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			 Galatians 1 
			Apostolic Address and Greeting 
				(Gal 1:1-5) 
			Galatians 1:1 
			"Paul, an apostle (not from men, neither through man, but through 
			Jesus Christ, and God the Father, who raised him from the dead)," 
			False teachers were at 
			work in the Lord's church.  Certain Jewish Christians were 
			sneaking around behind Paul and subverting his teachings by 
			attacking his validity as an Apostle based on the fact that he was 
			not an eyewitness of Jesus during his earthly ministry.  Jesus 
			did appear to Paul on his trip to Damascus on the day of his 
			conversion, nevertheless, Paul's opponents were neglecting that fact 
			and using whatever means they could to discredit him in the eyes of 
			the members of the congregations he was working with.  
			 
			With this said, Paul 
			begins his letter by immediately declaring who he is and stating his 
			position as an apostle if Christ.  He then goes on to say that 
			his appointment was not from men, nor through men in any way.  
			His position as an apostle came directly through Jesus Christ and 
			God the Father.  Paul's authority to write this epistle came 
			from the highest source and he wanted his readership to understand 
			that immediately.  And as an apostle acting under the authority 
			of Jesus Christ and God the Father, what he was about to communicate 
			to them was the word of God and coming directly from the top.  
			He was not acting under the authority of men, nor did his gospel 
			come from men, including the original twelve apostles.  Paul's 
			teaching was coming directly from the head of all authority and he 
			wanted to make sure his readership understood that first. 
			Galatians 1:2  
			"and all the brethren that are with me, unto the churches of 
			Galatia:" 
			 
			Paul's reference to the brethren who were with me was probably meant 
			to convey the assurance that Paul was not just a lone voice out 
			there crying in the wilderness with no approval.  While himself 
			an apostle and speaking under the direct authority of Jesus Christ, 
			it still serves to reinforce one's position when it is known by the 
			readership that there are other Christians who put their stamp of 
			approval on it.  Paul's reference to the brethren who were with 
			him infers their support of his epistle.   
			"unto the churches of 
			Galatia" 
			The recipients of this 
			letter were all the Christians in all the congregations that were in 
			the Roman province of Galatia.  At the time of this writing 
			this included all of the original Galatia and including parts of 
			Paphlagonia, Pontus, Phrygia, Pisidia, Lycaonia, and Isauria.  
			Some of the Galatian congregations are mentioned in scripture being 
			Antioch, Iconium, Lystra and Derbe.  It is not known with any 
			certainty exactly how many congregations there were not the 
			identities of them all, but Luke made mention of the extent of 
			Paul's missionary work in Galatia in Acts 18:23, "And after he 
			[Paul] had spent some time there, he departed, and went over all the 
			country of Galatia and Phrygia in order, strengthening all the 
			disciples."  Paul's evangelical work in Galatia was if a 
			considerable scope.   
			In view of the scale of 
			Paul's work in Galatia, it can be inferred that the addressing of 
			this epistle to all of the congregations in Galatia is an indicator 
			of just how broad the scope of the Judaizing influence really was.  
			The crisis threatening the church was not in any way confined to a 
			small number of Christians.  This problem was far reaching and 
			was affecting a considerable number of Christians.  Left 
			unchecked, this Judaizing movement threatened the very existence of 
			the Lord's church on a world wide scale.   
			Galatians 1:3  
			"Grace to you and peace from God the Father, and our Lord Jesus 
			Christ," 
			It was customary for 
			Paul to pray for God's favor to be extended to his readership.  
			This was expression of kindness on the part of Paul and served to 
			comfort his readership with the reassurance of God's grace.  
			Grace is sometimes defined as God's beneficial disposition towards 
			man.  Grace is a comprehensive Biblical term which represents 
			all that God did in reaching down to fallen man with an alternative 
			to the condemnation man faced because of his sin.  Man did 
			nothing to deserve God's grace, can never earn it and can never 
			repay the cost God incurred as a result of His grace.  The 
			personal cost to God was quite simply more than man can hope to 
			repay.  God's grace is given freely and flows from His vast 
			capacity for love and mercy.   
			God's grace is also one 
			of the most misunderstood results of God's loving and merciful 
			nature.  It is supposed by many in the religious world claiming 
			Christ as savior that the fact that God's grace can not be earned, 
			payed for, nor deserved releases man from the obligation to obey 
			God's will.  If God's grace were not conditional upon obedience 
			to His will, then every person who ever lived on the face of the 
			earth would be saved whether a believer or not and Paul completely 
			wasted his time in even writing this epistle.  If there were no 
			conditions attached to the reception of God's grace, then the 
			churches in Galatia were in no danger from the Judaizers and the 
			Judaizers were in no danger either which is abundantly denied by the 
			inspired words of the beloved apostle Paul in this very epistle.  
			Paul flatly stated in Galatians 5:4 that those who sought 
			justification through the law, meaning the law of Moses, fall from 
			grace.  The Hebrew writer instructed his readership to be 
			diligent lest they "fail of the grace of God".  If God's 
			grace were not conditional, it would not be possible to fall from or 
			fail of it and any warning against such a thing would be nonsense.   
			 
			"peace from God the 
			Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ" 
			The Greek word rendered 
			“peace” (eirënë) is the equivalent of the Heb. shalom, a greeting 
			exchanged by Jewish people from of old. Shalom stands for 
			well-being, wholeness and prosperity in every realm of life.  
			Paul extends his hope of peace from God the Father and Jesus Christ.  
			Peace with God is recognized as being synonymous with fellowship 
			with Him.  Those who are in Christ and walking in the light 
			(living faithfully) are not in rebellion to God and therefore at 
			peace with Him.  It is Paul's earnest wish for God's peace to 
			be with the churches of Galatia.   
			Galatians 1:4 
			"who gave himself for our sins, that he might deliver us out of 
			this present evil world, according to the will of our God and 
			Father:" 
			Jesus being quoted here 
			in John 10:11, "I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd layeth 
			down his life for the sheep".  The fact that Jesus gave his 
			life as a willing sacrifice in order to pay the penalty of death for 
			our sin is the single most important event in the entire plan of 
			redemption.  Without that sacrifice, no man has any hope 
			whatsoever for reconciliation to God.  It is our sin which 
			separated us from God (Isaiah 59:2).  God is absolutely just 
			(Isaiah 45:21), and his righteous nature demands a just penalty for 
			our transgressions against Him.  The wages of sin is death 
			(Romans 6:23), there is no other penalty, there is no less penalty 
			than death.  Since our sin renders our lives forfeit, our lives 
			are worthless as a sacrifice, even if we were to repent and live our 
			lives perfectly.  Jesus, who was innocent, willingly sacrificed 
			His life to pay the penalty we owe for our own transgressions.  
			He offered His life for ours, thereby paying our sin debt. 
			 
