Paul, during his eighteen-month stay in Corinth,…
52 CE
Paul, during his eighteen-month stay in Corinth, had met Aquila and Priscilla, who have become faithful believers and help Paul through his other missionary journeys.
The couple has followed Paul and his companions to Ephesus, and remain there to start one of the strongest and most faithful churches of this age.
As the founder of Gentile Christianity, Paul writes the Epistle to the Galatians to counter the influence of the Judaizers active in the Galatian church.
In Galatians, Paul contends that for the Galatians to accept the law as required for salvation is to repudiate the Holy Spirit they have already received through faith in Christ, and to return to spiritual slavery.
Since the council of church leaders at Jerusalem, conflict has continued between the Judaizers and with other missionaries, as well as by internal disputes between rival factions in his churches.
No original of the letter is known to survive.
The earliest reasonably complete version available to scholars today, named P46, dates to approximately the year 200 CE, approximately one hundred and fifty years after the original was presumably drafted.
This fragmented papyrus, parts of which are missing, almost certainly contains errors introduced in the process of being copied from earlier manuscripts.
However, through careful research relating to paper construction, handwriting development, and the established principles of textual criticism, scholars can be rather certain about where these errors and changes appeared and what the original text probably said.
Scholars generally date the original composition to around 50-60 CE.
Biblical scholars agree that Galatians is a true example of Paul's writing.
The main arguments in favor of the authenticity of Galatians include its style and themes, which are common to the core letters of the Pauline corpus.
Moreover, Paul's description of the Council of Jerusalem (Gal 2:1–10) gives a different point of view from the description in Acts 15:2–29.
The central dispute in the letter concerns the question of how Gentiles could convert to Christianity, which shows that this letter was written at a very early stage in church history, when the vast majority of Christians were Jewish or Jewish proselytes, which historians refer to as the Jewish Christians.
Another indicator that the letter is early is that there is no hint in the letter of a developed organization within the Christian community at large.
This puts it during the lifetime of Paul himself.
Biblical scholars agree that Galatians was written between the late 40s and early 50s.