EPISTLE TO THE GALATIANS.
INTRODUCTION.
This epistle, unlike the other church epistles of Paul,
is addressed, not to a single congregation dwelling in a city, but to the
churches of a district --"the Galatic Land."
The Roman province of Galatia, lying in the central portion of Asia Minor,
was larger than "the Galatic Land,"
for it included several other districts. The territory of the Galatians
originally belonged to the Phrygians, but certain tribes of Gauls,
as Frenchmen were then called, moved by their restless, conquest-loving spirit,
and by the pressure of rival tribes at home, invaded to the southeastward and
attempted to overrun Greece.
Being repulsed at Delphi, they crossed the Bosphorus, and, after many conflicts, were finally content
to confine themselves to this territory, which, as we see, eventually bore
their name. This occurred about B. C. 279. In B. C. 189 they were
conquered by the Romans, but were still permitted to retain their kings. In
B. C. 25 their self-government was taken away and they became part of the
Roman province which was also named for them. They were divided into three
tribes, each occupying subdistricts, with the cities
of Tavium, Pessinus and Ancyra (now Angora), as their respective capitals, which
last was also capital of the whole Roman province of Galatia.
Though speaking Greek, they also retained their language, so that Jerome leads us
to believe that a Galatian and a Frenchman could have
conversed together with ease as late as the fourth century A. D. Though a
part of the Celtic race, which includes the French, Welsh, Irish and Scotch,
they were Frenchmen, and their characteristics are described by Julius Cæsar, who says: "The infirmity of the Gauls is that they are fickle in their resolves and fond of
change, and not to be trusted." And Thierry speaks of them thus:
"Frank, impetuous, impressible, eminently intelligent, but at the same
[245] time extremely changeable, inconstant, fond of show,
perpetually quarreling, the fruit of excessive
vanity." Paul had planted churches among them and had revisited and
confirmed these churches; but after his departure certain Judaizers
had entered among them, and had persuaded them that becoming Jews was a
condition precedent to their becoming Christians, and hence they could not be
saved without circumcision. Being met by the teaching which the Galatians had
learned from Paul, these Judaizers had felt the
necessity of destroying Paul's influence. They undertook to do this by denying
that he was an apostle, and asserting that he was, if anything, only an
unfaithful messenger of the other apostles. The main purpose, therefore, of
this epistle is to establish the fact that Christianity was a religion
independent of Judaism, and that Paul was an apostle independent of the twelve.
The date of the epistle can not be determined with accuracy, but it was
evidently written sometime during the third missionary tour; for Paul had been
twice in Galatia
when he wrote it, having confirmed the Galatians on his second visit. Compare Acts
16:6; 18:23; Gal. 1:9; 5:21. It has been said that it was written from Ephesus, or Troas, or Macedonia,
or Corinth.
There are several internal evidences which cause us to prefer one or the other
of the two places last named, and to place the date in A. D. 57, in the
short interval between the writing of 2 Corinthians and Romans. The two
Corinthian letters, with Romans and Galatians, if we may judge by their
similarity, were all written at about the same period, and, in fact, the points
of resemblance between these epistles are so many and so striking that to
concede the authenticity of one, is to practically concede that of all. Hence
all four epistles have been recognized as authentic even by Renan
and Baur. For incidental similarities, such as the
mentioning of Damascus
and Titus, compare 2 Cor. 11:32 and Gal. 1:17; 2 Cor. 2:13; 8:16 and Gal. 2:1-3. For verbal similarities,
compare 2 Cor. 10:1-11 and Gal. 4:18, 20; 2 Cor. 12:20, 21 and Gal. 4:19-21; 2 Cor.
9:6 and Gal. 6:7; 2 Cor. 11:2 and Gal 4:17; 2 Cor. 11:20 and Gal. 5:15. The relation between Galatians
and Romans [246] is argumentative, for Paul discussed the
relations of the law and the gospel in each. The relation between 2 Corinthians
and Galatians is personal, for Paul is defending himself against similar
charges in each. For other relations between Galatians and Romans see Rom.
8:14-17 and Gal. 4:6, 7; Rom. 10:5 and Gal. 3:12; Rom. 4:13, 14, 16 and Gal.
3:14, 16, 29; Rom. 11:31 and Gal. 3:22. The epistle may be loosely divided into
three sections of two chapters each, as follows: Part 1--chapters 1 and 2,
Arguments sustaining Paul's gospel and apostolic office. Part 2-- chapters 3
and 4, Justification is by faith in Christ and not by legalism as proved by
Scripture. Part 3--chapters 5 and 6, Exhortations to
steadfastness and faithfulness to Christian duty. The epistle has been
in all ages the stronghold of evangelical Christianity in defending itself
against ecclesiasticism and ritualism of all kinds. It was the favorite book of
Martin Luther, who wrote three commentaries upon it. But Luther strained the
words of Paul and drew from them such extreme conclusions that John Wesley
regarded him as guilty of blasphemy. But the perversions of this precious
epistle in no way militate against it or its proper use. [247]
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