supposing it were granted that a part of our righteousness is obtained by works, and a part comes from grace. But such theology, it may easily be proved, was unknown to Paul. His argument with his opponents is either conclusive or inconclusive. If any blasphemer shall dare to accuse him of bad reasoning, a powerful defense is at hand; for that justification in the sight of God of which he treats, is not what men may imagine to be sufficient, but what is absolutely perfect.
But we are not now called to plead in behalf of Paul against blasphemers, who venture to speak in reproachful language of the Holy Spirit himself. Our present business is with the Papists. They ridicule us, when we argue with Paul that, if righteousness come by works, Christ is dead in vain. They imagine it to be a beautiful reply, with which their sophists furnish them, that Christ merited for us the first grace, that is, the opportunity of meriting; and that the merit of his death concurs with the satisfactions of works for the daily pardon of sins. Let them ridicule Paul, whose language we quote. They must refute him before they can refute us. We know that he had to deal with men, who did not entirely reject the grace of Christ, but ascribed the half of salvation to works. In opposition to them he argues, that “if righteousness is by the law, then Christ is dead in vain;” and by so doing, he certainly does not allow to works one drop of righteousness. Between those men and the Papists there is no difference; and therefore, in refuting them, we are at liberty to employ Paul’s argument.
Defender: Gal 2:20 - -- Here is the great secret of a Christ-honoring Christian life. As Paul wrote to the Romans, "Reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but ...
Here is the great secret of a Christ-honoring Christian life. As Paul wrote to the Romans, "Reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ, our Lord" (Rom 6:11).

Defender: Gal 2:20 - -- Christ lives in us by His Spirit (Joh 14:16, Joh 14:17, Joh 14:23). Since He is continually present in and with the believer, He knows all we say and ...

Defender: Gal 2:20 - -- Not the faith which we exercise in Christ, but His faith, which He lives out through us as we appropriate His life in us (compare Eph 2:9)."
Not the faith which we exercise in Christ, but His faith, which He lives out through us as we appropriate His life in us (compare Eph 2:9)."
TSK: Gal 2:20 - -- crucified : Gal 5:24, Gal 6:14; Rom 6:4-6, Rom 8:3, Rom 8:4; Col 2:11-14
nevertheless : Rom 6:8, Rom 6:13, Rom 8:2; Eph 2:4, Eph 2:5; Col 2:13, Col 3:...
crucified : Gal 5:24, Gal 6:14; Rom 6:4-6, Rom 8:3, Rom 8:4; Col 2:11-14
nevertheless : Rom 6:8, Rom 6:13, Rom 8:2; Eph 2:4, Eph 2:5; Col 2:13, Col 3:3, Col 3:4
but : Joh 14:19, Joh 14:20, Joh 17:21; 2Co 4:10,2Co 4:11, 2Co 13:3, 2Co 13:5; Eph 3:17; Col 1:27; 1Th 5:10; 1Pe 4:2; Rev 3:20
the life : 2Co 4:11, 2Co 10:3; 1Pe 4:1, 1Pe 4:2
I now : Gal 2:16, Gal 3:11; Joh 6:57; Rom 1:17, Rom 5:2; 2Co 1:24, 2Co 5:7, 2Co 5:15; Phi 4:13; 1Th 5:10; 1Pe 1:8, 1Pe 4:2
the Son : Joh 1:49, Joh 3:16, Joh 3:35, Joh 6:69, Joh 9:35-38; Act 8:37, Act 9:20; 1Th 1:10; 1Jo 1:7; 1Jo 4:9, 1Jo 4:10,1Jo 4:14, 1Jo 5:10-13, 1Jo 5:20
who : Gal 1:4; Mat 20:28; Joh 10:11, Joh 15:13; Rom 8:37; Eph 5:2, Eph 5:25; Tit 2:14; Rev 1:5

