When we read Paul’s letter to the Galatians, we often focus on the theology—the gospel of grace versus the law, the works of the flesh versus the fruit of the Spirit. But behind those words was a real people, living in a particular cultural setting that shaped their struggles and influenced the early church’s growth. To understand Galatians more fully, we must step into the cultural backdrop of Galatia in the first century.
A Land of Mixed Peoples
“Galatia” referred to a region in central Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey), named after the Gauls (Celts) who had migrated there centuries earlier. These Celtic peoples settled in the highlands and preserved many of their traditions, but by the first century, Galatia had become a Roman province (since 25 B.C.). This meant its culture was a blend of Celtic tribal customs, Hellenistic Greek influence, and Roman governance.
Thus, the Galatians were not one homogenous group but a people marked by ethnic diversity. Some lived in rural, tribal structures, while others were tied more closely to the Greco-Roman urban world. This cultural mix often created tensions that Paul had to address as he preached the gospel of unity in Christ.
Roman Rule and Local Religion
Under Roman control, Galatia was integrated into the broader imperial system. Roman law, taxation, and military presence were felt strongly. Loyalty to the emperor was often expressed through participation in the imperial cult—worship of the Roman emperor as a god. Alongside this, traditional Celtic religious practices and local pagan rituals still thrived.
For Jews living in Galatia, this environment presented challenges. They sought to maintain their religious identity amid a pluralistic and often idolatrous culture. Synagogues in cities like Pisidian Antioch, Iconium, Lystra, and Derbe became centers not only of worship but also of cultural preservation. When Paul preached in these places, he found both Jewish audiences steeped in the Law and Gentile “God-fearers” who admired Jewish monotheism but had not fully converted.
Honor, Shame, and Social Dynamics
Like much of the ancient Mediterranean world, Galatia’s society revolved around honor and shame. One’s public reputation, family lineage, and ability to keep social obligations were vital. This meant that embracing a crucified Messiah as Savior was deeply countercultural. Crucifixion was the ultimate shameful death under Roman rule. For Galatians to believe in Christ required them to challenge prevailing social values, rejecting both pagan honor codes and legalistic systems of status.
The Struggle with Law and Liberty
This cultural blend helps explain why the Galatian churches wrestled so much with legalism. Jewish Christians were pressuring Gentile believers to adopt the Mosaic Law—circumcision, dietary rules, and festival observances—as markers of true belonging. In a society so concerned with identity and loyalty, it made sense that some thought Gentile believers needed to become “Jewish” to be fully accepted. Paul’s fiery response in Galatians—that justification is by faith in Christ alone, not by works of the Law—cut through these cultural tensions to proclaim the radical freedom of the gospel.
Lessons for Today
The early church in Galatia reminds us that the gospel always enters into diverse cultural settings, challenging both religious traditions and social norms. For the Galatians, the challenge was whether they would cling to the outward markers of law or embrace the Spirit-filled life of liberty in Christ. For us today, the challenge may look different, but the call is the same: to live out the freedom of the gospel in whatever cultural pressures surround us.
The culture of Galatia—tribal, diverse, honor-driven, and bound by law—became the perfect stage for Paul to proclaim that in Christ, “neither circumcision nor uncircumcision avails anything, but a new creation” (Galatians 6:15).