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Romans 10:4

Context
10:4 For Christ is the end of the law, with the result that there is righteousness for everyone who believes.

Galatians 3:23-24

Context
Sons of God Are Heirs of Promise

3:23 Now before faith 1  came we were held in custody under the law, being kept as prisoners 2  until the coming faith would be revealed. 3:24 Thus the law had become our guardian 3  until Christ, so that we could be declared righteous 4  by faith.

Ephesians 2:14-15

Context
2:14 For he is our peace, the one who made both groups into one 5  and who destroyed the middle wall of partition, the hostility, 2:15 when he nullified 6  in his flesh the law of commandments in decrees. He did this to create in himself one new man 7  out of two, 8  thus making peace,

Colossians 2:17

Context
2:17 these are only 9  the shadow of the things to come, but the reality 10  is Christ! 11 

Hebrews 10:1-9

Context
Concluding Exposition: Old and New Sacrifices Contrasted

10:1 For the law possesses a shadow of the good things to come but not the reality itself, and is therefore completely unable, by the same sacrifices offered continually, year after year, to perfect those who come to worship. 12  10:2 For otherwise would they not have ceased to be offered, since the worshipers would have been purified once for all and so have 13  no further consciousness of sin? 10:3 But in those sacrifices 14  there is a reminder of sins year after year. 10:4 For the blood of bulls and goats cannot take away sins. 15  10:5 So when he came into the world, he said,

Sacrifice and offering you did not desire, but a body you prepared for me.

10:6Whole burnt offerings and sin-offerings you took no delight in.

10:7Then I said,Here I am: 16  I have come – it is written of me in the scroll of the book – to do your will, O God.’” 17 

10:8 When he says above, “Sacrifices and offerings and whole burnt offerings and sin-offerings you did not desire nor did you take delight in them” 18  (which are offered according to the law), 10:9 then he says, “Here I am: I have come to do your will.” 19  He does away with 20  the first to establish the second.

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[3:23]  1 tn Or “the faithfulness [of Christ] came.”

[3:23]  2 tc Instead of the present participle συγκλειόμενοι (sunkleiomenoi; found in Ì46 א A B D* F G P Ψ 33 1739 al), C D1 0176 0278 Ï have the perfect συγκεκλεισμένοι (sunkekleismenoi). The syntactical implication of the perfect is that the cause or the means of being held in custody was confinement (“we were held in custody [by/because of] being confined”). The present participle of course allows for such options, but also allows for contemporaneous time (“while being confined”) and result (“with the result that we were confined”). Externally, the perfect participle has little to commend it, being restricted for the most part to later and Byzantine witnesses.

[3:24]  3 tn Or “disciplinarian,” “custodian,” or “guide.” According to BDAG 748 s.v. παιδαγωγός, “the man, usu. a slave…whose duty it was to conduct a boy or youth…to and from school and to superintend his conduct gener.; he was not a ‘teacher’ (despite the present mng. of the derivative ‘pedagogue’…When the young man became of age, the π. was no longer needed.” L&N 36.5 gives “guardian, leader, guide” here.

[3:24]  4 tn Or “be justified.”

[2:14]  5 tn Grk “who made the both one.”

[2:15]  6 tn Or “rendered inoperative.” This is a difficult text to translate because it is not easy to find an English term which communicates well the essence of the author’s meaning, especially since legal terminology is involved. Many other translations use the term “abolish” (so NRSV, NASB, NIV), but this term implies complete destruction which is not the author’s meaning here. The verb καταργέω (katargew) can readily have the meaning “to cause someth. to lose its power or effectiveness” (BDAG 525 s.v. 2, where this passage is listed), and this meaning fits quite naturally here within the author’s legal mindset. A proper English term which communicates this well is “nullify” since this word carries the denotation of “making something legally null and void.” This is not, however, a common English word. An alternate term like “rendered inoperative [or ineffective]” is also accurate but fairly inelegant. For this reason, the translation retains the term “nullify”; it is the best choice of the available options, despite its problems.

[2:15]  7 tn In this context the author is not referring to a new individual, but instead to a new corporate entity united in Christ (cf. BDAG 497 s.v. καινός 3.b: “All the Christians together appear as κ. ἄνθρωπος Eph 2:15”). This is clear from the comparison made between the Gentiles and Israel in the immediately preceding verses and the assertion in v. 14 that Christ “made both groups into one.” This is a different metaphor than the “new man” of Eph 4:24; in that passage the “new man” refers to the new life a believer has through a relationship to Christ.

[2:15]  8 tn Grk “in order to create the two into one new man.” Eph 2:14-16 is one sentence in Greek. A new sentence was started here in the translation for clarity since contemporary English is less tolerant of extended sentences.

[2:17]  9 tn The word “only,” though not in the Greek text, is supplied in the English translation to bring out the force of the Greek phrase.

[2:17]  10 tn Grk “but the body of Christ.” The term body here, when used in contrast to shadow (σκιά, skia) indicates the opposite meaning, i.e., the reality or substance itself.

[2:17]  11 tn The genitive τοῦ Χριστοῦ (tou Cristou) is appositional and translated as such: “the reality is Christ.

[10:1]  12 tn Grk “those who approach.”

[10:2]  13 tn Grk “the worshipers, having been purified once for all, would have.”

[10:3]  14 tn Grk “in them”; the referent (those sacrifices) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[10:4]  15 tn Grk “for it is impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sins.”

[10:7]  16 tn Grk “behold,” but this construction often means “here is/there is” (cf. BDAG 468 s.v. ἰδού 2).

[10:7]  17 sn A quotation from Ps 40:6-8 (LXX). The phrase a body you prepared for me (in v. 5) is apparently an interpretive expansion of the HT reading “ears you have dug out for me.”

[10:8]  18 sn Various phrases from the quotation of Ps 40:6 in Heb 10:5-6 are repeated in Heb 10:8.

[10:9]  19 tc The majority of mss, especially the later ones (א2 0278vid 1739 Ï lat), have ὁ θεός (Jo qeo", “God”) at this point, while most of the earliest and best witnesses lack such an explicit addressee (so Ì46 א* A C D K P Ψ 33 1175 1881 2464 al). The longer reading is a palpable corruption, apparently motivated in part by the wording of Ps 40:8 (39:9 LXX) and by the word order of this same verse as quoted in Heb 10:7.

[10:9]  20 tn Or “abolishes.”



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