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This section of Galatians is part of Paul's defense of his ministry and message which begun in chapter 1 verse 11:

1:11, 12 The apostle presents six arguments in defense of his message and ministry. First, the gospel was received by divine revelation and independently of man.

1:13, 14 Secondly, Paul's failure to include Jewish law in his gospel could not be laid to any ignorance of Judaism on his part.

1:15-17 Thirdly, the first few years of his ministry were carried on independently of the other apostles.

1:18-20 Fourthly, when Paul finally visited Jerusalem, he met only Peter and James.

2:1-10 Fifthly, during Paul's later visit to Jerusalem, the apostles there agreed that his gospel was divine.

Paul is defending his message against Jewish Christians who were being influenced by Juaizers who said Christians must be circumcised. In 2:1-10 Paul took Barnabas and Titus with him to Jerusalem. There Paul explained the message that he preached to the gentiles and presented Titus as an example of a gentile Christian. The apostles recognised that Titus was genuinely saved and did not force him to be circumcised. The Judaizers who said Paul's message was watered down were countered also others who were trying to imposed legalism on Christian were also silenced. The apostle recognised Paul's apostleship as equal to theirs and that God had called Paul to a ministry among the gentiles.

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Q: What point is Paul trying to make in Galatians two one through ten?
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Where is it in the Bible where Saint Peter and St. Paul disagree?

In Paul's letter to the Galatians, Galatians 2:11


The author of the book of Galatians?

The apostle Paul was the author of the Book of Galatians.


What did Paul tell the Galatians about the way to obtain salvation and righteousness?

The apostle Paul wrote with strong conviction about the provision for salvation that God had made through Jesus Christ. Also in his letter to the Galatians, he wrote: "The Law has become our tutor leading to Christ, that we might be declared righteous due to faith." (Galatians 3:24)


What was Paul's tone in Galatians?

Paul's tone in Galatians could be described as passionate, stern, and urgent. He was addressing the issue of the Galatians turning away from the gospel message, and he expressed strong emotions in order to correct and warn them.


Who founded the church at Galatians?

The Apostle Paul was sent to the various gentile peoples of which the Galatians were one.


Who wrote the Galatians holy Bible?

ThenBook of Galatians which is one of 66 books in the Bible was written by Paul


What is the theme of ephesians?

Paul was correcting wrong thinking that had quickly developed in the congregations of Galatia(Galatians 1:6). Certain Jews were trying to teach that circumcision (and other facets of the Law) were still required among Christians and Paul was reprimanding congregation members for being influenced by their false teachings(Galatians 2:15-3:14; 4:9+10) These ' false brothers', called 'Judaizers', were sly and concerned with their own interests (Acts 15:1/Galatians 2:4). Pretending to represent the congregation in Jerusalem, they discredited Paul and wanted the Christians to get circumcised(Galatians 4:17), to try and stop Jewish persecution of Christians. Paul wrote to the Galatians to remind them that they were no longer under the Mosaic Law(Galatians 2:15-21)(Galatians 1:6-9/Galatians 5:1-12/Galatians 6:12-16), but that they were acceptable to God because of their FAITH in the good news about Jesus (Galatians 3:1-5)(Galatians 4:1-7), and that the 'true sons of Abraham' were those with FAITH like Abraham's (Galatians 3:6-9+26-29).


What happened after Paul wrote the letter to the Galatians?

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.


Why does Paul say to the Galatians that Jesus was clearly portrayed as crucified before their very eyes?

A:Galatians 2:21-3:2 (NAB): "I do not nullify the grace of God; for if justification comes through the law, then Christ died for nothing. O stupid Galatians! Who has bewitched you, before whose eyes Jesus Christ was publicly portrayed as crucified? I want to learn only this from you: did you receive the Spirit from works of the law, or from faith in what you heard?"Paul is trying to convince the Galatians that justification comes from faith and not from obedience to the ancient Jewish laws on circumcision and diet, because of Christ's death. In case the Galatians doubt whether Christ really had died by crucifixion, verse 3:1 says that the evidence for the crucifixion has been publicly set forth and seen by the Galatians - in other words that they had read about the crucifixion. The evidence of which Paul speaks was certainly not one of the gospels, as they had not yet been written, but Paul expects the Christians of Galatia to believe it.


What does galatians 2 8 mean?

Bible, New Testament, Paul's Letter to the Galatians, Chapter 2, Verse 8.


Where did the saying rob from peter to pay paul come from?

Galatians


Why did St. Paul write the letter to the Galatians?

Paul wrote to the Galatians in order to correct the false teachings which had arisen with regard to the observance of the Law. It explains the concept of justification by grace through faith and how this is applied.