Galatians refers to the New Testament book covering the epistle to Galatians from Saint Paul.
ANOTHER ANSWER:
"Galatians" gets its name from the general region and grouping of cities among which Paul preached and planted God's church. "Halley's Bible Handbook" says this:
"...Galatia
In Central Asia Minor (see Map page 572). Region of Paul's First Missionary Journey. Its borders at times varied. It included the cities of Iconium, Lystra, Derbe, and probably Pisidian Antioch. (Read Acts 13 and 14.)
Galatians were a branch of Gauls, originally from north of the Black Sea, split off from the main migration westward to France, and settled in Asia Minor, 3rd century B.C..." (Halley's Bible Handbook with the King James Version; Classic Edition - Galatians p 608)
In Galatians 3 /10 says we must believe in the work of god and not of men .
In Galatians 3 /10 says we must believe in the work of god and not of men .
Bible, New Testament, Paul's Letter to the Galatians, Chapter 2, Verse 8.
Biblically, there is no special significance to 327. But biblical numerology might have another answer.
Galatians is the ninth book in the New Testament.
The apostle Paul was the author of the Book of Galatians.
The Apostle Paul was sent to the various gentile peoples of which the Galatians were one.
ThenBook of Galatians which is one of 66 books in the Bible was written by Paul
In Paul's letter to the Galatians, Galatians 2:11
The book of Galatians is found in the New Testament.
The book of Galatians was written around 49-55 AD by the apostle Paul.
AnswerPart of the reason for Paul's Epistle to the Galatians seems to be to seek money for the poor in Jerusalem, possibly during the Great Famine of 44-48 CE. At the same time, Paul was very defensive, referring to the Galatians as foolish for listening to other apostles who had been trying to undermine his work. He faced the risk of failing to collect for the Jerusalem Church, as he had promised its leaders (Galatians 2:10), or even of losing his own leadership of the Galatian Church altogether. In fact, the Epistle to the Galatians was preserved by the Galatians and eventually passed down to us, which implies that at least some of the community remained faithful to his version of Christianity.1 Corinthians 16:1 has good news, because it talks of the planned collection of money from the Galatian churches, apparently with some hope of success. Paul mentioned the collection somewhat later in Romans, listing only Macedonia and Achaia (Corinth) as contributing, to the obvious exclusion of the Galatians. There seems little doubt that, in the end, the Galatians did not contribute to Paul's collection. This could mean that the Galatians themselves were suffering too much to be able to contribute, or that some time after 1 Corinthians but before Romans, the Galatians cut their ties with Paul and joined a different branch of Christianity.