			Jesus taught this during 
			His earthly ministry, (Matthew 20:28; 26:28, Mark 10:45, Luke 22:19, 
			John 10:11; 10:17-18). 
			And this fact was 
			testified of by the inspired writers (Romans 4:25, Galatians 2:20, 
			Ephesians 5:2, 1 Timothy 2:6, Titus 2:14, Hebrews 9:14, 1 Peter 
			2:24; 3:18, 1 John 2:2; 3:16, Revelation 1:5). 
			Of significance here is 
			the fact that Paul made this sacrifice a personal thing in Galatians 
			2:20 when he penned the words "and gave himself up for me".  
			The sacrifice offered by Jesus was indeed for all of mankind, but it 
			was also for each individual as well.  And when we consider the 
			enormity of Christ's sacrifice we must keep in mind that while the 
			scope of His sacrifice was as big an human kind, it was also as 
			specific to each and every one of us.  Christ died to save 
			mankind and we must never lose sight of the magnitude of that 
			sacrifice.  Christ also died to save each and every one of us 
			and we must never lose sight of the fact that He died for each one 
			of us specifically.  His death for us was personal, His 
			sacrifice for us was personal, and our sin made it necessary for Him 
			to die if we are to have a hope of reconciliation to God the Father. 
			Christ died for Paul.  He died for the serial killer and the 
			rapist.  He died for the rich and poor alike.  He died for 
			you and He died for me.  It was our sin that put Him on the 
			cross.  We are as responsible for the death of Christ as those 
			who screamed "crucify Him" the night of His murder.  We 
			are as individually responsible for His death as the ones who spat 
			on Him and mocked Him.  We are as guilty of His murder as those 
			who drove the spikes through Him into that cross.   
			 
			And it is a gracious and 
			loving God who accepted the death of His Son at the hands of man for 
			the sins of man.  Likewise it is a merciful, gracious and 
			loving God who accepted the death of His innocent Son at the hands 
			of each one of us in order to pay the penalty we owe.  We 
			sinned and incurred the penalty of death.  Jesus who knew no 
			sin died at our hands and God accepted that sacrifice as payment for 
			our transgression.   When we as individual Christians come 
			to the realization that it for us personally that Christ died, we 
			are on the path to understanding the awfulness of sin and the 
			overwhelming love it took for Jesus to do what He did on that cross. 
			Paul understood it and 
			made that distinction when he made it personal.  2 Corinthians 
			9:15, "Thanks be to God for his unspeakable gift." 
			 
			"according to the will of our God and Father" 
			Paul makes sure his 
			readership understands that God the Father is the one who is the 
			supreme authority in the affairs of the Godhood.  It is 
			recorded that Jesus Christ is in authority over all things to the 
			church (Ephesians 1:22), and over all the earthly powers (Colossians 
			1:16-17) as well.  Jesus Christ's authority is supreme, both in 
			Heaven and on Earth (Matthew 28:18) but God the Father is the head 
			over Jesus Christ (1 Corinthians 11:3).  Therefore all things 
			are according to the will of God the Father through Jesus Christ who 
			Himself is God (Acts 20:27).     
			Galatians 1:5 
			"to whom 
			(be) the glory for ever and ever. Amen." 
			To God be the Glory from 
			everlasting to everlasting.  And He is worthy of the glory.  
			We serve a God who is absolutely just, right and fair.  He is 
			holy, incapable of sin, incapable of being tempted, incapable of 
			failure.  He is omnipotent, and omniscient and last but 
			certainly not least, He is love indescribable.   
			God's absolutely just 
			nature demands punishment for sin and only one punishment.  The 
			wages of sin is death.  There is no partiality with God when it 
			comes to sin.   
			God's absolutely 
			merciful nature compelled Him to take pity on fallen man.  God 
			wanted to provide man with a way to be forgiven but God's absolutely 
			just nature would not allow Him to forgive man's sin without the 
			penalty.  The penalty of death is owed for sin, therefore the 
			penalty of death had to be paid.  So God, wanting to be 
			merciful and give man a chance to be forgiven, came up with a plan 
			where He would pay that penalty Himself.  This was accomplished 
			by one of the members of the Godhead taking on the form of man and 
			coming to earth to live as a man.  He gave up His heavenly 
			abode and willingly came down here to live with sinful man.  In 
			the end, He was rejected and murdered and God the Father accepted 
			the murder of His Son at the hands of men as the penalty all mankind 
			owed for sin.  That single sacrifice of God the Christ is the 
			single most important event in all of man's history.  That 
			willing sacrifice came about as a result of God's enormous capacity 
			for love and mercy.  Without that selfless sacrifice, all 
			mankind from Adam until the end would be doomed to everlasting 
			separation from God.   
			God did not have to do 
			this.  He would have been well within His rights to have simply 
			let mankind perish.  Mankind did nothing to deserve God's 
			gracious offer of redemption, cannot earn it and certainly cannot 
			pay for it in any way.  God could have simply washed His hands 
			of the whole affair and left mankind to his well deserved fate.  
			But God did not do that, rather, God sacrificed of Himself so that 
			man could have a chance for redemption.   
			God deserves and is 
			worthy of our 
			respect, our honor and our reverence.   He is deserving of glory for 
			what He accomplished for our behalf.  Even though we live 
			forever in His presence and hail his glory throughout eternity we 
			will never have honored Him sufficiently for what He did for us.  
			And on the other side, those who fail of His grace, even though they 
			endure the fiery condemnation of Hell for all eternity, they will 
			never, with their suffering fully pay the just penalty for their 
			sin.  God deserves our best, both in the life and the one to 
			come.  He is worthy of our highest esteem and honor.  Let 
			us glorify Him with our obedient service and praise.  Paul rightly puts the 
			honor and glory where it is due.    
			Paul's Vigorous Rebuke 
			Because of Their Apostasy (Gal 1:6-10). 
			Galatians 1:6  
			"I marvel that ye are 
			so quickly removing from him that called you in the grace of Christ 
			unto a different gospel" 
			Paul wastes no time in 
			getting to the point of his epistle.  He is distressed and 
			astounded at the ease of the apostasy of the Galatian Christians.  
			It is obvious that Paul has been informed of it while away from the 
			area and chose to write them a letter about it.  Judaizers 
			intent on binding the old law on Christian converts had been going 
			behind Paul's back and teaching the Gentiles that it was necessary 
			for them to be identified as a Jew first in order to be a Christian.  
			They felt that the way to Christ was only through the Jews and that 
			Gentiles had to undergo the steps of proselytization before becoming 
			a Christian.  Circumcision was the outward provable mark of 
			Jewish identity so it was this which was used to refer to the 
			conversion process of Gentile to Jew.  There were more 
			requirements than just circumcision, but this term was used to 
			represent all of what the Judaizers were requiring of the Gentile 
			converts. 
			When one considers the 
			political and social state of a Gentile convert to Christianity, it 
			is easy to surmise why they would be quick to accept such a thing.  
			People of Jewish descent had a nationality with which to associate 
			themselves.  They had a support group so to speak.  
			Gentiles who became Christians were ostracized from society and 
			rejected by the Jewish Christians at large.  It would be the 
			equivalent today of a black family in a predominantly white 
			congregation who did not have the support, encouragement and 
			fellowship of their white brethren and found themselves rejected by 
			their own nationality because of their faith.  The Gentile 
			Christians were the victims of racial prejudice and were struggling 
			for their place in God's kingdom.  They had no support or place 
			in a pagan, worldly society because of their faith and no support 
			from the Jews who were recognized as the bloodline from whom Jesus, 
			the Messiah came.  Jesus Christ was a Jew. The Gospel was 
			carried to the Jews first, therefore the Jews felt like they had 
			exclusive rights to Jesus and that it was under their supervision 
			and control how a Gentile came to their Messiah.   
			 "removing from 
			him that called you" 
			Removed from God who 
			called them (2 Thessalonians 2:13-14).  The significance of 
			this statement cannot be over emphasized.  Paul is soon going 
			to pronounce a curse on those who would pervert the gospel of Christ 
			but here is the consequence to the one who would fall for such false 
			teaching.  This statement here is the equivalent of being 
			removed from God.   
			Through Christ, all 
			Christians are reconciled to God (Romans 5:10) and have fellowship 
			with Him (1 John 1:3).  To be removed from "him that called 
			you" is to forfeit reconciliation and lose fellowship with God.  
			There can be no worse fate than this for the Christian.   
			There is a doctrine in 
			the denominational world that teaches that once one is saved, they 
			cannot so sin that it is possible to lose their salvation.  
			This doctrine is better known as 'Once Saved, Always Saved'.  
			Proponents of this doctrine need to answer the question on how one 
			could lose one's reconciliation and fellowship with God and yet 
			remain in a position where they can inherit eternal life with God 
			the Father in heaven.  This is not the only statement in this 
			epistle that strikes at the heart of this doctrine, but it is 
			significant that it occurs in the first sentence following Paul's 
			introduction.   
			This statement was 
			obviously meant to help set the tone in the minds of the readers as 
			to the seriousness of the situation that was before them.  
			Being removed from Him who called you is a 'snap to attention' type 
			statement aimed at focusing the attention of the readers upon the 
			personal consequences they faced. 
			"unto a different 
			gospel" 
			The gospel being 
			preached by these apostates was not the gospel Paul preached to 
			them.  It was a different gospel.  We will see very soon 
			that God's curse is in store for those who would change the gospel 
			from what it originally was.  The application for us today is 
			that any gospel which is more or less than the gospel of Christ is a 
			gospel other than the one delivered originally and that Christians 
			are responsible for making sure they are adherents of the right one. 
			 
