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Galatians: A New Translation with Introduction and Commentary is unavailable, but you can change that!

As the early church took shape in the mid-first century A.D., a theological struggle of great consequence was joined between the apostle Paul and certain theologians who had intruded into the churches founded by the apostle in Galatia. Writing his letter to the Galatians in the midst of that struggle, Paul was concerned to find a way by which he could assert the radical newness of God’s act in...

references to Paul’s own collection in certain ones of them, and by noting the absence of such references in others. Prior to conceiving the plan for his own collection, Paul wrote 1 Thessalonians, Galatians, and Philippians.19 After he conceived that plan, he communicated it to his church in Corinth (perhaps in the letter he mentions in 1 Cor 5:9); he spoke of it in a second letter to the Galatians, no longer preserved (1 Cor 16:1–2); he reemphasized it several times in writing to the Corinthians
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