TSK: Gal 2:21 - -- do not : Gal 2:18; Psa 33:10; Mar 7:9 *marg. Rom 8:31
righteousness : Gal 2:16, Gal 3:21, Gal 5:2-4; Rom 10:3, Rom 11:6; Heb 7:11
Christ : Isa 49:4; J...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Gal 2:20 - -- I am crucified with Christ - In the previous verse, Paul had said that he was dead. In this verse he states what he meant by it, and shows that...
I am crucified with Christ - In the previous verse, Paul had said that he was dead. In this verse he states what he meant by it, and shows that he did not wish to be understood as saying that he was inactive, or that he was literally insensible to the appeals made to him by other beings and objects. In respect to one thing he was dead; to all that was truly great and noble he was alive. To understand the remarkable phrase, "I am crucified with Christ,"we may remark:
(1) That this was the way in which Christ was put to death. He suffered on a cross, and thus became literally dead.
\caps1 (2) i\caps0 n a sense similar to this, Paul became dead to the Law, to the world, and to sin. The Redeemer by the death of the cross became insensible to all surrounding objects, as the dead always are. He ceased to see, and hear, and was as though they were not. He was laid in the cold grave, and they did not affect or influence him. So Paul says that he became insensible to the Law as a means of justification; to the world; to ambition and the love of money; to the pride and pomp of life, and to the dominion of evil and hateful passions. They lost their power over him; they ceased to influence him.
\caps1 (3) t\caps0 his was with Christ, or by Christ. It cannot mean literally that he was put to death with him, for that is not true. But it means that the effect of the death of Christ on the cross was to make him dead to these things, in like manner as he, when he died, became insensible to the things of this busy world. This may include the following things:
(a) There was an intimate union between Christ and his people, so that what affected him, affected them; see Joh 15:5-6.
(b) The death of the Redeemer on the cross involved as a consequence the death of his people to the world and to sin; see Gal 5:24; Gal 6:14. It was like a blow at the root of a vine or a tree, which would affect every branch and tendril or like a blow at the head which affects every member of the body.
© Paul felt identified with the Lord Jesus; and he was willing to share in all the ignominy and contempt which was connected with the idea of the crucifixion. He was willing to regard himself as one with the Redeemer. If there was disgrace attached to the manner in which he died, he was willing to share it with him. He regarded it as a matter to be greatly desired to be made just like Christ in all things, and even in the manner of his death. This idea he has more fully expressed in Phi 3:10, "That I may know him, (that is, I desire earnestly to know him,) and the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable unto his death;"see also Col 1:24; compare 1Pe 4:13.
Nevertheless I live - This expression is added, as in Gal 2:19, to prevent the possibility of mistake. Paul, though he was crucified with Christ, did not wish to be understood that he felt himself to be dead. He was not inactive; not insensible, as the dead are, to the appeals which are made from God, or to the great objects which ought to interest an immortal mind. He was still actively employed, and the more so from the fact that he was crucified with Christ. The object of all such expressions as this is, to show that it was no design of the gospel to make people inactive, or to annihilate their energies. It was not to cause people to do nothing. It was not to paralyze their powers, or stifle their own efforts. Paul, therefore, says, "I am not dead. I am truly alive; and I live a better life than I did before."Paul was as active after conversion as he was before. Before, he was engaged in persecution; now, he devoted his great talents with as much energy, and with as untiring zeal, to the cause of the great Redeemer. Indeed, the whole narrative would lead us to suppose that he was more active and zealous after his conversion than he was before. The effect of religion is not to make one dead in regard to the putting forth of the energies of the soul. True religion never made one lazy man; it has converted many a man of indolence, and effeminacy and self-indulgence to a man actively engaged in doing good. If a professor of religion is less active in the service at God than he was in the service of the world; less laborious, and zealous. and ardent than he was before his supposed conversion, he ought to set it down as full proof that he is an utter stranger to true religion.
Yet not I - This is also designed to prevent misapprehension. In the previous clause he had said that he lived, or was actively engaged. But lest this should he misunderstood, and it should be inferred that he meant to say it was by his own energy or powers, he guards it, and says it was not at all from himself. It was by no native tendency; no power of his own; nothing that could be traced to himself. He assumed no credit for any zeal which he had shown in the true life. He was disposed to trace it all to another. He had ample proof in his past experience that there was no tendency in himself to a life of true religion, and he therefore traced it all to another.
Christ liveth in me - Christ was the source of all the life that he had. Of course this cannot be taken literally that Christ had a residence in the apostle, but it must mean that his grace resided in him; that his principles actuated him: and that he derived all his energy, and zeal, and life from his grace. The union between the Lord Jesus and the disciple was so close that it might be said the one lived in the other. So the juices of the vine are in each branch, and leaf, and tendril, and live in them and animate them; the vital energy of the brain is in each delicate nerve - no matter how small - that is found in any part of the human frame. Christ was in him as it were the vital principle. All his life and energy were derived from him.
And the life which I now live in the flesh - As I now live on the earth surrounded by the cares and anxieties of this life. I carry the life-giving principles of my religion to all my duties and all my trials.
I live by the faith of the Son of God - By confidence in the Son of God, looking to him for strength, and trusting in his promises, and in his grace. Who loved me, etc. He felt under the highest obligation to him from the fact that he had loved him, and given himself to the death of the cross in his behalf. The conviction of obligation on this account Paul often expresses; see the Rom 6:8-11; 8:35-39 notes; 2Co 5:15 note. There is no higher sense of obligation than that which is felt toward the Saviour; and Paul felt himself bound, as we should, to live entirely to him who had redeemed him by his blood.

