Date and Provenance
1 G. S. Duncan considers this a question of first-rate importance “for the exegesis of the Epistle, for our answer to it will determine our view of the circumstances in which the apostle was placed when he wrote this great letter, of the stage he had reached in his thinking and missionary activity, and of the development of that opposition which pursued him throughout all his ministry” (Galatians xxi-xxii).
2 While this meaning is favored in BAGD, the observation is made that from a lexical point of view “it is not poss[ible] to establish the thesis that Paul wished to differentiate betw[een] a later visit and an earlier one” (722).
3 Based on K. L. Moore’s A Critical Introduction to the NT (pp. 37-48), whereas an even earlier date (ca. 48-49) is often proposed by those who follow a different chronology (see, e.g., M. C. Tenney, NT Survey [Rev.] 270-71).
5 J. B. Lightfoot points out the striking coincidences of geography, time, participants, subject of dispute, character of the conference, and results (Epistles of St. Paul: Galatians 123-28). For arguments against equating Gal. 2 with Acts 15, see G. S. Duncan, Galatians xxii-xxvi. For responses to these arguments, see J. M. Boice, Galatians 10:418-20.
6 To contend that “the visit in Galatians 2:1 was only Paul’s second visit” (G. L. Borchert, Galatians 250) is to read too much into the apostle’s statement. The text simply says: “then after fourteen years …” This does not necessarily exclude another prior visit, particularly if it were unrelated to the issue at hand.
7 That Paul went there “according to a revelation” and then had a private meeting with certain leaders (Gal. 2:1-2) is not at variance with the Acts 15 meeting. Paul did not specify the means through which the revelation was received, and the Antioch church that sent him and Barnabas had prophets among its leadership (Acts 13:1; 15:2-3). Moreover, the time spent in Jerusalem could easily have included both private and public discussions (cf. Acts 15:4, 6).
8 See esp. J. B. Lightfoot, Epistles of St Paul: Galatians 40-56; C. Kruse, Second Corinthians 45-48; H. Boers, Justification of the Gentiles 241-303; F. O. Francis and J. P. Sampley, Pauline Parallels 5-32.
9 Another interesting factor is the opening address of Galatians, which describes the churches geographically (“of Galatia”), similar to the earlier Thessalonian letters (1 Thess. 1:1; 2 Thess. 1:1).
10 At the time of writing Paul could say, “for I bear the marks of Jesus in my body” (Gal. 6:17). This would be indicative of his sufferings to date: (a) persecutions (incl. stoning) during his initial visit to southern Galatia: at Antioch, at Iconium, and at Lystra (2 Tim. 3:11; cf. Acts 13:45–14:22); (b) beating and imprisonment at Philippi (Acts 16:23-37); (c) further maltreatment in Macedonia and Achaia (Acts 17:5-14; 18:12-18); and (d) continued affliction during his three-years’ ministry at Ephesus (Acts 19:23–20:19; 1 Cor. 4:9-13; 15:32; cf. Gal. 5:11).
11 R. Riesner dismisses this (provenance and date) conclusion because, he argues, Paul wanted to be present with the Galatian brethren (Gal. 4:20) and the conventional view dating Galatians during Paul’s Ephesian ministry “cannot persuasively explain why Paul did not undertake the visit” (Paul’s Early Period 394-95, cf. 290-91). However, something kept Paul in Ephesus for three years (Acts 20:31; 1 Cor. 16:9)—he could not be everywhere at once—and there were other pressing matters that demanded his attention (1 Cor. 4:18-21; 15:32; 16:5-9; cf. Rom. 15:22). Moreover, he may not have wanted to personally visit the “senseless Galatians” while he was so upset with them (cf. 2 Cor. 1:27; 2:1). For alternative dates (both earlier and later), see B. Reicke, Re-examining Paul’s Letters 13-15; M. C. Tenney, NT Survey (Rev.) 267-73; G. S. Duncan, Galatians xxi-xxxii.
12 Scholars debate as to whether the Judaizers in Galatia were ethnic Jews or Gentile proselytes. Based on Gal. 5:12, B. D. Ehrman proposes the latter, commenting, “Paul hopes that when they perform the operation of circumcision on themselves, the knife slips” (The NT: Historical Introduction [4th ed.] 341; cf. L. M. White, From Jesus to Christianity 199-201). J. D. G. Dunn points out that the repeated use of the present tense in Galatians (1:6; 4:9-10, 21; 5:2-4; 6:12) “indicates an on-going crisis, with increasing numbers succumbing to the new teaching” (Theology of Galatians 9 n. 11).
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