			Galatians 1:7 
			"which is not another (gospel) only there are some that trouble 
			you, and would pervert the gospel of Christ." 
			Paul's wording here 
			means that this "different gospel" is not "another gospel".  
			There is no such thing as another valid gospel.  
			"only there are some 
			that trouble you" 
			These are the apostate 
			Judaizers who are going behind Paul and teaching Gentile Christians 
			that Paul is wrong, and that they are not Christians unless they 
			observe the parts of the law of Moses which identifies them as Jews 
			in order to be a real Christian.  These apostates were calling 
			into question the Gentiles conversions to Christ, thus eroding the 
			faith they had through the teachings of Paul. 
			The Galatians were 
			troubled because of the false doctrine they were being led to 
			believe.  False teachers bring great trouble to those who 
			accept their erroneous teachings.  Their victims may not even 
			be aware of the danger they are in until it is too late. 
			 
			"and would pervert 
			the gospel of Christ" 
			Any departure from the 
			gospel of Christ is a perversion of it.  Whether adding the 
			commandments of men such as the Judaizers here were doing, or taking 
			away from it, making it incomplete.  The application for us 
			today is that the gospel of Christ can be perverted.  And when 
			we look out into the denominational world we have today which is 
			saturated with all kinds of different gospels, we can see that such 
			is indeed the case. 
			The warnings and curses 
			which Paul places on both those who would change the gospel and 
			those who accept and follow after these perversions should be 
			adequate.  Sadly this is not the case.  Division, 
			perversion and distortion of the gospel of Christ continues even in 
			the face of sound Biblical warnings against it.   
			Galatians 1:8  
			"But though we, or an angel from heaven, should preach unto you any 
			gospel other than that which we preached unto you, let him be 
			anathema." 
			The churches in Galatia 
			had already been preached the gospel.  The congregations, 
			however many there were, had already been established and were 
			serving the Lord.  Paul is authenticating the original gospel 
			that had been preached by himself and others laboring with him.  
			And if anyone of them preaches one that is different, more than or 
			less than the original, then they are "anathema".  The 
			KJV translates this as "cursed".  The word "anathema" 
			is a transliteration of the original Greek word and it carries the 
			meaning of being condemned and rejected or thrust out by God. 
			The NIV translates this as "eternally condemned". 
			 
			Paul emphasized his 
			point here by writing that even an angel preaching another gospel 
			would be accursed.  Angels hold a special status in the minds 
			of God's children.  They filled a role in the mediation of the 
			old law (Acts 7:53, Hebrews 2:1-2, Galatians 3:19) and are thus 
			recognized as holy messengers of God.  Paul is making the point 
			that not even an angel has the authority to change anything in the 
			gospel from that which they first heard from him.  The gospel 
			they received from him at the beginning was the authentic one.  
			And anyone changing that in any way, even if it were an angel from 
			heaven, will be anathema, cursed, thrust out, eternally condemned. 
			 
