45. XVIII. The Second Visit to Jerusalem (Gal_2:1-10)
XVIII. The Second Visit to Jerusalem (Galatians 2:1-10) This visit is described much more fully than the first visit. The narrative is most difficult to understand. The Galatians could understand it, because it to a considerable extent merely recalled to them what they knew already. Modern readers find it obscure, because they have no certainty as to the facts that are alluded to. Every modern commentator holds some theory as to the correspondence with Acts; he identifies the visit described by Paul with some visit described by Luke, and reads into Paul’s narrative the spirit and even the incidents of Acts. Paul’s narrative is broken by the omission of words essential to strict grammatical construction. Each commentator naturally fills up the gaps according to his own theory and his conception of the events. Thus, for example, Lightfoot makes out of Paul’s words a story very like the account given in Acts 15; but most of the resemblances are inserted bodily to complete Paul’s broken clauses.
It is specially necessary in this case to carry out our principle;
It is not our purpose, however, to touch on any of those theories; but simply to determine what Paul meant the Galatians to gather. Only we must plead against the fixed belief entertained by many that the interpretation is now certain, and that discussion is closed. The Tubingen scholars founded their theory on a false interpretation. The present dominant interpretations are all founded on a theory of identification with Luke, and differ in many details from one another. We cannot see that the now dominant theory is any more certain than the Tubingen interpretation.
Here once more, as in many other points, our first duty is to protest against the closed door by which so many scholars try to bar our investigations. History in all departments is being rewritten in the present age. The most important, and one of the most difficult, episodes in history is the early stage in the growth of Christianity. Here of all places it is unsuitable to assume certainty, and to refuse to reconsider without prejudice dominant theories.
We, at any rate, shall try to write here without any theory in the mind on this point.
What a sentence it is that we have to study! Involved and perplexed, taking up one point, abandoning it, resuming it, explaining, correcting, returning on itself. Never was such a sentence penned by mortal man before or since. Never has so much been said in so few words; and never has it been said in such defiance of ordinary construction, and yet on such a high intellectual level. The one thing on which all commentators are agreed is the terrific, awe-inspiring nature of that portentous sentence; for though one may thrust in a period here or there, it is really one sentence that runs through the Galatians 2:1-10. But at least the spirit of the narrative is clear. The spirit is unity, concord, hearty agreement between Paul and the great Apostles, “the acknowledged leaders”. That is the impression which any one who reads the words of Paul without prepossession by Luke’s accounts must derive. Paul consulted them; they heard: they gave the right hand of fellowship to the two new Apostles to the Gentiles: they made a formal partition of the work that lay before the young Church — Barnabas and Paul to the Gentiles, the older Apostles to the Jews. That being so, is it permissible to suppose that Paul succeeds in conveying that impression by omitting all the facts which showed disagreement between himself and the older Apostles? This question ought to be fairly faced and answered by all commentators. But certainly some of them do not face it; they unconsciously hide it from themselves. Here on our principles we must answer “No”. It is not open to us to think that Paul attained his effect by omitting what told against him. His solemn oath before God that he is telling the truth is not needed to convince us. We know that he rested on the truth for his influence on men’s minds, that without the truth his moral power was lost. In passing, we notice the really almost comic — were it not almost tragic — argument in Meyer-Sieffert that Paul’s solemn oath, Galatians 1:20, refers only to the preceding part of the narrative.
Accordingly, our first principle in approaching Paul’s narrative is this: we must be slow to interpolate in the breaks of his story facts contrary to the spirit of what he explicitly relates.
Another essential preliminary to the right interpreting of the narrative is to apprehend correctly the distinction between the tenses. This is very subtle throughout the whole historical retrospect, Galatians 1:11 to Galatians 2:10. Paul distinguishes carefully between those actions which belonged to a definite point in the series of past events (aorist), those actions which continued for a period but are not thought of as continuing at the moment of writing (imperfect), and those actions which are marked as permanent and true down to the moment of writing (present). This distinction is well brought out in Galatians 1:15 : “And when it seemed fit (aorist) to God, who set me apart from my birth and called me through His grace (aorists) to reveal His Son in me (aorist), so that I preach Him (present) among the Gentiles”. When the due moment arrived, God revealed His will to Paul and called him. These are two definite acts which produced certain lasting consequences, but were themselves momentary. But the purpose and the result of the call was that Paul became, and continued until the moment of writing to be, the preacher among the Gentiles. Again in Galatians 1:22 : “I continued unknown (imperfect) by face to the churches of Judea” (this is not said to be true at the time of writing, though it lasted for many years); “and they continued to hear reports (imperfect) that ‘our persecutor
Galatians 2:2, “I laid before them (aorist) the gospel which I continue preaching to the present day among the Gentiles (present)”.
Galatians 2:2, “To prevent the work of my whole life (present), or my work then (aorist), from being ineffectual”.
Galatians 2:10, “Only (they instructed me) to remember permanently (present) the poor, which I then made it my object to do (aorist)”. A difficult contrast between present and imperfect occurs in Galatians 2:6 : “it matters not in my estimation (now or then, or at any time, present) by what conduct and character they were marked out before the world for their dignified and influential position (imperfect).” The necessity for the imperfect here becomes clearer if we substitute the present, and observe that the change gives an inadmissible sense. “What their permanent character is matters not to me” (
Still more clear does the necessity for the imperfect become if we take the sense preferred by Lightfoot: he says, “it does not mean ‘what reputation they enjoyed,’ but ‘what was their position, what were their advantages, in former times, referring to their personal intercourse with the Lord’”. The many aorists of this passage are clear: each of them denotes an act in the drama, which is described. They need no elucidation or comment except the following in Galatians 2:5 : “we resisted them then that the truth of the Gospel might continue (aorist) for you”. Here it may seem that the aorist expresses an action that continues to the moment of writing. That, however, is not so: the action belonged to the moment, though its result lasts down to the time of writing; and this becomes clear if we put the proposition in another form, “we resisted them then that the truth might not by our compliance be interrupted and prevented from continuing for you”. The aorist is required to express “might not be interrupted,” and it is therefore required to express “might continue”.