Barnes: Gal 2:21 - -- I do not frustrate the grace of God - The word rendered "frustrate"( ἀθετῶ athetō ) means properly to displace, abrogate, abolis...
I do not frustrate the grace of God - The word rendered "frustrate"(
For if righteousness come by the law - If justification can be secured by the observance of any law - ceremonial or moral - then there was no need of the death of Christ as an atonement. This is plain. If man by conformity to any law could be justified before God, what need was there of an atonement? The work would then have been wholly in his own power, and the merit would have been his. It follows from this, that man cannot be justified by his own morality, or his alms-deeds, or his forms of religion, or his honesty and integrity. If he can, he needs no Saviour; he can save himself. It follows also that when people depend on their own amiableness, and morality, and good works, they would feel no need of a Saviour; and this is the true reason why the mass of people reject the Lord Jesus. They suppose they do not deserve to be sent to hell. They have no deep sense of guilt. They confide in their own integrity, and feel that God ought to save them. Hence, they feel no need of a Saviour; for why should a person in health employ a physician? And confiding in their own righteousness, they reject the grace of God, and despise the plan of justification through the Redeemer. To feel the need of a Saviour it is necessary to feel that we are lost and ruined sinners; that we have no merit upon which we can rely; and that we are entirely dependent on the mercy of God for salvation. Thus feeling, we shall receive the salvation of the gospel with thankfulness and joy, and show that in regard to us Christ is not "dead in vain."
Poole: Gal 2:20 - -- This Epistle is much of the same nature with that to the Romans, and the substance of what the apostle saith in the latter part of this chapter, agr...
This Epistle is much of the same nature with that to the Romans, and the substance of what the apostle saith in the latter part of this chapter, agreeth much with Rom 6:1-23 ; where we find an expression much like to this, Gal 2:6 : Our old man is crucified with him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin.
I am (saith the apostle) crucified with Christ not only by justification made partaker of the benefits coming by a Christ crucified, but also as having communion with the death of Christ, in the mortification of my lusts. A figure of which (as he informs us, Rom 6:4 ) we have in baptism, buried with him by baptism into death
Nevertheless I live yet (saith he) I live a holy, spiritual life; though dead to the law, and though crucified with Christ.
Yet not I, but Christ liveth in me but I cannot say so properly that it is I, for my motions are not according to my natural propensions and inclinations; but Christ by his Spirit, liveth in me having renewed and changed me, made me a new creature, and begot new motions and inclinations in me. And though I live in the flesh yet I live by the faith of the Son of God all my natural, moral, and civil actions, being principled in faith, and done according to the guidance of the rule of faith in Jesus Christ.
Who loved me, and gave himself for me of whom I am persuaded that he loved me, and from that love gave himself to die upon the cross for me.

