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PARALLEL BIBLE - Galatians 4:19


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King James Bible - Galatians 4:19

My little children, of whom I travail in birth again until Christ be formed in you,

World English Bible

My little children, of whom I am again in travail until Christ is formed in you--

Douay-Rheims - Galatians 4:19

My little children, of whom I am in labour again, until Christ be formed in you.

Webster's Bible Translation

My little children, of whom I travail in birth again, until Christ be formed in you,

Greek Textus Receptus


τεκνια
5040 μου 3450 ους 3739 παλιν 3825 ωδινω 5605 5719 αχρις 891 ου 3739 μορφωθη 3445 5686 χριστος 5547 εν 1722 υμιν 5213

Treasury of Scriptural Knowledge

VERSE (19) -
1Co 4:14 1Ti 1:2 Tit 1:4 Phm 1:10,19 Jas 1:18 1Jo 2:1,12; 5:21

SEV Biblia, Chapter 4:19

¶ Hijitos míos, que vuelvo otra vez a estar de parto de vosotros, hasta que Cristo sea formado en vosotros;

Clarke's Bible Commentary - Galatians 4:19

Verse 19. My little
children] teknia mou? My beloved children. As their conversion to God had been the fruit of much labour, prayers, and tears, so he felt them as his children, and peculiarly dear to him, because he had been the means of bringing them to the knowledge of the truth; therefore he represents himself as suffering the same anxiety and distress which he endured at first when he preached the Gospel to them, when their conversion to Christianity was a matter of great doubt and uncertainty. The metaphor which he uses needs no explanation.

Until Christ be formed in you] Till you once more receive the Spirit and unction of Christ in your hearts, from which you are fallen, by your rejection of the spirit of the Gospel.


John Gill's Bible Commentary

Ver. 19. My little children , etc..] A soft and tender way of speaking, used by Christ to his disciples, and frequently by that affectionate and beloved disciple, John. It is expressive of the apostle's strong love and affection for them, and points out their tenderness in the faith, and that small degree of spiritual light and knowledge they had, as well as signifies that he had been, as he hoped, and in a judgment of charity believed, an instrument of their conversion, and was their spiritual parent: hence it follows, of whom I travail in birth again ; he compares himself to a woman with child, as the church in bringing forth souls to Christ sometimes is; and all his pains and labours in the ministry of the word to the sorrows of a woman during the time of childbearing, and at the birth. When he first came among them, he laboured exceedingly; he preached the Gospel in season, and out of season; he followed his indefatigable endeavours with importunate prayers; and his ministry among them was attended with much weakness of body, and with many reproaches, afflictions, and persecutions, comparable to the birth throes of a woman in travail: however, as he hoped he was the means of their being born again, of the turning of them from Heathenism to Christianity, and from serving idols to serve the living God, and believe in his Son Jesus Christ; but the false apostles coming among them had so strangely wrought upon them, and they were so much gone back and degenerated, that they seemed to be like so many abortions, or as an unformed foetus; wherefore he laboured again with all his might and main, by writing to them, using arguments with them, sometimes giving them good words, at other times rough ones, and fervently praying for them, if possible, to recover them from Judaism, to which they were inclined, to the pure Gospel of Christ. Until Christ be formed in you ; which is the same as to be created in Christ, to be made new creatures, or new men in him; or, in other words, to have the principle of grace wrought in the soul, which goes by the name of Christ formed in the heart; because it is from him, he is the author of it, and it bears a resemblance to him, and is that by which he lives, dwells, and reigns in the souls of his people. Now though, as he hoped, this new man, new creature, or Christ, was formed in them before, when he first preached the Gospel to them; yet it was not a perfect man; particularly their knowledge of Christ, of his Gospel, and Gospel liberty, was far from being so, in which they went backwards instead of forwards; and therefore he was greatly concerned, laboured exceedingly, and vehemently endeavoured, which he calls travailing in birth again, to bring them to the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ. It is also the same as to be conformed to the image of Christ, which in regeneration is stamped upon the saints, and is gradually increased, and will be perfected in heaven; and that this might more manifestly appear, over which a veil was drawn, by their departure in any degree from the truths of the Gospel, was what he earnestly sought after: once more, it is the same as to have the form of Christ; that is, of the Gospel of Christ upon them, or to be cast into the form of doctrine, and mould of the Gospel, and to receive a Gospel impression and spirit from it; which is to have a spirit of liberty, in opposition to legal bondage; to live by faith on Christ, and not on the works of the law; to derive comfort alone from him, and not from any services and duties whatever; to have repentance, and the whole course of obedience, influenced by the grace of God, and love of Christ; and to be zealous of good works, and yet have no dependence on them for justification and salvation. This is what the apostle so earnestly desired, when, instead of it, these Galatians seemed to have the form of Moses, and of the law.

Matthew Henry Commentary

Verses 19, 20 - The Galatians were ready to account the
apostle their enemy, but he assures them he was their friend; he had the feelings of a paren toward them. He was in doubt as to their state, and was anxious to know the result of their present delusions. Nothing is so sure a proof tha a sinner has passed into a state of justification, as Christ being formed in him by the renewal of the Holy Spirit; but this cannot be hoped for, while men depend on the law for acceptance with God.


Greek Textus Receptus


τεκνια
5040 μου 3450 ους 3739 παλιν 3825 ωδινω 5605 5719 αχρις 891 ου 3739 μορφωθη 3445 5686 χριστος 5547 εν 1722 υμιν 5213

Vincent's NT Word Studies

19. My little
children (teknia mou). Only here in Paul, but often in John. See John xiii. 33; 1 John ii. 1, 12, 28; iii. 7, 18, etc. 74 See on chapter iii. 26.

I travail in birth again (palin wdinw). Better as Rev. of whom I am again in travail. Wdinw only here and Apoc. xii. 2. Gal. iv. 27 is a quotation. The metaphorical use of the word is frequent in O.T. See Psalm vii. 14; Sir. xix. 11; xxxi. 5; lxiii. 17; Micah iv. 10; Isa. xxvi. 18; lxvi. 8. Paul means that he is for the second time laboring and distressed for the Galatian converts, with the same anguish which attended his first efforts for their conversion. The metaphor of begetting children in the gospel is found in 1 Cor. iv. 15; Philemon 10. It was a Jewish saying: "If one teaches the son of his neighbor the law, the Scripture reckons this the same as though he had begotten him."

Until Christ be formed in you (mecriv ou morfwqh Cristov en umin). The forming of Christ in them, their attainment of the complete inner life of Christians, is the object of the new birth. By their relapse they have retarded this result and renewed Paul's spiritual travail. The verb morfoun N.T.o . The idea under different aspects is common. See Romans viii. 9; 1 Cor. ii. 16; v. 15; 2 Cor. iii. 18; Gal. ii. 20; Eph. iii. 17; Col. i. 27.


Robertson's NT Word Studies

4:19 {I am in travail} (wdinw). I am in birth pangs. Old word for this powerful picture of pain. In N.T. only here, verse #27; Re 12:2. {Until Christ be formed in you} (mecris hou morfwqei cristos en humin). Future temporal clause with mecris hou (until which time) and the first aorist passive subjunctive of morfow, late and rare verb, in Plutarch, not in LXX, not in papyri, only here in N.T. this figure is the embryo developing into the child. Paul boldly represents himself as again the mother with birth pangs over them. this is better than to suppose that the Galatians are pregnant mothers (Burton) by a reversal of the picture as in #1Th 2:7.


CHAPTERS: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
VERSES: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31

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