Paul’s letter to the Galatians is spiritual dynamite—written to rescue believers from a distorted gospel and call them back to the cross of Christ alone. In this introductory episode, we trace Paul’s story, the birth of the Galatian churches, and the crisis that led him to write one of the most urgent and passionate letters in the New Testament.
In this week’s episode, we explore:
- Who Paul was before and after his conversion—from zealous persecutor to apostle of Jesus Christ (Acts 7–9; Philippians 3)
- How Paul’s early years after conversion (Damascus, Arabia, Jerusalem, and Tarsus) prepared him for ministry to both Jews and Gentiles
- The setting of Galatia: where these churches were located and why their mixed Jewish-Gentile makeup matters for interpreting the letter
- Key moments from Paul’s first missionary journey in Acts 13–14, including opposition, persecution, and the surprising joy of new Gentile believers
- Who the “Judaizers” were, what they were teaching, and why their message sounded close to the gospel—but wasn’t the gospel at all
- Why Galatians is so forceful in tone, including Paul’s confrontations, strong language, and a series of striking contrasts (law vs. promise, flesh vs. Spirit, sonship vs. slavery)
- How Galatians addresses our two deepest problems: guilt before God and the inner corruption that keeps us from true righteousness
- The central claim that forgiveness and real moral transformation both come through Christ and the gift of the Holy Spirit—not through law-keeping or religious performance
- How this letter challenges attempts to blend Christianity with other beliefs, cultural expectations, or “spiritual hedging”
After listening, you’ll come away with a clear sense of what is at stake in Galatians: whether we will trust a gospel of grace centered on the cross and the Spirit, or a gospel of human effort clothed in religious language.
Series: Galatians: Living by Faith
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