Poole: Gal 2:21 - -- I do not frustrate the grace of God I do not despise, reject, make void, (for by all these words the word here used is translated, Mar 7:9 Joh 12:48 ...
I do not frustrate the grace of God I do not despise, reject, make void, (for by all these words the word here used is translated, Mar 7:9 Joh 12:48 Joh 3:15 Heb 10:28 ), the free love of God, in giving his Son to die for our sins: from whence is easily gathered, that those who live a loose life, and take a liberty to sin, from their justification, or from the free grace of God in Christ, they do contemn and despise the grace of God: or rather, (if we refer it to the following words), those who assert justification by the works of the law, they do reject and despise the free grace of God in the gospel, and (as much as in them lies) make it vain and frustrate.
For if righteousness come by the law for if it be possible, that a man by works done in obedience to the law should arrive at a righteousness, in which he may stand before God,
then is Christ dead in vain then Christ died to no purpose, or without any just cause: the reason of this must be, because it was the main and principal end of Christ’ s death, to procure or purchase a righteousness wherein sinners might stand before God, to bring in an everlasting righteousness, Dan 9:24 . If the most proper effect of the death of Christ be taken away, then his death is made causeless, and to no purpose. Thus the apostle concludeth his thesis, laid down Gal 2:16 : That none shall be justified by the works of the law, from two absurdities that would follow upon the contrary, viz. justification by the works of the law, the rejecting of the grace of God, and the frustration, or making void, of the death of Christ.
Gill: Gal 2:20 - -- I am crucified with Christ,.... Not literally, for so only the two thieves were crucified with him, but mystically; Christ was crucified for him in hi...
I am crucified with Christ,.... Not literally, for so only the two thieves were crucified with him, but mystically; Christ was crucified for him in his room and stead, and so he was crucified with him, and in him, as his head and representative. Christ sustained the persons of all his people, and what he did and suffered was in their name, and on their account, and so they were crucified and suffered with him, as they are said to be buried with him, and to be risen with him, and to sit together in heavenly places in him. Moreover, their old man was crucified with him; when he was crucified, all their sins, the whole body of them, were laid upon him, and he bore them, and bore them away, destroyed and made an end of them; they received their mortal wound by his crucifixion and death, so as never to be able to have any damning power over them; and in consequence of this the affections and lusts are crucified, and the deeds of the body of sin mortified by the Spirit and grace of God, in regeneration and sanctification, so as not to have the dominion over them; the world is crucified to them, and they to the world; and this is another reason proving that justification by Christ is no licentious doctrine. This clause is, in the Vulgate Latin, Syriac, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions, put at the end of the preceding verse.
Nevertheless I live; which is to be understood, not of his natural, but of his spiritual life; the life of justification he lived, by faith, on the righteousness of Christ; and the life of sanctification which he had from Christ, by the quickening influences of his Spirit, by virtue of which he walked in newness of life. The believer is a mere paradox, he is dead to the law, and "yet lives" to God; he is crucified with Christ, and yet lives by him; yea, a crucified Christ lives in him.
Yet not I; not the same I as before, but quite another man, a new creature: he did not now live as in his state of unregeneracy, and whilst in Judaism; he was not now Saul the blasphemer, the persecutor, and injurious person; nor did he now live Saul the Pharisee: or the life he had was not of his own obtaining and procuring; his life of righteousness was not of himself, but Christ; his being quickened, or having principles of life and holiness implanted in him, was not by himself, but by the Spirit; and the holy life and conversation he lived was not owing to himself, to his power and strength, but to the grace of God; or it was not properly himself, or so much he that lived,
but Christ liveth in me: who was not only the author and maintainer of his spiritual life, but the life itself; he was formed in his soul, dwelt in his heart, was united to him, was one with him, whence all vital principles and vital actions sprung, and all the communion and comforts of a spiritual life flowed.
And the life which I now live in the flesh; in the body, whilst in this mortal state, whereby he distinguishes that spiritual life he had from Christ, and through Christ's living in him, both from the natural life of his body, and from that eternal life he expected to live in another world; and which, he says,
I live by the faith of the Son of God; meaning, not that faith which Christ, as man, had, but that of which he is the author and object, by which the just man lives; not upon it, for the believer does not live upon any of his graces, no, not upon faith, but by faith on Christ, the object; looking to him for pardon, righteousness, peace, joy, comfort, every supply of grace, and eternal salvation: which object is described as "the Son of God"; who is truly God, equal with his Father; so that he did not live upon a creature, or forsake the fountain of living waters, but upon the only begotten Son of God, who is full of grace and truth: of whom he further says,
who loved me; before the foundation of the world, from everlasting, prior to his love to him; and freely, without any regard to worth or merit, and though he was a blasphemer and a persecutor; and him personally, and particularly, in a distinguishing manner, of which he had a special knowledge and application by the Spirit of God; and was a reason and argument constraining him, and prevailing on him to live to him who loved him, and died for him, or, as he adds,
and gave himself for me; his whole self, his soul and body, as in union with his divine person, into the hands of justice, and unto death, in his room and stead, as an offering and sacrifice for sin, and which he did freely and voluntarily; and is a strong and full proof of his love to him. Now though Christ gave his life a ransom for many, and himself for his whole church, and all the members of his mystical body, yet the apostle speaks of this matter as singularly respecting himself, as if almost he was the only person Christ loved and died for; which shows that faith deals with Christ not in a general way, as the Saviour of the world, but with a special regard to a man's self: this is the life of faith; and these considerations of the person, love, and grace of Christ, animate and encourage faith in its exercises on him.

