
Galatians 1.1-5 KWL 1 The apostle Paul—- not sent by people nor through people’s agency,
- but by Christ Jesus,
- and by God the Father
- who raised him from those who are dead—
2 and all the Christian brethren with me,- to the churches of Galatia.
3 Grace to you all, and peace- from God our Father,
- and from master Christ Jesus—
4 Jesus who gave himself for our sins- so he might pluck us from the present, evil age,
- consistent with the will of God our Father—
- 5 glory to Jesus in the age of ages, amen!
No doubt Paul of Tarsus wrote hundreds of letters over his lifetime, but we only have 13 of them in the New Testament. All of them were written within about 15 years:
- Paul was still “a young man”
Ac 7.58 —what we’d today call a teenager—when Stephen was killed, and became a Christian shortly after that. This happened within a year after Jesus’s death and rapture in 33, so figure around then. - After this he went to Arabia (probably Mt. Sinai) about three years; then went to Jerusalem to see the apostles.
Ga 1.18 Figure the years 33 to 36. - Then to Syria and Cilicia for 14 years,
Ga 2.1 during which time he got to know Barnabas, got involved in the Antioch church, and went on what’s popularly called his “first missionary journey.” Figure 36 to 50. - Then Barnabas, Paul, and Titus went to
the Council of Jerusalem in the year 50. - Ultimately Paul was arrested, tried, and beheaded during the Neronian persecution—round the year 65.
It’s a rough timeline, but you get the gist. Paul’s two earliest letters were both written after the Council of Jerusalem: Galatians makes reference to the council and its aftermath, and 1 Timothy was co-written by Timothy,
Anyway. Today I’m picking apart Galatians’s introduction, which was written Roman-style: Whom it’s from, whom it’s to, and salutations. Letters were written on papyrus (’cause parchment, i.e. sheepskin, is expensive!) and ink tends to bleed through, so rather than write the address on the outside of the scroll, Romans put it at the top and permitted people to unroll the scroll just enough to see the addressee. Paul, taking advantage of the fact just about anyone might read this, threw in a lot of Christian stuff. It’s never just “Paul to Timothy,” or “Paul to the church of Cilicia,” but “Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus,” or “Paul, to the church of God the Father and our master Christ Jesus.” Evangelists gotta evangelize.