1:21-31. the example of Hagar and Sarah
Paul returns again to an example from the Jewish
Scriptures, from the Law itself, to show the Galatians that they are the
children of God, true heirs of Abraham, not slaves. Paul uses the stories of
Hagar, the slave-woman of Abraham, and Sarah, his wife, in an allegorical way
such as was used by the Jewish rabbis to interpret Scripture. Paul shows Hagar
as illustrating the slavery of the Jewish people to the Law. Her son, Ishmael,
was not Abraham's heir; Ishmael was the child of his mother's slavery. Isaac,
the son born as a result of God's promise, was the heir. Paul understands the
two women as illustrating the two covenants, the Old and the New. Hagar stands
for the old covenant of Sinai and the Jewish people enslaved to the Law. Sarah
illustrates the heavenly Jerusalem, a metaphor for the Christian Church, freed
from the Law. The Church is the new people of God, the people of the new
Covenant. The members of God's Church are like the son of Sarah and Abraham who
was born as a result of God's promise. Paul quotes Genesis
21:10 to show that those who are still slaves to the Law will
have no place in the Kingdom of God. He is referring to Jews who have rejected
the Good News. This severe judgement is based on their own Scriptures.