			It is important to keep 
			in mind here that the apostates who were teaching this different 
			gospel considered themselves Christians.  They were Jewish 
			converts to Christ who were trying to bind tenants of the Mosaic law 
			on their Gentile brethren.  These apostates were believers in 
			Christ to a degree.  They believed in Christ as the Messiah and 
			the Son of God.  They had faith in who Christ was, but their 
			faith did not lead them to lay aside the traditions of the old law 
			and follow after the true gospel of Christ.  Paul pronounced 
			the curse of God upon them for their error.   
			The doctrine of 
			salvation by faith alone cannot stand up to a critical textual 
			examination of the book of Galatians.  If Salvation were 
			available by faith alone then these apostates would have been in no 
			danger, yet this is not the case.  They were cursed by God and 
			it is recorded for us by inspiration of the Holy Spirit through the 
			writing of Paul.  Salvation is either by faith alone or it is 
			not.  There is no middle ground on this.  If anything in 
			addition to faith is necessary in order escape eternal condemnation, 
			then salvation is not by faith alone.  Preaching another gospel 
			causes one to be condemned, therefore it is necessary to teach the 
			one true, authentic and original gospel to be saved.  It is 
			important that students of God's word think the outcomes of their 
			conclusions out to their logical results.  If there are any 
			accountable acts in addition to belief which one may engage in which 
			are either necessary for salvation, or will result in condemnation, 
			then salvation cannot be by faith alone.  The conclusion is 
			that faith must be perfected by obedience to the will of God in 
			order to be a saving faith.  Faith alone cannot save.   
			Another prevalent 
			doctrine which this verse defeats is the doctrine of OSAS (Once 
			Saved Always Saved).  This doctrine states that once one 
			converts and becomes a Christian, they can never so sin as to lose 
			their salvation.  If this doctrine were true, Judaizing 
			teachers who had come to Christ initially would not be rejected or 
			thrust out by God.  Proponents of the OSAS doctrine almost 
			universally believe in salvation by faith alone.  Their 
			argument would be that these Judaizers were never saved in the first 
			place.  If this were true, then as believers in Christ they 
			were not saved by faith alone.  They were believers in Christ 
			to a degree, but their faith was not perfected/completed by works of 
			obedience (James 2:22), and therefore dead (James 2:20; 26). 
			Galatians 1:9 
			"As we have said before, so say I now again, if any man preacheth 
			unto you any gospel other than that which ye received, let him be 
			anathema." 
			It is exceedingly 
			important to take notice of Paul's usage of the words "As we have 
			said".  This epistle is likely not the first time these 
			congregations have heard of this pronouncement of condemnation for 
			these apostate teachers and their unholy doctrine.  Paul is 
			reiterating the former statement with the reminder that they had 
			been told this before and to emphasize the importance of it. 
			 
			Paul is using very 
			strong language here in his condemnation of these apostates.  
			Similar strong language regarding another group of apostates in the 
			first century is used by Jude in his epistle and also Peter in 
			chapter 2 of his second epistle.  Peter prophesied of an 
			apostasy to come while Jude was dealing with one head on. 
			 
			Some of the strongest 
			words of condemnation in all the Bible are used by the inspired 
			writers when handling apostasy.  God exhibits no tolerance 
			whatsoever for this kind of behavior in the inspired record.  
			We today can be assured God's attitude toward this has not changed.  
			There is no indication whatsoever that God's intolerance of this has 
			in any way altered.  When we 
			look out into the so called religious world today, we see thousands 
			of groups of people claiming Christ as their savior and each 
			teaching a variant form of the gospel of Christ.  There is no 
			reason to believe that God's displeasure over the activities of 
			false teachers in the first century has in any way diminished.  
			Rather, there is every reason to believe that it has not changed and 
			that many many people who call on the name of the Lord to a degree 
			will be disappointed at their judgment.  The importance of this 
			cannot be overstated.  It is vitally important that those who 
			wish to be children of God teach and obey only the gospel delivered 
			in the first century.  The only way to accomplish this is to 
			reject all manmade creeds, catechisms and teachings of men (Mark 
			7:7), and turn 
			to the holy scriptures as the only source of authority for what we 
			do and teach, adding nothing to and taking nothing away, ordering 
			our lives according to what is written and striving to 
			be and live only as God would have us live.   
			Galatians 1:10 
			"For am I now seeking the favor of men, or of God? or am I 
			striving to please men? If I were still pleasing men, I should not 
			be a servant of Christ." 
			The only source for any 
			gospel other than the one originally received has to come from men.  
			Paul is drawing a contrast here between the wishes of men and the 
			will of God.  The two are not in harmony.  One cannot 
			please men and please God at the same time.  Paul is building a 
			case here to set this different gospel the Galatians were succumbing 
			to as something which came from man and not God.  
			Jesus had some teaching 
			regarding the serving of God or man in Matthew 6:24 where He said, "No 
			man can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one, and love 
			the other; or else he will hold to one, and despise the other. Ye 
			cannot serve God and mammon."  Luke recorded a parallel 
			account of this in Luke 16:13.  James, the brother of Jesus had 
			some straightforward teaching on the issue Paul is dealing with as 
			well: James 4:4, "...know ye not that the friendship of the world 
			is enmity with God? Whosoever therefore would be a friend of the 
			world maketh himself an enemy of God". 
			Paul is not concerned 
			with pleasing men, or in modern terms, being politically correct.  
			Paul's main thrust here to draw a definitive contrast between the 
			"other gospel" being propagated by men and the one true gospel he 
			originally taught them and is standing firm on.  Paul ends this 
			statement by saying to please men means he cannot be a servant of 
			Christ.  There is no middle of the road here.  Paul says 
			he cannot set on the fence on this issue and by implication neither 
			can anybody else either.  Those who teach or follow the 
			commandments and doctrines of men are not the servants of Jesus 
			Christ.   
			Jesus taught in Matthew 
			15:9, "in vain do they worship me, Teaching (as their) doctrines 
			the precepts of men".  Paul wrote in Colossians 2:22, "(all 
			which things are to perish with the using), after the precepts and 
			doctrines of men?" And to Titus in 1:14, Paul wrote, "not 
			giving heed to Jewish fables, and commandments of men who turn away 
			from the truth". 
			"a servant of Christ." 
			The word in the original 
			language for "servant" is "doulos (doo'-los), which has a 
			literal meaning of a slave, or someone in a voluntary or involuntary 
			state of subjection or subserviency.  A bond servant in the new 
			testament times could be someone who owed a debt they were unable to 
			pay and were therefore placed in the service to their creditor until 
			such time that the debt is satisfied.  Paul referred to himself 
			on other occasions as a bond servant of Christ (Romans 1:1, Titus 
			1:1) as well as Epaphras (Colossians 4:12).  James, Peter and 
			Jude all three referred to themselves as bondservant or slaves of 
			Christ in the opening line of epistles written by them (James 1:1, 2 
			Peter 1:1, Jude 1).  
			Jesus Christ took the 
			form of a bondservant or slave when He humbled Himself, left Heaven 
			and became like men, becoming obedient to the will of God, even to 
			the point of His death.  Christ is pictured here as a 
			bondservant because He voluntarily placed Himself in service until a 
			debt was paid.  The debt Jesus Christ paid was the penalty men 
			owed for his transgressions against God.  Jesus paid a debt for 
			us that we are incapable of paying.  He purchased us with His 
			blood (Ephesians 1:14, Hebrews 9:12, 1 Peter 1:18).  Paul, 
			Peter, James, Jude and Epaphras rightfully felt they owed Jesus 
			their lives for what He did for them.  They understood that 
			they had sinned and deserved to die.  They understood that 
			Jesus was innocent and they were guilty. They understood that Jesus 
			shed His blood and died in order to pay the penalty they owed for 
			their sin.  They understood that they owed Jesus their lives 
			because of His free will sacrifice.  They understood that they 
			were to offer their lives back to Him as a living sacrifice (Romans 
			12:1).  
			They understood that 
			Jesus paid a debt they could not afford.  They understood that 
			because of sin, their lives were forfeit and that nothing they had 
			to offer could pay the debt.  They understood that they owed 
			Jesus their very lives because of what He did for them.  They 
			understood that nothing they could offer would repay the debt they 
			owed Jesus.  So they they freely offered the only thing they 
			had to give back to Him who gave everything for them.  Jesus 
			took the form of bondservant for them, so in return, they took the 
			form of a bondservant to Christ.   
			A bondservant remained 
			in service until the debt was repaid.  In our case, our very 
			lives were forfeit; we had nothing to offer that would satisfy the 
			debt either before or after conversion to Christianity.  There 
			is nothing man can do to earn, deserve or merit God's offer of 
			salvation in any way.  This circumstance does not change after 
			one becomes a Christian.  Christians likewise can do nothing to 
			repay God what it cost Him to provide salvation.  Mankind did 
			not deserve the hope we have in Christ, nor can it be earned.  
			Christians cannot reimburse either God the Father or God the Son for 
			the sacrifice that was given in their behalf.  The only thing a 
			Christian has to return back to a loving God who gave so much, is 
			his life in service.  Since it was God who gave us life, the 
			sacrifice of that life back to Him in service cannot repay the debt.  
			A Christian is only returning what was given to him in the first 
			place.  A bondservant of Christ will serve Christ in obedience 
			to His will.  Since salvation can never be deserved or 
			reimbursed, the term of service is for life.   
			 
