PREFACE
The epistle was written, not as
most of St. Paul’s epistles are,
to the Christians of a
particular city, but to those of
a whole country, called
Galatians, as being the
descendants of those Gauls who,
finding their own country too
strait for them, left it, after
the death of Alexander the
Great, in quest of new
settlements. A body of these,
proceeding eastward along the
Danube, entered Thrace, and
passed over the Bosphorus into
the Lesser Asia; in the middle
of which they settled, namely,
in a country given them by
Nicomedes, king of Bithynia, in
reward of their assisting him to
subdue his brother Zipetes, with
whom he was at war. This
country, afterward called from
them, “Gallo-Gręcia,” or
“Galatia,” was bounded on the
west by Phrygia, on the north by
Paphlagonia, on the east by the
river Halys, and on the south by
Lycaonia. It anciently contained
twenty-two noted cities, the
principal of which was Ancyra.
About A.M. 3824 the Romans
ravaged Galatia, and about A.D.
25 it was reduced, with some
places adjacent, into a Roman
province. The inland situation
of this country preventing its
inhabitants from having much
intercourse with more civilized
nations, the Gauls, who settled
in it, continued long a rude and
illiterate people, speaking the
language of the country from
whence they came. So Jerome, who
lived six hundred years after
that people settled themselves
in Asia, informs us; observing,
that in his time the language of
the Galatians was the same with
that which he had heard spoken
when he was at Treves, or Triers.
It is probable the gospel was
first introduced into Galatia by
Paul, and that about A.D. 53;
(see Acts 16:6;) when passing
through that country, he was
received with great affection by
the inhabitants thereof, and
made the instrument of
converting many of them from
heathenism to Christianity, and
of planting several churches
among them, called, in the
inscription of this letter, the
“churches of Galatia.” These
churches, when he visited those
parts again in his next
progress, about A.D. 56, he had
an opportunity of confirming in
the doctrine he had before
taught them, Acts 18:23;
Galatians 4:13-15. But, from the
contents of this epistle, it
appears that not long after he
had preached the gospel with
such success to them, and had
left them, certain Judaizing
zealots came among them, and,
like those mentioned Acts 15.,
taught that it was necessary
they should be circumcised, and
should observe the whole ritual
law of Moses, in order to their
salvation. What these false
teachers seem to have chiefly
aimed at was to draw the
Galatian believers from the
truth as it is in Jesus, with
respect to the great doctrine of
justification, which they
grossly perverted. And the
better to accomplish their
design, they did all they could
to lessen the character and
reputation of St. Paul as an
apostle, and to raise theirs on
the ruins of his; representing
him as one who, if he was to be
acknowledged as an apostle, yet
was much inferior to the others,
and particularly to Peter,
James, and John, whose
followers, it is likely, they
pretended to be; and who, they
affirmed, inculcated the
necessity of circumcision, and
the observance of the Mosaic
ceremonies as they did; nay, and
that St. Paul himself sometimes
both practised and recommended
these rites, though at other
times he opposed them.
The first part, therefore, of
this epistle is employed by the
apostle in vindicating himself
and his doctrine; proving, 1.
That he had it immediately from
Christ himself, and that he was
not inferior to the other
apostles; 2. That it. was the
very same which the other
apostles preached; and, 3. That
his practice was consistent with
his doctrine. In the second part
he produces proofs from the Old
Testament, that the law and all
its ceremonies were abolished by
Christ. The third part contains
practical inferences, closed
with his usual benediction. To
be a little more particular: the
epistle contains, I. The
inscription, Galatians 1:1-5.
II. The calling of the Galatians
back to the true gospel; wherein
He, 1. Reproves them for leaving
it, Galatians 1:6-10. 2. Asserts
the authority of the gospel he
had preached, who of a
persecutor was made an apostle
by an immediate call from
Heaven; (Galatians 1:11-17;) and
was no way inferior to Peter
himself, Galatians 1:18 —
Galatians 2:21. 3. He defends
justification by faith, and
again reproves the Galatians,
Galatians 3:1 to Gal_4:11. 4.
Explains the same things by an
allegory, taken out of the law
itself, Galatians 4:12-31. 5.
Exhorts them to maintain their
liberty; (Galatians 5:1-12;)
warns them not to abuse it, and
admonishes them to walk not
after the flesh, but after the
Spirit, Galatians 5:13 —
Galatians 6:10. III. The
conclusion, Galatians 6:11-18.
As to the time when this epistle
was written, we may infer from
chap. Galatians 1:6, where the
apostle expresses to the
Galatians his concern and wonder
that they were so soon perverted
from the doctrine he had
preached, that it must have been
written not long after he had
been among them; and as no hint
is given, through the whole of
it, that when he wrote it he had
been with them more than once,
it is most reasonable to
conclude that it was written
before his second journey to
Galatia, mentioned Acts 18:23,
and consequently not later than
A.D. 56. to them, not only by
giving them his apostolical
benediction, but by calling them
brethren; and, as Dr. Macknight
observes, by making that
appellation (for so it is in the
original) the last word of his
letter, except the word Amen. |