Albert Barnes Commentary


Albert Barnes Commentary
"So that the law is become our tutor [to bring us] unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith." — Galatians 3:24 (ASV)
Therefore the law was our schoolmaster. The word translated schoolmaster, paidagwgov, from which the word pedagogue comes, referred originally to a slave or freedman to whose care boys were committed, and who accompanied them to the public schools. The idea here is not that of instructor, but there is reference to the office and duty of the paedagogus among the ancients.
The office was usually entrusted to slaves or freedmen. It is true that when the paedagogus was properly qualified, he assisted the children committed to his care in preparing their lessons. But still his main duty was not instruction; rather, it was to watch over the boys, to restrain them from evil and temptation, and to conduct them to the schools where they might receive instruction.
For illustrations of this, see Wetstein, Bloomfield, etc. In the passage before us, the proper notion of pedagogue is retained. In our sense of the word schoolmaster, Christ is the schoolmaster, and not the law. The law performs the office of the ancient pedagogue, to lead us to the teacher or the instructor. That teacher or instructor is Christ. The ways in which the law does this may be the following: