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At Galatians 1:15-2:10 (NIV) Paul provided detailed chronological information regarding his own life. He wrote:
This material raises three questions.
These matters were in part addressed by Paul J. Achtemeier in his analysis of early Pauline chronological problems. Achtemeier holds that the epistle to the Galatians followed the events of Acts 15 and was a result of it. Nevertheless as to the three-year (Galatians 1:18) and the fourteen-year (Galatians 2:1) periods he wrote:
Arguing that the two periods each began at Paul�s conversion, while plausible, is not a point generally contended by scholars. Most follow the rationale of linking the two periods as successive, so that the full period is understood as three plus fourteen for a total of seventeen years, less two years based upon so-called "Jewish inclusive reckoning" for a revised total of fifteen years. As to this traditional understanding John A. T. Robinson wrote:
The other way to which Robinson referred makes these two periods coincide for the first three years and not run successively. By assigning an early date for the Acts 15 proceeding, CE 48, and subtracting the traditional fifteen years the date of Paul�s conversion yields CE 33 or three years after a CE 30 crucifixion. In the alternative, assigning a late 49 or early 50 date, perhaps in December or January, for the Acts 15 proceeding and subtracting fourteen years yields a plausible conversion date for Paul in CE 35 which would allow a CE 30 date for the crucifixion. While it appears to allow time for a CE 33 alternative date for the crucifixion the events between the crucifixion and Paul�s conversion would have to be artificially manipulated and compressed and in any case Nisan 14 was on Friday not Wednesday of that year. Robinson�s opinion was that:
Why? Robinson�s paradigm requires a Friday crucifixion and a Sunday morning resurrection. The Passover, Nisan 14, was on a Friday in CE 33 but interestingly enough in both 30 and 31 it was on a Wednesday. An apparent misunderstanding of the rules pertaining to the intercalary years resulting from the utilization of the Babylonian calendar by many scholars has led to the erroneous date of the Passover to be reckoned as Friday, April 7, 30 when Nisan 14, according to the Hebrew calculated calendar, was Wednesday, April 5. In any event, while Robinson believed no one would seriously argue the coinciding of the two periods in the Galatians volume in the Word Biblical Commentary Longenecker did just that. In establishing his argument he stated: In order to accommodate the three-year and fourteen year time spans of Gal 1:18 and 2:1 within the limits imposed for Jesus� crucifixion and Paul�s initial Corinthian ministry, and still hold to the identification of Gal 2:1-10 with Acts 11:27-30, at least two of the following three assumptions must be made:
There were several misplaced suppositions inherent in this material. First, as in Robinson, because of Christian tradition Longenecker presumed that the year of the crucifixion must have Nisan 14 occurring on Friday in order to rationalize a Friday crucifixion and a Sunday morning resurrection. Second, that it is necessary to equate the events of Galatians 2:1-10 with Acts 11:27-30. Third, that the method of calculation in Galatians 1:18 and 2:1 was inclusive reckoning wherein parts of years are counted as full years. Fourth, that the Babylonian calendar is to be preferred over the calculated Hebrew calendar. The epistle to the Galatians recorded a visit by the apostle Paul to Jerusalem which cannot be conveniently correlated with any of the accounts in Acts of the Apostles. This was the a visit of Paul, Barnabas, and Titus to Jerusalem to confer with the apostles and elders of the mother church. This was the Apostolic Conference occurring a few months prior to the CE 49 hearing before James on the issue of circumcision and the law of Moses (Galatians 2:1-10).
The Acts of the Apostles is secondary for establishing a Pauline chronology. Where ambiguity lies it has to be taken as a principal authority. It provides an account of the remaining five of the six known Jerusalem visits by Paul as a Christian. These may be referred to as the conversion visit (Acts 9:26-30), the famine visit (Acts 11:27-30), the hearing before James at Jerusalem (Acts 15:1-30) the hasty visit (Acts 18:22), and the collection visit (Acts 21:15-18).By placing the events of Galatians 1-2 and Acts 15 into their first-century historical context one may discern their chronological implication. The primary factor in establishing early Pauline chronology is the Procouncilship of Gallio. The events recorded in Acts of the Apostles from the hearing before James to Paul�s appearance before Gallio contain so much detail that the date of the Acts 15 proceeding can be known with specificity. Taking into account the Jewish character of the early church permits the development of a realistic Pauline chronology, utilizing Galatians and Acts of the Apostles, based upon Judeo-Christian Sabbath observance and festival celebration together with their reliance on first-century Hebrew calendar rules. The result is the harmonization of the events recorded in Galatians and Acts of the Apostles.
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