“There is neither Jew nor
Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you
are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28, ESV). This translation, along
with the NASB, KJV, and NKJV, uses the phrase “Jew nor Greek.” The NIV translates
it less literally as “Jew nor Gentile.” Either way, this verse relates a
wonderful message concerning the unity we have in Christ
In New Testament times, Greek
culture was dominant in the Roman Empire of which Israel was a part, so there
was a basic distinction made between Jews and Greeks. (Greeks could refer to
those who lived according to the practices of Greek culture, whether they were
ethnically Greek or not. Today there are many non-Jews who are not Greeks and
who do not follow Greek culture, so the word Gentile may give a better sense of
what the passage is saying.) The Jews were the people of God, and the
Greeks/Gentiles were not.
In addition to Jew and Greek,
Galatians 3:28 lists two other contrasting pairs: male and female, and slave or
free. When Paul says that “there is neither Jew or Greek,” male or female, or
slave and free, we know that he is not speaking literally, for all of these
types of people existed in Paul’s day as well as in our day (modern
gender-bending notwithstanding). Paul is not saying that the differences do not
exist but that, in Christ, they do not matter. Again, this is not an absolute
statement that the differences have been completely abolished, as some
interpret it, because the New Testament spends a good bit of time telling how
men and women should act in their unique roles as men or women and of the
proper behavior of slaves and masters, even Christian slaves and Christian
masters (see Ephesians 5:21—6:9 and Colossians 3:18—4:1, for example). But
within the context of the discussion of Galatians 3, these differences do not
matter. When these differences are taken outside the context of Galatians 3,
they might matter a great deal. Galatians 3:28 cannot be quoted in isolation to
“prove” that there are or should be no differences.
For example, if a family is
attending an amusement park, they may encounter different prices for different
people: kids, teenagers, adults, teachers, students, senior citizens, military
veterans, etc. However, on Tuesday everyone is admitted for the same low price.
So, if the family approaches the ticket window on a Tuesday, and Grandma says
to the ticket agent, “Don’t forget, I am a senior citizen,” the ticket agent
might respond, “It doesn’t matter.” He is not attempting to be rude or say that
all of the life experience that Grandma has accumulated is worthless. Nor is he
saying that the aches and pains of age will not affect her today. What he is
saying is that, within the context of the issue at hand—ticket prices—the fact
that she is a senior citizen (or that Dad is a veteran or that Junior is a
college student) does not matter; that is, those facts, as important as they
may be in other contexts, simply do not affect the ticket prices on Tuesday.
The distinctions do not matter.
Galatians 3:26–29 gives the
fuller context: “So in Christ Jesus you are all children of God through faith,
for all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with
Christ. There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there
male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. If you belong to Christ,
then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.”
The specific consideration is
the identity of Abraham’s offspring, those who are children of God and eligible
to inherit the promises God made to Abraham. It would be normal to think that
Jews were Abraham’s descendants and thus the only ones eligible to receive the
promises God, but Paul says that, in Christ, Greeks or Gentiles can also be
Abraham’s children and heirs. It would be normal to think of men as heirs,
because in that culture women generally did not inherit property. It would be
normal to think that only free people could be heirs, because slaves did not
inherit—they were given as an inheritance. However, Paul says that in Christ
slaves, women, and Greeks can all be heirs to the promises of God.
In Christ, it doesn’t matter
about your ethnic identity, your gender, or your station in life. If you are in
Christ, you are one of God’s chosen people and you stand to inherit all that
God has promised. It is only through Christ that anyone can inherit God’s
kingdom (John 14:6). While there may still be ethnic, gender, and social
distinctions that carry weight in other contexts, those distinctions do not
affect one’s standing as a child of God by faith in Christ.
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