Introduction
  Brief recap of author/audience (MAP). Gal. 3:1 informs us of the setting of this  letter (read).
  
    Paul had clearly instructed the Galatians about the meaning of  Jesus’ death – that through it He paid for all of our sins, so that we may be  fully and permanently accepted by God by simply putting our personal faith in  Jesus. Paul calls this “justification by  grace through faith alone.”
    Then false teachers (called “Judaizers” because they were Jews  from Judea) “cast a spell” on the Galatian Christians. They rejected justification by grace through  faith alone. They claimed it wasn’t  enough to believe in Jesus; the Galatians also had to become Jewish (observe  circumcision, dietary laws, and Old Testament festivals). In other words, they taught “justification by  faith plus works.”
    The Galatians were listening to these Judaizers and beginning  to be persuaded by them. Paul calls them  “foolish” because they knew better because of Paul’s instruction.
    So Paul writes this letter to refute the Judaizers’ objections  about God’s grace (2:15-21; LAST WEEK), and to provide additional confirmations  that justification by grace through faith alone is God’s way.
    
      In 3:6ff., Paul shows that the Old Testament taught that God  accepts people by grace through faith alone, and not by obeying the law. This is a confirmation based on scripture—and we each need this objective basis of assurance. We’ll cover this important subject NEXT WEEK.
      In 3:1-5, Paul appeals to their experience of God’s Spirit to  prove that God accepted them by grace through faith, and not obeying the  law. This is a conformation based on  spiritual experience, which corroborates what God says through scripture. Let’s see how Paul makes his  case...
    
  
The passage
  Read 3:2,3. Paul reminds  them of their conversion. When they  believed the gospel, they received God’s Spirit. (Define Holy Spirit: Person; confirms our  adoption). On what basis did they  receive the Spirit? Not by obeying the  Law, but by simply believing Paul’s message.  Since their spiritual life began this way, it is foolish to think they  can become more spiritual by law-keeping through moral will-power/religious  observance. 
  
    Can you see that Paul’s argument makes no sense unless they experienced the Holy Spirit’s presence  when they believed Paul’s message? Suppose  I was gravely ill, and you offered me free medicine. I ingested it, and I quickly recovered. Later, someone insists that I need to buy  their expensive medicine to recover my health.  You’d say to me: “You don’t need that expensive medicine; my free  medicine was effective. Don’t you  remember how you felt better after you took it?” Your argument would be unconvincing unless I actually felt better after taking your medicine. In the same way, Paul’s argument is  unconvincing unless the Galatians experienced the Spirit after believing the gospel (more details on this later).
  
  Read 3:4. Paul asks them  another question about their experience of the Holy Spirit. (Other versions translate pascho as “suffer” – but the immediate  context makes “experience” a better translation. ) “Are  you ready to discount your entire experience of the Spirit for the sake of  embracing Jewish religion?”
  Read 3:5. Paul reminds them now of their ongoing experience  of the Holy Spirit (epichoregeo is  present tense – “He who keeps supplying you with the Spirit”). He mentions miracles as an example of the  Spirit’s work. By the Spirit’s power,  Paul and Barnabas healed a lame man when he simply believed in Jesus (Acts  14:8-10). They had evidently experienced  some additional miraculous acts. Paul’s  point is that even after their conversion, they experienced the Spirit’s  activity not because they became religiously-observant Jews, but because they  simply exercised faith in Christ. 
  SUMMARIZE: “How can you listen to these guys who are saying  you have to obey the Law in order to get or stay accepted by God? This totally contradicts your own spiritual  experience! You received God’s Spirit  when you believed the gospel, not when you started keeping the Law. God has continued to bless you through His  Spirit as you simply believe His promises, not because you have been religiously  observant. This alone should convince  you that God accepts you by faith in Christ alone, not by faith plus works!”
  Now that we understand Paul’s argument, let’s consider three  important truths this passage teaches us about the Holy Spirit ...
Applications
  The first application is that people normally receive the Holy Spirit when they believe in Christ,  not at some later time (3:2). The  Galatians were not an exception in this regard.  Paul says the same thing about the Ephesian/Asian Christians (read and  explain Eph.1:13,14 NLT).  Pentecostalism’s teaching that people normatively receive the Holy  Spirit sometime after they believe in Jesus is unbiblical because it is based  on a couple of extraordinary exceptions in Acts (Acts2,8,19) rather than  on the clear teaching of the rest of Acts and Paul’s letters.
  The second application is that it is normal for Christians to experience the Holy Spirit when or soon  after they believe in Christ (3:2,4). According to the New Testament, the Spirit is God’s “Helper” (Jn.14:16-18)  given to us by Jesus through His death on the cross. The Spirit provides His help to true  Christians in a variety of ways:
  