			 The Divine Origin of Paul’s Gospel  
			 Galatians 1:11-12 
			"For I make known to you, brethren, as touching the gospel which 
			was preached by me, that it is not after man. For neither did I receive it from man, nor was I taught it, but 
			(it came to me) through revelation of Jesus Christ." 
			Paul is telling his 
			readership here that the original gospel preached by him at the 
			first did not originate with men, neither was it taught to him by 
			men.  The Judaizers working behind Paul were trying to 
			discredit him by telling the Gentiles that Paul had received his 
			teaching from the other Apostles and that they had given him his 
			commission to go forth and spread the gospel but that Paul was 
			leaving some important things out that they had to do.  The 
			Judaizers were telling the Gentile Christians that Paul didn't know 
			what he was talking about as far as conversion to Christianity is 
			concerned and that they were not in the body of Christ after all. 
			 
			Paul is telling them 
			that the gospel he preached was not taught to him by any man, but 
			that he received it from Jesus Christ by direct revelation.  
			The Judaizers were telling them Paul was taught by men, Paul is 
			denying that and claiming to have his information from the head of 
			the kingdom of God Himself, Jesus Christ.   
			There is a practical 
			application for us today in this text.  The religious division 
			today is a result of the same thing Paul was battling with in the 
			first century with the Judaizers.  The Judaizers were trying to 
			bind the teachings and doctrines of men on the Gentile Christians 
			thereby departing from the faith delivered by Jesus Christ.  
			Today we similarly have those who advocate the teachings and 
			doctrines of men in the church.  The result in the first 
			century was that people were being led away from Christ.  The 
			result of this today is no different.  The Bible teaches only 
			one faith (Ephesians 4:4-5), yet we see many different ones.  
			Paul's remedy for this was that he appealed directly to the highest 
			authority for his source of doctrine.  Today, we have the 
			inspired writings of men who got the gospel directly from the 
			source.  We can go to the source through the writings of Paul 
			and others.  We don't need the teachings of men where they 
			conflict with what the scriptures teach.  We can go to the 
			scriptures to validate what men teach and we are obligated to do 
			that very thing.   
			Paul appealed directly 
			to the source for his authority.  Today, we can appeal directly 
			to the source for our authority.  The remedy for apostasy today 
			is exactly the same as it was in Galatia for the readers of Paul's 
			letter.  Reject the teachings of men and go straight to the 
			teachings of Jesus Christ through the inspired scriptures.   
			 
			Paul’s Former Life in Judaism 
				(1:13-14). 
			Galatians 1:13  
			"For ye have heard of my manner of life in time past in the Jews' 
			religion, how that beyond measure I persecuted the church of God, 
			and made havoc of it:" 
			Paul's authenticity as 
			an Apostle was being challenged by the Judaizers working behind him.  
			Paul begins his defense by laying down some initial facts that will 
			be important in his overall defense.  Paul is going to deliver 
			a conclusive treatise against the teachings of the Judaizers and in 
			order to do that, he must establish himself as an authentic Apostle 
			and independent of their influence in every way.   
			Paul begins his defense 
			by revealing some of his former life as a persecutor of the Faith he 
			was now trying to advance.  The church was already in existence 
			when Paul converted to the Faith and he was initially opposed to it 
			and zealously tried to destroy it from existence.  Paul wanted 
			his readership to know that he did not have his beginnings in the 
			faith of Christ from other men.     
			Galatians 1:14  
			"and I advanced in the Jews' religion beyond many of mine own age 
			among my countrymen, being more exceedingly zealous for the 
			traditions of my fathers." 
			Paul was an 
			over-achiever concerning the law of Moses.  Scholarship places 
			Paul's birth in Tarsus somewhere near the year 5 AD.  He became 
			a Pharisee in roughly 31 AD which would make him in his late 
			twenties.  Paul is about to lay out a number of facts which 
			will serve to establish him as a genuine Apostle of Christ.  
			The overall goal of this epistle is to conclusively establish the 
			fact that the old law of Moses is set aside completely and that the 
			law of Christ (Galatians 6:2) is the true Faith.  Paul needs to 
			establish himself, not only as a genuine Apostle of Christ, but also 
			as an authority on the law of Moses as well.  Paul wants his 
			readership to know that he is an authority on both the law of Moses 
			and the Faith of Christ so that when he sets them in opposition to 
			one another, his readership is aware that he knows exactly what he's 
			talking about.  Who better to write an epistle which 
			conclusively abolishes the old law than a former Pharisee of the 
			Jewish faith?        
			 
