In the first five verses of Galatians, chapter 3, the Apostle Paul asks a series of six rhetorical questions. It is a very effective method, both then and now, because it compels the hearer or reader to answer the question posed. A well-formed rhetorical question has only one possible answer. In this particular case, the inspired apostle challenges all believers to answer these important questions. This series of questions leads us from the point at which we heard the gospel, through our life as believers, and then up to the point of our anticipated glorification. If one answers any of these questions incorrectly, there will be a disconnect between where one was, where one is, and where one wants to be in the end. Or to put it another way, having made a good start on your trip, it is possible to take a wrong turn and end up at a different destination than the one you intended or wanted. For Paul, this process is an integrated whole: the beginning, the end, and everything in between all related to one another and effect one another. His basic premise is, if your salvation was all of grace at the beginning, it must be all of grace even to the end. It is the height of folly (with eternal consequences) to believe, teach, or practice otherwise. – Pastor Schlegel
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