Gill: Gal 2:21 - -- I do not frustrate the grace of God,.... Or "cast it away", as the Vulgate Latin version reads it; or "deny it", as the Syriac and Arabic; or "despise...
I do not frustrate the grace of God,.... Or "cast it away", as the Vulgate Latin version reads it; or "deny it", as the Syriac and Arabic; or "despise, reject, and make it void", as other versions; meaning either the grace of the Son of God in giving himself for him, just mentioned by him; or the particular doctrine of grace, justification, he is speaking of, as proceeding from the grace of God, upon the foot of the righteousness of Christ; or the whole Gospel, all and each of which would be denied, despised, rejected, made null and void, be in vain, fallen and departed from, should justification be sought for by the works of the law: but this the apostle did not do, and therefore did not frustrate the grace of God: which to do would be to act the most ungenerous and ungrateful part to God, and Christ, and to that love and grace which are so largely displayed in the free justification of a sinner.
For if righteousness come by the law; if a justifying righteousness is to be attained unto by the works of the law, or men can be justified by their obedience to it,
then Christ is dead in vain; there was no necessity for his dying: he died without any true reason, or just cause; he died to bring in a righteousness which might have been brought in without his death, and so his blood and life might have been spared, his sufferings and death being entirely unnecessary; which to say is to cast contempt upon the wisdom, love, and grace of God in this matter, and to offer the greatest indignity to the person, character, sufferings, and death of Christ. Wherefore it may be strongly concluded, that there is no righteousness by the law of works, nor to be attained that way, otherwise Christ had never died; and that justification is solely and alone by his righteousness.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Gal 2:20 On the phrase because of the faithfulness of the Son of God, ExSyn 116, which notes that the grammar is not decisive, nevertheless suggests that ̶...

Geneva Bible: Gal 2:20 I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not ( u ) I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the ( x ) flesh I live by ...

Geneva Bible: Gal 2:21 ( 5 ) I do not frustrate the grace of God: for if righteousness [come] by the law, then Christ is dead ( e ) in vain.
( 5 ) The second argument taken...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Gal 2:1-21
TSK Synopsis: Gal 2:1-21 - --1 He shows when he went up again to Jerusalem, and for what purpose;3 and that Titus was not circumcised;11 and that he resisted Peter, and told him t...
Combined Bible: Gal 2:20 - --color="#000000"> 20. I am crucified with Christ.
Christ is Lord over the Law, because He was crucified unto the La...

Combined Bible: Gal 2:21 - --color="#000000"> 21. I do not frustrate the grace of God.
Paul is now getting ready for the second argument of his...
Maclaren -> Gal 2:20
Maclaren: Gal 2:20 - --From Centre To Circumference
The life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for me.'--G...
MHCC -> Gal 2:20-21
MHCC: Gal 2:20-21 - --Here, in his own person, the apostle describes the spiritual or hidden life of a believer. The old man is crucified, Rom 6:6, but the new man is livin...
Matthew Henry -> Gal 2:11-21
Matthew Henry: Gal 2:11-21 - -- I. From the account which Paul gives of what passed between him and the other apostles at Jerusalem, the Galatians might easily discern both the fal...
Barclay -> Gal 2:18-21
Barclay: Gal 2:18-21 - --Paul speaks out of the depths of personal experience. For him to re-erect the whole fabric of the law would have been spiritual suicide. He says tha...
Constable -> Gal 1:11--3:1; Gal 2:11-21
Constable: Gal 1:11--3:1 - --II. PERSONAL DEFENSE OF PAUL'S GOSPEL 1:11--2:21
The first of the three major sections of the epistle begins her...

Constable: Gal 2:11-21 - --C. Correction of another apostle 2:11-21
Paul mentioned the incident in which he reproved Peter, the Judaizers' favorite apostle, to further establish...
College -> Gal 2:1-21
College: Gal 2:1-21 - --GALATIANS 2
E. SHOWDOWN: CONFERENCE IN JERUSALEM (2:1-5)
1 Fourteen years later I went up again to Jerusalem, this time with Barnabas. I took Titus ...
McGarvey: Gal 2:20 - --I have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I that live, but Christ liveth in me: and that life which I now live in the flesh I live in fai...
