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To whom be the glory (ω η δοξα). No verb in the Greek. For like doxologies see Ro 9:5; 11:36; 16:27; Ephesians 3:21; [R…

To whom be glory, etc. Let him have all the praise and honour of the plan and its execution. It is not uncommon for Paul to introduce an a…

Glory.—Perhaps, properly, the glory—that is, the divine glory: that pre-eminent glory with which no other can compare.

Paul does not usually include a doxology at the beginning of a letter, but the doxology here serves an important purpose. It sets the Gospel, cente…

To whom be glory. By this sudden exclamation of thanksgiving, he intends to awaken powerfully in his readers the contemplation of that inv…

To whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen . That is, either to Christ, who gave himself to expiate the sins of his people,…

St. Paul was an apostle of Jesus Christ; he was expressly appointed by Him, and therefore by God the Father, who is one with Him in His divine natu…

The Apostle, therefore, writes this epistle to the Galatians to show that with the coming of the grace of the New Testament, the Old Testament shou…
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A.T. Robertson
A.T.Robertson