The Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Galatians



Who Were the Galatians?


It is difficult to decide who Paul was writing to in the Book of Galatians. In Paul's time the word Galatians had both an ethnic and a political meaning.
            The ethnic Galatians were Celts who migrated from central Europe to Asia Minor in the third century B.C. They settled in the area around Ankara, the capital of present-day Turkey. In Paul's day the native Galatian dialect was still spoken there, although Greek had been accepted as the language of business and diplomacy.
            By New Testament times there was a Roman province called Galatia that was larger than the original ethnic area. Territory to the south which was not ethnically Galatian was included in the Roman province. Pisidia  as well as sections of Phrygia and Lycaonia were formally part of political Galatia.
            Whether Galatia refers to people or to the province would indicate who the original readers of the letter to Galatians were. The usual view until the last two centuries was that Paul addressed "North Galatia," or congregations of ethnic Galatians located in the northern part of the province. Personal contact of the apostle with these churches may be referred to in Acts 16:6 and 18:23. However, a "South Galatia" theory is more widely held today. According to this view, Paul wrote to churches in the southern part of the province, that is, to the churches he founded on his first missionary journey (Acts 13:14-14:24) and later revisited (Acts (16:1-5).
            An obvious strength of the North Galatia view is that the northern part of the province was Galatia in both sense: ethnic and political. Also, it has been asserted that Paul's description of the fickleness of his readers was a well-known characteristic of the ethnic Galatians in the north.
            On the other hand, a strong case can be made for the South Galatia view. Paul normally used Roman Provincial names, as Luke did in the Book of Acts. Also, the most natural understanding of Acts 16:6 and 18:23 is that Paul retraced his steps from the first missionary journey (Acts 13; 14) at the beginning of his second and third journeys.
            With the biblical and historical evidence divided as it is, there have been notable scholars on both sides of the Galatian question. Neither theory is clearly superior, though is seems that the South Galatian view fits better with Acts. The questions are important for assigning a date to the letter.
            In either case, it is obvious that the book was addressed to a church which was struggling with the Judaizers, a group that insisted that the Gentile converts keep the requirements of the law. Paul's letter was a stern rebuke of this faction in the church. By adding the law to the gospel message, this group was in effect rejecting Jesus' free offer of salvation.




The Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the
Galatians

In the whole Bible, there is no more passionate, comprehensive, yet concise statement of truth of the gospel than the Galatians. Salvation is through the faith in Jesus Christ alone (2:16; 3:11,12). No work can earn salvation. Paul's succinct refutation of the Judaizers in this letter has transformed the lives of many - from Martin Luther to John Wesley. In general people want to earn their salvation by works that can be easily identified. In this letter, Paul reveals the arrogance of such thinking. It amounts to desertion of the truth of the gospel and turning away from God (1:6). We can stand justified before God only through faith in Jesus Christ; nothing else will save us.

Author - The writer of Galatians identifies himself as Paul (1:1). He claims to be an apostle, and then goes on to argue at length for the apostolic authority behind his gospel message. Much of the personal information he gives in the course of his defense corresponds to the narratives about Paul in the Book of Acts, as well as to the autobiographical material in Philippians 3:4-6. The use of the Old Testament in chapters 3 and 4 fits Paul's rigorous training in Judaism. Finally, the theology presented in this letter corresponds perfectly with the theology Paul expresses in his other writings, notably the Epistle to the Romans.

Date - Paul addresses his letter "to the churches of Galatia" (1:2) and to readers he expressly calls "Galatians" (3:1), but it is not easy to determine what this means precisely. At the time Paul was writing, the word Galatians could be used with an ethnic or with a political meaning.
            To a great extent assigning a date for Galatians depends on making a decision about the destination of the letter. If the churches of Galatia were founded on Paul's second missionary journey in the northern part of Galatia (Acts 16:6), the earliest the epistle could have been written was around A.D. 52. The similarity in content between Galatians and Romans, among other things, has led some to date the letter in the midf-50s. On the other hand, if Galatia is understood to be southern Galatia, including Lystra, Iconium, and Pisidian Antioch (Acts 14:21), congregations planted on Paul's first missionary journey, the letter could have been written as early as A.D. 48.
            To determine the date, the possible role of the Jerusalem council (Acts 15) in the controversies addressed in Galatians must also be considered. If Galatians was written after the Jerusalem council, had made its authoritative decisions, Paul most likely would have centered his argument on those decisions, or at least made an unmistakable reference to them. Since he did not, Galatians probably dates from A.D 48. This means it is one of the earliest New Testament books.