			Paul’s Conversion/Calling and 
				Its Immediate Results (1:15-17). 
			Galatians 1:15  
			"But when it was the good pleasure of God, who separated me, 
			(even) from my mother's womb, and called me through his grace," 
			Paul is continuing to 
			build a defense of his authenticity as an apostle.  He is now 
			pointing out to his readership that it was God who directly chose 
			him for this purpose and not men.  Paul's appointment as an 
			apostle was in the mind of God before he was even born.  
			Similar language is used by Isaiah in 49:1, "Jehovah hath called 
			me from the womb; from the bowels of my mother hath he made mention 
			of my name".   
			Scripture teaches us 
			that the entire plan of redemption for mankind was in the plan of 
			God since before the world was even created and time began (Romans 
			16:25, Ephesians 1:4; 3:9; 3:11, Colossians 1:26, 2 Timothy 1:9, 
			Titus 1:2, Revelation 13:8).  Paul's appointment as an apostle 
			of Christ was not a spontaneous spur of the moment decision by man 
			or God.  Paul was preaching the gospel to them in a capacity 
			that had been predetermined before his birth by God Himself.   
			"and called me 
			through his grace" 
			Paul wrote much 
			regarding God's grace.  Grace is defined as an undeserved 
			beneficial disposition, or unmerited favor, towards something or 
			someone.  In this case, God called Paul through His favor of 
			Paul arising from a beneficial disposition towards him.  Paul 
			had done nothing whatsoever at this point to earn God's grace.  
			Rather, he had been diligently and fervently pursuing the 
			persecution of Christians with the goal of destroying them from the 
			face of the earth.   
			God extended His grace 
			to Paul while Paul was on his way to persecute and possibly kill 
			Christians in Damascus.  This is a very important point in 
			understanding God's grace.  If salvation were available on the 
			merits of God's grace alone, then Paul would have been saved at the 
			moment Jesus appeared to Him on the road to Damascus.  Paul had 
			to first make a proper response to God's grace before anything good 
			for Paul would manifest itself for him.   
			Advocates of salvation 
			by grace alone through faith alone will argue that Paul had to have 
			faith.  The immediate point to make clear is that if faith is 
			required, salvation is not by grace alone.  The very term 
			'grace alone through faith alone' is a contradiction in terms.  
			These two conditions cannot coexist.  Grace is not alone if 
			faith, or anything else is required.   
			Moving on to the next 
			issue, is faith alone.  If salvation were by faith alone, then 
			Paul would have been saved at the moment He accepted that it was 
			Jesus Christ who had appeared to Him.  At that meeting, Jesus 
			identified Himself to Paul and blinded Him for emphasis.  
			Paul's whole world was turned upside in a moment of time.  Paul 
			was so upset he spent the next three days without food in Damascus 
			(Acts 9:8-9).  It cannot be reasonably denied that Paul had 
			faith in Jesus Christ during that period of time.  Then Ananias 
			laid his hands on Paul (formerly Saul), and his sight was restored 
			(Acts 22:13).  Paul had been blinded and then had his eyesight 
			restored to its former state miraculously.  One cannot 
			reasonably deny that Paul had faith in Jesus Christ at this time 
			either. 
			 
			If Paul were saved by 
			faith alone, his sins should have been forgiven at that moment in 
			time, yet we see that Ananias gave Paul a very important 
			instruction.  Acts 22:16, "And now why tarriest thou? arise, 
			and be baptized, and wash away thy sins, calling on his name."  
			One must ask the question, if one is saved by faith alone, why did 
			Paul still have sins to be washed away?  The answer is he 
			couldn't be be saved.  Salvation is absolutely dependent upon 
			the forgiveness of one's sins.  Where there is no forgiveness 
			there can be no salvation.  Paul had faith, yet before he was 
			baptized, he still had sins to be washed away.   
			The means of this 
			forgiveness of sins was said to be obtained through baptism in the 
			text.  Paul was instructed to be baptized and wash his sins 
			away.  If salvation were obtainable through faith alone, then 
			baptism nor anything else would not have been required for Paul's 
			sins to be washed away.   Advocates of faith alone 
			salvation sometimes draw a connection between the washing away of 
			Paul's sins and "calling on His name".  They argue that 
			sins are washed away by calling on the name of Jesus.  That 
			does not help their case at all, rather it contradicts it in that if 
			salvation were obtainable through faith alone, then calling on the 
			name of Jesus would be as unnecessary for the forgiveness of sins as 
			baptism would be.  Salvation by faith alone is either true or 
			false.  Salvation by faith plus anything at all cannot be by 
			faith alone.   
			Proponents of faith 
			alone salvation must argue that Paul could have walked out of that 
			meeting with Ananias in Damascus that day without baptism and be 
			able to expect a home in heaven with God.  Many many years 
			later, Paul wrote this to the Christians in Philippi.  
			Philippians 3:11-14, "if by any means I may attain unto the 
			resurrection from the dead. Not that I have already obtained, or am 
			already made perfect: but I press on, if so be that I may lay hold 
			on that for which also I was laid hold on by Christ Jesus. Brethren, 
			I count not myself yet to have laid hold: but one thing (I do), 
			forgetting the things which are behind, and stretching forward to 
			the things which are before. I press on toward the goal unto the 
			prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus." 
			The truth is, there must 
			be a response to God's calling.  Paul said he was called 
			through God's grace. Paul had to answer that calling.  Paul had 
			to provide a proper response.  God's grace was extended to Paul 
			while he was yet a sinner.  God called Paul through grace when 
			He reached down from heaven to Paul with instructions.  Paul 
			answered that calling and obeyed those instructions by faith.  
			It is by faith that anyone obeys God's call and it is by obedience 
			that their faith is made complete. 
			James 2:20-26 
			"But wilt thou know, O vain man, that faith apart from works is 
			barren? Was not Abraham our father justified by works, in that he 
			offered up Isaac his son upon the altar?  Thou seest that faith 
			wrought with his works, and by works was faith made perfect; and the 
			scripture was fulfilled which saith, And Abraham believed God, and 
			it was reckoned unto him for righteousness; and he was called the 
			friend of God. Ye see that by works a man is justified, and not only 
			by faith. And in like manner was not also Rahab the harlot justified 
			by works, in that she received the messengers, and sent them out 
			another way? For as the body apart from the spirit is dead, even so 
			faith apart from works is dead." 
			 
