Open Bible Data Home  About  News  OET Key

OETOET-RVOET-LVULTUSTBSBBLBAICNTOEBWEBWMBNETLSVFBVTCNTT4TLEBBBEMOFJPSASVDRAYLTDBYRVWBSKJBBBGNVCBTNTWYCSR-GNTUHBRelatedParallelInterlinearDictionarySearch

OET-RVBy DocumentBy Section By Chapter Details

GALIntroC1C2C3C4C5C6

OET-RV GAL Chapter 2

OETGAL 2 ©

This is still a very early look into the unfinished text of the Open English Translation of the Bible. Please double-check the text in advance before using in public.

2:1 The ambassadors accept Paul and Barnabas

2It was fourteen years later that I made the uphill trek to Yerusalem[ref] with Barnabas and taking Titos along as well. 2God had told me to go there and I explained to the leaders there the good message that I’d been proclaiming to the non-Jews. I did it privately to double-check that I wasn’t somehow just acting vainly. 3But not even Titos who was with me was compelled to be circumcised even though he is a Greek. 4However some false brothers were sneaked in to monitor the freedoms that we have in the messiah, Yeshua, and wanting us to be enslaved to their traditions. 5But we didn’t even submit to them for one hour, so that the truth of the good message could continue amongst you.

6[ref]And those people who were supposed leaders (although what they were didn’t mean much to me because God doesn’t go by appearances) didn’t really contribute anything useful as far as I could tell. 7Instead, they saw that I’ve been entrusted with taking the good message to the non-Jews just like Peter was entrusted to take it to the Jews 8because the same God who worked in Peter to commission him to the Jews also worked in me to commission me towards the non-Jews. 9So seeing the grace that God had shown towards me, Yacob and Peter and Yohan, the apparent pillars of the assemblies accepted me and Barnabas as equals, so that we could go to the non-Jews and them to the Jews. 10Also they said that we need to keep helping the poor, but I was eager to do that anyway.

2:11 Paul scolds Peter

11But when Peter came to Antioch, I had to oppose him to his face, because he had messed up. 12He’d been eating with non-Jews, but when Yacob and companions arrived, he about-faced and started eating separately because he was afraid of being criticised by the strict Jews. 13The other Jews with him were also being hypocrites, so much so that even Barnabas joined their hypocrisy, 14but when I saw that they weren’t being honest with the truth of the good message, I had to say to Peter in front of everybody, “If you Jews are living more like non-Jews and not like strict Jews, how can you force non-Jews to obey all the Jewish traditions?

2:15 You can’t be saved by obeying rules

15We follow Jewish laws and not the customs of other nations, 16but we know that we’re not saved by following rules[ref] but only by faith in Yeshua the messiah. So we’ve believed in Yeshua the messiah so that we can be made guiltless by our faith in the messiah, and not by obeying all those rules, because all of those rules can never make any person guiltless. 17However if we attempt to be made guiltless through the messiah yet find that we’re sinners, does that mean that the messiah is servant to sin? That could never be so! 18If I rebuild what I’ve already torn down, that would show me to be a law-breaker. 19[ref]It was the law that showed me that I needed die to the idea of following the law so that I could live to serve God instead. I was executed on a stake along with the messiah 20and I’m not living any more, but it’s the messiah now living in me. The way that my body stays alive now is by living by faith in God’s son—the one who loved me and allowed himself to be executed for me. 21I’m not rejecting God’s grace, because if the law could make me guiltless, that would mean that the messiah died unnecessarily.


2:1: Acts 11:30; 15:2.

2:6: Deu 10:17.

2:16: a Psa 143:2; Rom 3:20; b Rom 3:22.

2:19: Rom 6:1-11; 7:1-6.

OETGAL 2 ©

GALIntroC1C2C3C4C5C6