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Chapter XIV.—Reply to the Charge of “Galaticism.”
Being, therefore, observers of “seasons” for these things, and of “days, and months, and years,”10971097 Comp. Gal. iv. 10. we Galaticize. Plainly we do, if we are 112observers of Jewish ceremonies, of legal solemnities: for those the apostle unteaches, suppressing the continuance of the Old Testament which has been buried in Christ, and establishing that of the New. But if there is a new creation in Christ,10981098 Comp. Luke xxii. 20; 2 Cor. v. 17, etc. our solemnities too will be bound to be new: else, if the apostle has erased all devotion absolutely “of seasons, and days, and months, and years,” why do we celebrate the passover by an annual rotation in the first month? Why in the fifty ensuing days do we spend our time in all exultation? Why do we devote to Stations the fourth and sixth days of the week, and to fasts the “preparation-day?”10991099 Comp. Mark xv. 42. Anyhow, you sometimes continue your Station even over the Sabbath,—a day never to be kept as a fast except at the passover season, according to a reason elsewhere given. With us, at all events, every day likewise is celebrated by an ordinary consecration. And it will not, then, be, in the eyes of the apostle, the differentiating principle—distinguishing (as he is doing) “things new and old”11001100 Comp. Matt. xiii. 52 ad fin.—which will be ridiculous; but (in this case too) it will be your own unfairness, while you taunt us with the form of antiquity all the while you are laying against us the charge of novelty.
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