New Testament

Galatians

The gospel of Christ crucified and risen creates a people justified by faith, adopted as sons, indwelt by the Spirit, and freed for love, so no human work or covenant marker may be added as the ground of acceptance before God.

Why this book matters

Galatians guards the church at the point where the gospel is most easily corrupted: not by open denial of Christ, but by adding requirements to Christ as though his cross were not enough. It also shows that grace does not weaken holiness; grace relocates holiness from fleshly effort to life by the Spirit.

How to read it

Read Galatians as a covenantal, apostolic argument. Follow Paul's movement from gospel defense, to autobiographical defense of apostleship, to scriptural proof from Abraham and the law, to sonship and inheritance, to Spirit-led freedom. Do not isolate the ethical commands in chapters 5-6 from the gospel argument in chapters 1-4.

6 Chapters

  1. 1 No Other Gospel: Paul’s Apostolic Authority and Gospel Defense
  2. 2 Justified by Faith: Gospel Unity, Apostolic Confrontation, and Life in Christ
  3. 3 Faith, Promise, and the Curse-Bearing Christ
  4. 4 No Longer Slaves: Sonship, Pastoral Anguish, and Children of Promise
  5. 5 Stand Firm in Freedom: Faith Working Through Love and Life by the Spirit
  6. 6 Boasting Only in the Cross: Spirit-Shaped Community and New Creation

Book Structure

Galatians 1:1-10
The Gospel Crisis Announced
Paul greets the churches by grounding salvation in Christ's self-giving rescue and immediately rebukes them for turning to a different gospel.
Galatians 1:11-2:21
The Gospel Received from Christ and Defended in Public
Paul recounts his conversion, apostolic calling, relationship to Jerusalem, concern for Titus, and confrontation with Peter to prove that the gospel of justification by faith cannot yield to pressure from law-based identity markers.
Galatians 3:1-29
Abraham, Promise, Law, Curse, and Faith
Paul argues from the Galatians' reception of the Spirit and from Scripture that the blessing of Abraham comes through faith in Christ, who redeems from the law's curse so the promised Spirit may be received.
Galatians 4:1-31
Sons and Heirs, Not Slaves
Paul develops the movement from minority and slavery to sonship and inheritance through the sending of God's Son and the Spirit of his Son, then warns the churches not to return to slavery.
Galatians 5:1-26
Freedom That Walks by the Spirit
Paul commands the churches to stand firm in Christ's freedom, rejects circumcision as a ground of standing, and contrasts the works of the flesh with the fruit of the Spirit.
Galatians 6:1-18
Burden Bearing and Boasting in the Cross
Paul applies Spirit-shaped life to restoration, burden-bearing, sowing, doing good, and final boasting only in the cross of Christ rather than in circumcision or fleshly approval.

Where to Start

Galatians 1:6-10
What Makes a Gospel 'Different'?
This opening rebuke sets the stakes for the whole letter and forces careful distinction between gospel clarity, human approval, and religious distortion.
Galatians 2:15-21
Justified by Faith, Crucified with Christ
This paragraph states the doctrinal heart of the letter and ties justification to union with Christ, grace, law, and the meaning of the cross.
Galatians 3:6-14
Abraham, Curse, and the Promised Spirit
This section joins Genesis, Deuteronomy, Habakkuk, and the cross to explain how Gentile blessing and the Spirit come through Christ by faith.
Galatians 4:4-7
Sent Son, Sent Spirit, Adopted Heirs
This compact text brings together incarnation, redemption, adoption, the Spirit, prayer, and inheritance in one of the letter's richest theological statements.
Galatians 5:1-6:10
Freedom, Spirit, and Love
The ethical section shows that grace does not produce passivity or license; the Spirit forms a community of love, holiness, restoration, and perseverance.

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Book Storyline

Canonical Context

Pentecost & Church
Galatians stands at the point where promise, law, cross, Spirit, and church are brought into sharp relation. The book insists that the blessing promised to Abraham reaches the nations through Christ, that the law served a temporary custodial role, that Christ redeems from the curse, and that the Spirit marks the people of God until the final inheritance is fully realized.
Purpose
Galatians was written to recall threatened churches to the one gospel, to expose any addition to Christ as a distortion, and to form believers who stand firm in grace while walking by the Spirit.
Previous
Galatians follows 2 Corinthians in the canonical order. Where 2 Corinthians strongly displays apostolic weakness, reconciliation, and ministry under the cross, Galatians turns to the non-negotiable truth of the gospel that Paul's apostolic ministry exists to preserve.
Next
Galatians precedes Ephesians. Galatians fights for Jew-Gentile unity through justification by faith and freedom in Christ; Ephesians then unfolds the cosmic and ecclesial unity created in Christ and displayed in the church.

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Key Terms

gospel euangelion good news; the apostolic announcement of God's saving work in Christ
grace charis favor; divine grace freely given
faith pistis faith, trust, believing reliance
justify dikaioō to declare righteous; to count as right before God
law nomos law; in Galatians chiefly the Mosaic law considered in covenantal and redemptive-historical function
works erga works, deeds, actions
curse katara curse; covenantal judgment
promise epangelia promise; divine pledge
Spirit pneuma Spirit; the Holy Spirit given by God
flesh sarx flesh; human nature in weakness, self-reliance, or sinful desire depending on context
freedom eleutheria freedom, liberty
adoption as sons huiothesia adoption; placement as sons with inheritance status
fruit karpos fruit, produce, visible outcome
new creation kainē ktisis new creation; God's renewed creative work