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Introduction
to the Book of Galatians
I.
Writer
Paul the apostle (Gal. 1:1; 5:2; 6:11).
According to the records of
the Bible
Paul was Saul previously (Acts. 13:9) and he was an Israelite
of tribe of Benjamin (
II.
The Recipients
To
the church in
III.
The Time and Location the Book was Written
Paul mentioned that he came to
From the contents of this
book and the book of Romans
probably these two books were written in one
period. The book of Galatians should be written before the book of Romans
because the words in the book of Romans were more detailed. The book of Romans
was written about A.D. 56-57 before Paul arrived at
IV.
The Background
After Paul went to the south
1) they defamed Paul and questioned his
ministry of apostleship.
2) they held that the Gentiles should be
circumcised and Judaised and then they shall be saved.
3) they opposed Paul that he only preached
grace and did not preach the law. They emphasized that men had to pay attention
to behaviors beyond grace and they agitated Christians to keep the Jewish
ceremonies and regulations.
These churches had shallow knowledge of
the truth. They actually accepted the statements of the Judaizers and held that
they won’t be saved unless they kept the circumcision and the Law of Moses.
When Paul went to Greece on his third
journey
some people told him that how the Judaizers misled them and the
churches in Galatia hesitated. And then Paul wrote this book to guide
encourage them and make them abandon the wrongness and return to the truth. And
it is the book of Galatians.
V.
Special Points
1) There aren’t words of praise. In the other
epistles of Paul
he always praised the good points of the recipients first.
2) There aren’t words of thanksgiving. Paul
was accustomed to giving thanks to God for the recipients and Paul even thanked
God for the church in
3) The words are quite sharp-pointed. The terms in
the book were quite frank and Paul denounced them relentlessly. He accused
those who preached the heresy and he would they were even cut off (Gal. 1:8-9;
5:12).
4) The letter that Paul had written with his own
hand was large (Gal. 6:11).
5) This book is the sharp weapon to deal with those
who insisted on the law.
VI.
General Description
The three themes of this book:
1) It guides men how to have freedom------only rely
on the pure Christ’s gospel which God reveals (Gal. 1).
2) It tells men the good pointes of having freedom:
a. One does not need to be circumcised if he has
freedom (Gal. 2:1-10).
b. One should not follow the life style of the Jews
if he has freedom (Gal. 2:11-21).
c. One is not restrained by the law if he has
freedom (Gal. 3-4).
3) It tells men how to enjoy the freedom that they
have:
a. Do not use liberty as an opportunity for the
flesh (Gal.5:1-6:10).
b. Deal with the old men by cross and be a new
creation (Gal. 6:11-18).
VII.
It’s Relations with Other Books in the Bible
1) This book and the book of Romans: the
salvation is both talked about in these two books and one is primary and the
other is secondary
just as the book of Ephesians and the book of Colossians in
which Christ and the church are discussed. Justification is both mentioned in
these two books and the contents of the two books are similar. However
the
book of Galatians is quite simple and the book of Romans
abundant. The book of
Galatians is to restrain the present baneful influence and the book of Romans
is to prevent the prospective baneful influence. These two books are the bases
of the religious doctrines of Christianity and they are quite important.
2) This book and the
book of Hebrews: these two books have many similar points:
a. the
similar aim: the aim of this book is to save them from falling from grace (Gal.
5:4) and the aim of the book of Hebrews is to save them from losing God’s grace
(Heb. 12:15).
b. the
similar objects: this book is written to the churches that were confused by
Judaism and the book of Hebrews is written to the churches who had not fully
departed from Judaism and wanted to returned to Judaism.
c. the
scriptures that are quoted are similar: “the just shall live by faith” (Gal.
3:11; Heb. 10:38).
d. the
similar title: the law is talked about in these two books; however
the
recipients of this book are the Gentile believers and therefore grace is spoken
earlier than the Law. And the recipients of the book of Hebrews are the Jewish
believers and therefore the law is spoken earlier than grace.
e. the
similar content: in these two books the author both mentioned “
f. the
heresies that are talked about in these two books are similar: a different
gospel is discussed in this book and the different teachings are discussed in
the book of Hebrews. It is written in this book that the heretical ones changed
the Lord’s gospel (Gal. 1:17) and it is written in the book of Hebrews that the
gospel is better than the law of the Old Testament (Heb. 9:11). It is discussed
in this book that we should not fall from grace and it is written in the book
of Hebrews that there remains no more sacrifice for sins if one departs from
the Lord. It is written in this book that the freedom of the truth of the
gospel is not restrained or controlled by Judaism and the advantages of the New
Testament is talked in the book of Hebrews. It is written in this book that men
are misled because of ignorance and it is written in the book of Hebrews that
believers who do not make progress are babies. Judaism is called the elements
in both books (Gal. 4:3; Heb. 5:12).
VIII.
Key Verses
“I
have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live
but Christ lives
in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of
God
who loved me and gave Himself for me” (Gal. 2:20).
“Stand fast therefore
in the liberty by which Christ has made us free
and do not be entangled again
with a yoke of bondage.” (Gal. 5:1).
IX.
Key Words
“Law” is used thirty-one
times; “flesh” is used eighteen times; “the Holy Spirit is used twenty-two
times; “faith” is used twenty-two times; “freedom” is used eleven times;
“promise” is used ten times; “justification” is used six times.
X.
Outlines of the Book
I. Paul defended for his apostleship and the authority
to preach the gospel of grace:
A.
Paul’s apostleship was not from men but from God (Gal. 1:1-5).
B.
Some people preached a different gospel that was different from what Paul
preached (Gal. 1:6-10).
C. The
gospel that Paul preached was of God’s revelation and it was not according to
men (Gal. 1:11-24).
D. The
gospel that Paul preached was proved by all apostles (Gal. 2:1-10).
E.
Paul was faithful to the gospel that he preached and stood fast (Gal. 2:11-21).
II. Paul restated the contents of the gospel of grace
and verified that grace is the only way to be saved:
A. The
experience that the Galatians were saved proved that the gospel is
justification (Gal. 3:1-5).
B. The
fact that Abraham was justified by faith proved that the gospel was of God
(Gal. 3:6-14).
C.
God’s covenant of promise was before the law and it proved that one receives
grace not by keeping the law (Gal. 3:15-22).
D. The
convention that babies cannot inherit the inheritance proved that the law was
only the herald of the gospel (Gal. 3:23-4:11).
E. The
situation that the Galatians were saved proved that they had received Christ by
faith (Gal. 4:12-20).
F. The
two covenants that were typified by Sara and Hagar proved that believers of the
covenant of grace were born by promise (Gal. 4:21-31).
III. Paul pointed out the result of the gospel of grace
that makes men depart from the control of the law and live freely in grace:
A. In
Christ neither circumcision nor uncircumcision avails anything (Gal. 5:1-5).
B.
Believers walk in the Spirit instead of the flesh and therefore they are not
under the law (Gal. 5:16-26).
C.
Only when men do good by the Spirit will the law of Christ be fulfilled (Gal.
6:1-10).
D. We
should be a new creation and only boast the cross of Christ (Gal. 6:11-18).
──
Caleb Huang《Christian Digest Bible
Commentary Series》
Translated by Sharon Ren