30. IV. Relation of Paul to Barnabas
IV. Relation of Paul to Barnabas
It has often been said that Paul is very niggardly here in recognition of Barnabas’s work as a champion of Gentile rights. But Paul was not writing a history for the ignorant; he assumes throughout that the Galatians knew the services of Barnabas. The single phrase “even Barnabas” is a sufficient answer to that charge. The one word “even” recalls the whole past to the interested readers; it places Barnabas above Peter in this respect. Peter had recognised the apostolate to the Gentiles: Peter had eaten with the Gentiles: but his dissembling, after all that, was not so extraordinary a thing as that “even Barnabas was carried away with the dissimulation” of the other Jews. That one sentence places Barnabas on a pedestal as a leading champion of the Gentiles; and yet it does not explicitly state that; it merely assumes the knowledge of his championship among the Galatians.
Further, where Paul speaks of his first journey, i.e., his Gospel to the Galatians,
