Wednesday in the Word
11 How Hagar and Sarah Explain the Two Ways to Approach God (Galatians 4:21-31)
Oct 25, 2023
Season 23
Episode 11
Krisan Marotta
Galatians 4:21–31 gives us a vivid story of two mothers, two sons, and two very different ways of relating to God. In this episode, we unpack Paul’s difficult but powerful allegory of Hagar and Sarah to show that not all of Abraham’s physical descendants inherit the promise and that those who look to law-keeping for security are choosing slavery over the freedom Christ has already won.
In this week’s episode, we explore:
- Why many consider this one of the hardest passages in Galatians, and how a basic grasp of Abraham’s family story (Hagar, Sarah, Ishmael, and Isaac) clears the fog
- What an allegory is and how Paul can use a real, historical story to illustrate a spiritual truth without turning the Old Testament into a book of hidden riddles
- How Abraham’s two sons, both physically related to him, end up with very different futures: Ishmael “according to the flesh,” and Isaac “through promise”
- The difference between the Old Covenant at Sinai (a conditional “deal” that exposes our sin) and the New Covenant in Christ (a promise based on God’s faithfulness, not our performance)
- Why Paul links Hagar with Mount Sinai and “the present Jerusalem,” and Sarah with “the Jerusalem above,” showing two spiritual lineages: slavery under law and freedom through faith
- How Isaiah 54’s “barren woman” becomes a picture of God creating a new, supernatural family by his Spirit—one that far outnumbers Israel’s physical descendants
- Paul’s startling claim that the real question is not just, “Is Abraham your father?” but “Who is your mother?”—law-based striving (Hagar) or promise-based faith (Sarah)
- The ongoing pattern of persecution: how those “born according to the flesh” have always mocked and opposed those “born according to the Spirit,” and what that means for believers today
- The call to “cast out the slave woman and her son” as a warning not to mix the gospel of grace with a return to law-keeping as the basis of our standing before God
After listening, you’ll see this challenging passage as a clear, searching invitation: to stop living as though you are under a deal you can never keep, and to stand instead as a child of promise.
Series: Galatians: Living by Faith
Start Strong: A New Believer’s Guide to Christianity is available now wherever books are sold.