Purpose - Apparently Paul became aware of a perversion of the gospel of grace that was actively infecting the Galatian churches. The false teachers who had come to Galatia since Paul's ministry there were advocating salvation by "the words of the law" - that is, by keeping the law. Specific emphasis was placed on the Jewish rite of Circumcision.
            Paul's letter to the Galatians was a swift and decisive attempt to counter this message, which was a different gospel. Paul had to convince his "little children" in the faith, whom he had evangelized personally, that the new teaching was in fact a distortion of the gospel of Christ. In his argument Paul reasserted his authority as an apostle , which apparently had been minimized by the Judaizing teachers. Paul wrote not out of anger, but out of love. He saw the Galatians leaving the correct path by their additions to the gospel message, and he loved his fellow believers too much to allow them to go astray.

Literary Form - Galatians contains the three standard elements of a typical first-century letter: introduction (1:1-5), body (1:6-6:10), and conclusion (6:11-18). However, Galatians differs from many of Paul's other letters. For example, most of Paul's other letters contain an introductory thanksgiving section that serves as a prologue (Philippians 1:3-11). The starling absence of such a thanksgiving at the beginning of Galatians probably indicates the severity of the situation in Paul's eyes. There is nothing for which Paul can be thankful, since some of the Galatians were abandoning the gospel they once had embraced. Likewise, the letter contains no concluding greetings, whether long like Romans 16:3-23, or short, like 2 Corinthians 13:12, 13. There is only a terse benediction and concluding salutation (6:16, 18).

Theology - If there is one repeated phrase that summarizes the subject of Galatians, it is "the truth of the gospel." Unlike Romans, which presents the gospel as an answer to universal human sinfulness (Rom. 3:23; 6:23), Galatians clarifies the gospel message against the subtle, but ever deadly, danger of works salvation. No sinful person has ever been granted eternal life based on works. What is more, everyone who lives by such a confidence in works is "cursed," because no one can perfectly obey the law (3:10). Thus, to add works, rituals. or the law to the message of what it takes to become a Christian is to overturn the Good News. The proper place of the law is to convict us of our sin, demonstrating the urgent need for the redemption provided by Jesus Christ.
            What then is the basic gospel that Paul goes to such lengths to clarify and safeguard? The only way a person can be justified before God is by faith in Jesus Christ (2:16). Paul emphasizes this point over and over. Faith in Christ, nothing more nothing less, is the proper response to the gospel. This emphasis on faith is not about the historical dimension of the gospel that is open to reasonable inquiry: Jesus perfectly kept the Law of Moses (4:4), died on the cross (2:20), and rose from the dead (1:1). Rather Paul underscores faith in Christ because the controversies in Galatia raged around the reception of the gospel in the lives of new believers.
            Paul also addresses themes dealing with the Christian life, one living out the new freedom the believer possesses in Christ. Between the extremes of legalistic sanctification and hedonistic license, Paul charts a middle course of "faith working through love" and the power of the Holy Spirit (5:5, 6). Thus, not only is justification by faith alone, but so is sanctification.
            Paul variously describes this life of faith as walking in the Spirit (5:16, 25), being "led by the Spirit" (5:18), producing "the fruit of the Spirit" (5:22, 23), and sowing "to the Spirit" (6:8). Concretely, "faith working through love" (5:6) expresses itself in love for neighbors, especially other believers, and in bearing one anther's burdens (5:14; 6:2, 6). The ever-present danger is that rather than relying upon the power of the Spirit, the believer will start displaying the corrupt "works of the flesh." Works can be truly good only when they are accomplished in the power of the Holy Spirit given to those who place the faith in Christ (6:7-10).