			Galatians 1:16-17 
			"to reveal his Son in me, that I might preach him among the 
			Gentiles; straightway I conferred not with flesh and blood neither went I up to Jerusalem to them that were apostles before 
			me: but I went away into Arabia; and again I returned unto Damascus." 
			Paul's adversaries had 
			gone behind him to the Galatian churches and discredited his 
			teaching by telling them he was not a real apostle and that what he 
			was teaching was a perversion of the gospel he had received from the 
			other apostles in Jerusalem.  Here he is telling his readership 
			that God's Son, Jesus, was revealed directly to him so that he could 
			preach Him among them.  Paul's mounting defense is to point out 
			to his readership that he got his gospel straight from the highest 
			source and he did not consult anyone else as to what he was 
			teaching.   
			He did not consult the 
			other apostles beforehand, never even having gone to Jerusalem at 
			the beginning of his ministry.  Paul did not receive his 
			commission from the other apostles but was acting under the direct 
			authority of God, thus affirming to his readership that what he had 
			taught them was authentic.  Anything other than that, either 
			more or less, did not come from him and was the product of man's 
			interjections into God's will.   
			Upon receiving his 
			commission directly from Jesus Christ, instead of seeking out the 
			other apostles, Paul went directly east into the land of Arabia 
			where he began preaching the gospel to the gentiles immediately.  
			Paul later returned to Damascus where he converted to Christianity 
			and preached there for a period of time.   
			Paul's purpose for 
			revealing this information is to demonstrate that he had received 
			his commission directly from Jesus Christ and that he was acting 
			independently of the Jerusalem church.  His adversaries had 
			made the claim that he was not a genuine apostle and that he was 
			acting under the direction of the Jerusalem church and preaching a 
			gospel that was not authentic.  The Judaizers were going behind 
			Paul directly to the churches and interjecting their Judaizing 
			practices into their faith system by whatever means necessary in 
			order to achieve their ends.  A big part of their strategy 
			hinged on their ability to discredit Paul.  If they could 
			achieve that, the rest was a matter of simply teaching them their 
			heresy.   
			 
			Paul’s First Visit to 
			Jerusalem (1:18-20) 
			 
			Galatians 1:18  
			"Then after three years I went up to Jerusalem to visit Cephas, 
			and tarried with him fifteen days." 
			Up to this point, Paul 
			had been in Damascus preaching the gospel.  Paul left Damascus 
			under less than favorable conditions.  He was forced to flee 
			for his life.  This corresponds with Luke's account in Acts 
			9:22-26, "But Saul [Paul], increased the more in 
			strength, and confounded the Jews that dwelt at Damascus, proving 
			that this is the Christ. And when many days were fulfilled, the Jews 
			took counsel together to kill him:  but their plot became known 
			to Saul. And they watched the gates also day and night that they 
			might kill him:  but his disciples took him by night, and let 
			him down through the wall, lowering him in a basket.  And when 
			he was come to Jerusalem, he assayed to join himself to the 
			disciples: and they were all afraid of him, not believing that he 
			was a disciple". 
			It was three years after 
			Paul's conversion and he was growing very proficient at confronting 
			the unbelieving Jews and they were going to 
			kill him at their first opportunity.  Paul's disciples snuck 
			him out of Damascus and it was at this time he decided to go to 
			Jerusalem for the first time.  Paul was known by reputation in 
			Jerusalem as a persecutor of the church and a man to be feared.  
			When he tried to meet with the Christians there, they were afraid of 
			him so Barnabas took him to the apostles and vouched for him.  
			Peter had a rather large house in Jerusalem and it makes sense that 
			Paul would have stayed with him.   
			Galatians 1:19  
			"But other of the apostles saw I none, save James the Lord's 
			brother. 
			The accusations of the 
			Judaizers against Paul was that he was not an apostle and that what 
			he was teaching was delivered to him by the twelve apostles that had 
			walked with Jesus during his ministry on earth.  Paul is 
			building the case that he never had an opportunity to learn from 
			them.  He was only in Jerusalem for a few days and that after 
			three years of preaching the gospel beforehand.  And when he 
			did come to Jerusalem for the first time he only saw Peter and 
			James.  This James is identified as the Lord's brother and he 
			was not one of the original twelve so the only original apostle Paul 
			saw in Jerusalem was Peter.   
			Galatians 1:20  
			"Now touching the things which I write unto you, behold, before 
			God, I lie not." 
			The case against Paul by 
			the Judaizers was that he was a phony going around teaching an 
			inaccurate gospel received under the authority of the original 
			twelve.  Paul's defense of himself is a direct contradiction to 
			what the Galatian Christians had been told by the Judaizers.  
			Paul is reinforcing his defense by affirming in writing that the 
			things he is writing are the truth before God.  Such a 
			statement is not to be taken lightly.  Paul invokes the name 
			and authority of God in the verification of his claims.  A 
			modern day equivalent would be the addition of 'so help me God' to a 
			statement.  Such is the force of the declaration Paul made 
			here.   
			In Acts 9:28-29 we get 
			an inspired look at Paul's activities while in Jerusalem at this 
			time.  Paul was not setting at the feet of Peter in his house 
			being instructed.  Paul was busy evangelizing and getting 
			himself in trouble with the unbelieving Gentiles.  Paul was 
			with the disciples there working, teaching and evangelizing from the 
			start.  Paul did not come to Jerusalem to learn the gospel.  
			Paul already knew the gospel when he arrived there and busied 
			himself with the disciples there in the spreading of it.  And 
			so zealous and effective was his presentation of it that in just 
			fifteen days, he was in danger of being killed and was escorted to 
			Caesarea where he then set out for Tarsus, the city of his birth. 
			 
