“Formerly, when you did not know God, you were enslaved to those that by nature are not gods. But now that you have come to know God, or rather to be known by God, how can you turn back again to the weak and worthless elementary principles of the world, whose slaves you want to be once more?” – Galatians 4:8-9
Turning back
It’s easy (or at least natural) to look at the Christian life like this: we used to do certain things, but now that we’re believers – we don’t. And that’s a true and noble aim that we can only hope to attain through the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.
But that’s not what Paul is writing about here. He’s not saying I used to be a drunk, but now I’m not. I used to act sexually immoral, but now I don’t. I used to cheat people, but now I don’t. He writes about that in other places.
The challenge of the Galatians is the challenge of every believer who grew up in a particularly religious environment. Paul is issuing the challenge to resist returning to a system of rules and regulations as your metric for measuring or earning your standing with God!
The Law
The law has a very specific purpose. Simply put, the law was given so that we would realize our complete and total inability to keep it. Period.
Paul says it like this: ‘Wherefore the law was our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith‘ (Gal 3:24). The law is, and has always been, a mirror that allows us to see our true selves in light of God.
The bottom line: we don’t measure up.
We can’t measure up.
None of us.
Not even close.
The law is like looking in a mirror that shows us something is wrong. But the mirror can’t fix what’s wrong!
Only Jesus can do that.
Jesus Breaks the Cycle of Futility
Jesus is the only one who ever has kept (or ever could keep) the Law perfectly. He is the perfect, unblemished sacrifice offered for our forgiveness and salvation. When our trust is placed in Jesus as our only necessary and sufficient sacrifice, our standing in eternity is based on the work Christ did.
We actually receive His righteousness!
Once you realize and embrace that Jesus did the work – because you couldn’t and only He can – it releases you from an endless cycle of trying to earn God’s love or measure up to His standard (which is perfection by the way).
You are freed from the slavery of sin and freed to yield yourself to the power of Christ working in you. Apart from that, we would have no hope.
But we do.
His name is Jesus.





