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												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.
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