Now let us review successively the points that are clearly stated in Paul’s account of the visit, remembering always that nothing is mentioned except what had a bearing on the Galatian difficulty. In company with him were Barnabas and Titus. The mention of Barnabas as a companion is probably intended to recall past events to his readers. Barnabas was well-known to them.
What is the force of “also Titus”? In this detail, too, Acts 15:37 furnishes a perfect analogy: “Barnabas wished to take with them also John”. In that case there is no other possible sense than “in addition to themselves”; and so it is in this case. Titus was taken in addition to the official envoys. The reason for the visit lay in revelation. This statement must be taken as a denial that the visit was undertaken for the reason alleged by the Judaisers, see p. 281 f. Paul says nothing as to the recipient of the revelation. A Divine revelation to one man was binding on all whom it concerned.
Paul gives no hint as to the immediate purpose of that visit. The incidents which he relates as occurring during the visit are described as arising out of the circumstances existing in Jerusalem,
Lightfoot connects closely, “I went up by revelation and laid before them the Gospel which I preach,” giving the appearance that the setting forth of Paul’s Gospel had been the object of his journey. He agrees with the Authorised Version, with Tischendorf and others. But the Revised Version and the text of Westcott and Hort are right in separating the two statements by a colon — “and I went up by revelation: and I laid before them my gospel, but privately”.
Paul laid his Gospel before them (i.e., those in Jerusalem), but privately, before them of repute (whom afterwards he names, Peter and James and John). “The wide assertion is forthwith limited by the second clause” (Alford). This had an important bearing on the misrepresentations of the Judaisers: he did not lay his Gospel officially before the assembly of the Apostles, but privately before the Three. It is merely unreasonable to understand with some that Paul made both a public exposition before the whole Church, and a private esoteric exposition before the Three. The question which underlies this whole historical retrospect is whether or not Paul had sought official guidance and official authorisation from the Apostles in regard to his message to the Galatians. He maintains and asseverates that it came from God alone, and was delivered to them from God through himself. It would be absurd, and worse than absurd, that Paul should assure the Galatians that he consulted the Three privately, if he also laid it before them in public in their official assembly. We must understand Paul to imply that he made no public consultation on this subject. The verb used, “laid before them,” is interpreted by Lightfoot as “related with a view to consulting”. He quotes Acts 25:14, “Festus laid Paul’s case before the king,” and remarks that there the idea of consultation is brought out very clearly by the context, Acts 25:20, Acts 25:26. It is unnecessary to quote corroborative examples from other Greek literature: they are numerous.
Paul, therefore, asked the advice of the three great Apostles as to the Gospel which he proposed to preach, or was preaching, among the Gentiles. It is difficult to suppose that he asked their advice about a Gospel which he had already been preaching — that, after delivering the message from God to the Gentiles, he asked the counsel of any man about that message. When that Gospel was still hid in his own mind, when he had not yet full confidence that he fully comprehended it, he might consult the three leaders about it. After it had fixed itself in his nature as the truth of God, so that he had proclaimed it broadcast to the Gentiles, he no longer “conferred with flesh and blood”.
We are therefore placed in this dilemma: either Paul consulted the Three before he promulgated his Gospel in its fully developed form, or there is no idea of “consultation” in the verb which he here employs. The second alternative seems to me excluded. All readers must judge for themselves. That Paul’s Gospel to the Gentiles was not fully matured until shortly before the beginning of the first journey (Acts 13:1) will be set forth more fully elsewhere. That it was fully matured when he preached in South Galatia on that journey will hardly be disputed by any unprejudiced reader.
Accordingly, we conclude Paul consulted the three leaders privately and apart, not in public council; as friends, not as authoritative guides. What a revelation is this as to the forethought and statesmanship with which the diffusion of the Gospel through the civilised, i.e., the Roman, world was planned! We cannot here dilate further on the immense significance of that private
Next Paul states his object. “I consulted them — but privately — to prevent my work as it continues now, or my work then, from being ineffectual.”
Now Paul diverges from the path of the proper topic. It bears on the Galatian interest that not even Titus, his companion, Greek as he was, was compelled to accept circumcision. The question here rises, was Titus’s case made the subject of an open discussion and decided in the negative? Many commentators assume that the extreme party formally contended that Titus must submit to the rite, and that it was decided that he should not be forced to submit. This seems not to be the natural force of the passage, but rather to be forced into it through the inclination to read into this passage as much as possible out of Acts 15. The plain meaning of the Greek words is that the question was not formally raised, nor publicly decided: Titus was left free and unconstrained: nobody compelled him: he was let alone. Had the question been raised formally, it would have been a test case. Titus was distinctly a person of standing in the Church; and if the Apostles had solemnly and officially decided, after the question had been formally raised and discussed, that Titus need not accept the rite, that would have practically decided the present case in Galatia. The Apostolic Decree in Acts 15 did not constitute a thorough decision, for it was too general and was open to misconstruction;
After the parenthetic remark about Titus, Paul again takes up the thread, employing the particle
Paul’s sense of right is shocked by the conduct of those brethren: his words distinctly imply that they came to visit as pretended friends, and used knowledge acquired in private social intercourse to injure Paul among others. The result of the communication follows: “but from the recognised leaders — how distinguished soever was their character matters not to me: God accepteth not man’s person”. Here once more Paul breaks the grammatical thread, and resumes with
Some commentators attribute a depreciatory sense to