			 
			
			After 
			the Jerusalem Visit (1:21-24) 
			Galatians 1:21  
			"Then I came unto the regions of Syria and Cilicia." 
			In Acts 9:30 we learn 
			that after leaving Jerusalem under threat of death, Paul was 
			escorted by the disciples to Caesarea where he then headed for 
			Tarsus.  That was a journey by ship.   
			Tarsus was the 
			birthplace of Paul, and was a city in Cilicia (Acts 22:3).  
			When Pompey subjected Tarsus to Rome it became capital of the Roman 
			province of Cilicia, the metropolis where the governor resided. In 
			66 BC, the inhabitants received Roman citizenship.  For a time, 
			it was called Juliopolis  in order to seek the favor of and to 
			flatter Julius Caesar.  It was in Tarsus that Cleopatra 
			and Mark Antony met and was the scene of 
			the great feasts they gave during the construction of their fleet in 
			41 BC.  Tarsus was a grand city with palaces, 
			marketplaces, roads and bridges, baths, fountains and waterworks, a 
			gymnasium on the banks of the Cydnus river, and a stadium. Tarsus 
			was later eclipsed by nearby Adana, but remained important as a port 
			and shipyard.  Present day Tarsus is part of the Adana-Mersin 
			Metropolitan Area, the fourth-largest metropolitan area in Turkey 
			with a population of 2.75 million. Tarsus District forms an 
			administrative district in Mersin Province and lies in the core of 
			the Çukurova region in the Mersin province of Turkey. 
			Upon leaving Jerusalem 
			after having spent time with only one of the original apostles, Paul 
			is making the point here that he did not seek out nor see any of the 
			other original twelve.  He went from Jerusalem straight back to 
			working as an evangelist elsewhere.   
			Galatians 1:22  
			"And I was still unknown by face unto the churches of Judaea which 
			were in Christ:" 
			Not only did Paul not 
			spend time with any of the original twelve apostles, but he never 
			got around to visiting any of the faithful congregations in Judaea.  
			The reason for this being that not only did Paul not have the 
			opportunity to learn the gospel from Peter, he also did not have the 
			opportunity to learn it from any of the Judean congregations as 
			well.  Paul is laying out a complete case for his independence 
			from the Jerusalem church.  He did not receive the gospel he 
			was preaching from them in any way shape or form.  He is 
			presenting the proof of this by telling them that what they had 
			heard from the Judaizers regarding his teaching could not have been 
			possible.   
			Galatians 1:23  
			"but they only heard say, He that once persecuted us now preacheth 
			the faith of which he once made havoc;" 
			Paul was known only by 
			his reputation to the churches in Judaea.  He was the former 
			nemesis of the Lord's church who had converted and was now preaching 
			the faith.  Paul's use of the words "the faith" are 
			significant in this context.  He was battling the influence of 
			those who were teaching a perversion of the one true faith.  
			Paul here affirms in this sentence that there is only one faith and 
			that those in Judaea knew that he was preaching it and only it.   
			Paul's use of the words 
			"the faith" refer to the system of faith under which all Christians 
			are amenable to Jesus Christ.  The faith of Christ is never 
			just a mental assent of the facts of who He is and what He did for 
			mankind.  Rather "the faith" is a reference to a system under 
			which all who claim Christ as savior must live in accordance to 
			God's divine will.  Those who fail to obey God's will are not 
			faithful, therefore do not exhibit "the faith" as it is 
			specified in scripture.   
			Galatians 1:24  
			"and they glorified God in me." 
			The Judean Christians 
			praised and gave glory to God because of Paul's conversion to "the 
			faith".  Paul's reputation as a persecutor of the church was 
			well known and he was feared greatly among the Christians.  
			What a testament to the power of the gospel it must have been to the 
			Christians of the day when they discovered that an arch enemy of the 
			church such as Paul converted and became one of them.  It is no 
			wonder they glorified God, doubtless out of both profound amazement 
			and relief.  In either event, God was glorified because of 
			Paul's conversion.  God is glorified among men when He is 
			obeyed. 
			 
			  
			Galatians 1 
			Paraphrase 
			Greetings from Paul, an 
			apostle. I was chosen to be an apostle, but not by any group or 
			person here on earth. My commission came from Jesus Christ and God 
			the Father, who raised Him from the dead.  Greetings also from 
			all those in God's family who are with me.  
			To the churches in 
			Galatia: 
			 
			I pray that God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ will be 
			gracious to you and give you peace.  Jesus gave himself for our 
			sins to free us from this evil world we live in according to the 
			will of God and our Father. The glory belongs to God forever and 
			ever. Amen.  
			I am amazed that you are 
			already turning away from He who called you into the grace of Christ 
			and are following a different gospel than the one we preached among 
			you.  This different gospel is not another valid one because 
			there is no other.  But there are those who have come among you 
			and have brought you great trouble because they have corrupted the 
			true gospel.   
			We preached you the only 
			true gospel message. So if any of us, even if we were an angel from 
			heaven, teaches you a different message, let him be eternally 
			condemned.   I said this before. Now I am proclaiming it 
			again; anyone who tells you another way to be saved will be 
			eternally condemned! 
			 
			Now do you think I am trying to get people to accept me? No, God is 
			the one I am trying to please. Am I trying to please people? If I 
			seek only to please the people with my teaching, I would not be a 
			bond servant of Jesus Christ.  Brothers and sisters, I want to 
			assure you that the Gospel message I taught you was not made up by 
			anyone.  I did not get my teaching from any other person, 
			neither did I learn it from other people. Jesus Christ himself gave 
			His gospel  to me. He is who revealed to me what I have been 
			teaching among you. 
			 
			Now you have heard about my former life in the Jewish religion. I 
			persecuted the church of God and tried to destroy his people. I was 
			becoming a leader in the Jewish religion and advancing faster than 
			most other Jews my own age.  I tried harder than anyone else to 
			follow the traditions we got from our ancestors.  
			 
			But God had special plans for me even before I was born, so he 
			graciously chose me for His purpose. He wanted me to teach the 
			message of Jesus Christ to the non-Jewish people.  After this 
			happened, I did not waste any time neither did I seek the advice of 
			anyone else about it.  I did not go to Jerusalem to see those 
			who were apostles before me, instead I went away to Arabia and then 
			back to the city of Damascus.  
			It was three years later 
			when I first went to Jerusalem to meet Peter and I stayed with him 
			only fifteen days.  While I was there, I saw none of the other 
			apostles, only James the brother of the Lord.  You must believe 
			what I am saying for I am telling you this by the authority and 
			approval of God. This is exactly what happened, I am not trying to 
			deceive you.   
			 
			Then after my visit to Jerusalem, I went to Syria and Cilicia.  
			And still the Christians in Judea didn't even know what I looked 
			like.  All they knew was what people there were saying, that 
			"our former enemy is now preaching the same system of faith he tried 
			to destroy."  And because of this, they gave glory to God. 
			  
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