    He helps you to relate  personally to God (Rom.8:15,16). You used to pray only in times of great need, and in impersonal  ways. But now you find yourself talking  to God informally about what you’re thinking and feeling—and you sense He is  somehow helping you do this so you can know you are His beloved child.
    He makes the Bible come  alive (1Cor.2:12). It’s  not that you suddenly understand everything it says, but what it says about  God, you, others, etc. starts to become understandable and personally relevant  to you (EXAMPLE).
    He sensitizes your  conscience (Eph.4:30,31). You  still sin—in fact, you are far more aware of this—but you can’t enjoy it like  you used to because God’s Spirit pierces your heart (EXAMPLE).
    He gives you a special  bond with other Christians (Phil.2:1). When you discover that someone you already  know is a Christian, you are glad and want to talk with them about the Person  you have in common. When someone you  know becomes a Christian, you have a new and deeper kinship.
    He gives you the desire  to defend Jesus and share your faith (Acts1:8). You never used to  care what people thought about Jesus, but now you’re pained when people defame  Him and you want to tell people that you believe in Him.
    He delivers you from  destructive habits (Gal.5:16). Sometimes you just lose the desire to do what enslaved you. More often, He gradually weakens the desire  as you replace it with other healthy desires/habits.
    He prompts you to love  people in specific ways (Acts8:26-38). You sense His specific guidance to encourage a  brother or sister—and discover after doing that they were discouraged or in  doubt. You sense that He wants you to help  someone at work—and this leads to an opportunity to tell them about Christ.
    He gives you peace and  hope in spite of difficult circumstances (Rom.15:13). They still hurt, but they don’t devastate you  because you sense that Jesus is with you, and that He will help you through  this and bring good out of it.
    QUALIFY: The Bible doesn’t say that you will experience all of  this immediately when you receive Christ, or that you will experience this all  the time, or that your experience will be exactly like other people. We are unique persons, and the Holy Spirit  gives each of us exactly what we need to assure us of His presence. But if you have put your faith in Christ, He has given you His Spirit, and His Spirit will show you experientially that you  are now God’s child. If the above activity  of His Spirit is totally foreign to you, it is probably because you don’t have  God’s Spirit. If this is the case, don’t  focus on the experiences you lack; simply receive Christ! Then you will begin to experience the Holy  Spirit working in your life (Acts2:38).
  
  The third application is that we receive the Spirit’s help by simply believing God’s promise (3:5). The Spirit is God’s Helper given to His  children. If your child asks you for a  hug or help tying his shoes, do you deny him unless he has behaved according to  your standard? Do you want him to not  ask for help unless he has been good?  No, you want him to come to you and ask for help, believing in your love  for him. How much less is God like a  legalistic parent! How much more is God  our loving Father who gives the help of His Spirit to all His children who  simply ask Him, believing in His love (quote Lk.11:13)!
  
    Commenting on this passage, Chuck Smith makes this same point:  “God’s blessings (i.e., the above works of the Spirit) are not dependent upon  our goodness or our righteousness. The  blessings of God depend solely upon His desire to bless us. Our part is simply to receive and believe Him  for His blessings... It is so hard for us to repudiate the  idea of deserving a blessing. Simply to  believe and to expect God to bless us – though we have been failures and don’t  deserve it – is extremely difficult for us.  But when we finally get over that barrier and come to expect God to  bless us simply because He has promised to bless us, there is nothing that can  stop His blessing from touching our lives.” 
    Smith is so right. Deep within us is the sense that God’s  willingness to bless us is based on something worthy in us rather than on  unmerited love within Him and our simple faith in Christ. This is why people intuitively assume that  they must earn God’s acceptance through their good works. It is alien and humbling to think that God  would want to accept us freely even though we deserve His condemnation. But even Christians, who understand justification  by grace through faith alone, often assume that the Holy Spirit’s help is based  on having a certain level of devotion, commitment, rule-keeping, etc. Do you assume this? Do you find yourself thinking:
    
      “I can’t expect the Spirit to help me draw near to God because  I really blew it yesterday.” 
      “I can’t expect the Spirit to empower me to serve since I’ve  hardly prayed at all this past week.” 
      “I can’t expect the Spirit to help my rotten attitude until I  have first scolded myself for this.”
      “I can’t expect the Spirit to help me share my faith since I  chickened out last time.”
      These are all thoughts I have had as a Christian worker who  teaches regularly on God’s grace! Do you  see the common element in them? “I must  do something to merit the Spirit’s willingness to help me.” Which is another way of saying: “God’s favor  is something I must earn.” But this is  what Paul rejects! 
      Paul will have more to say about how to receive the Holy  Spirit’s help in Gal.4,5. But this  point, that the Spirit’s help is a free gift received by simple faith, is  foundational! How often do you ask for the  Spirit’s help with child-like faith?  Start asking this way today!
    
  
Conclusion
NEXT WEEK: Grace in the Old Testament
SUMMARIZE: 3 truths about the Holy Spirit >> Q & A
  “W. Michaelis, in fact, argues that when πάσχω is used absolutely it always implies suffering,  except where the context suggests it should be understood sensu bono (TDNT 5:905–23). On the other hand, there are instances in Greek writings where πάσχω is used of favorable experiences (cf. BAG, though  Josephus, Ant. 3.312 is disputed). So  some recent interpreters have taken ἐπάθετε here to refer to positive experiences of the Spirit,  either referring back to “having begun with the Spirit” of v 3 or forward to  the statements about God giving his Spirit and working miracles among them of v  5—or both (so Lietzmann, Bligh, Mussner, and Betz)... If one  gives attention only to etymology and frequency of usage, then a meaning sensu malo must prevail. It is possible,  however, indeed even likely, that if context is given primary importance, then  a meaning sensu bono would appear  more likely... More pertinently, v 4 is set in the immediate  context of vv 3 and 5, where God’s giving of his Spirit and God’s working of  miracles in the midst of the Galatians are highlighted. So τοσαῦτα  ἐπάθετε  (“have you experienced so much”) should probably be taken as a recollection of  the Galatian believers’ past, positive spiritual experiences—perhaps even  should be translated “have you had such remarkable experiences”” Longenecker,  R. N. (1998). Galatians (Vol. 41, p.  104). Dallas: Word, Incorporated.
  Chuck  Smith, Why Grace Changes Everything (The  Word for Today, 2007), pp. 98,99.