A Chronology of Acts - McGough PDF
A Chronology of Acts - McGough PDF
A Chronology of Acts - McGough PDF
Michael McGough
Professor of New Testament and Greek
Canadian Southern Baptist Seminary
The problem of establishing a chronology of Acts lies in
two areas: the historical reliability of the chronological data
in the book of Acts and the chronological data given in Gal.
1:15-2:14. Concerning the first problem area, a brief
historical overview is needed.
About the middle of the last century F. C. Baur and the
Tubingen school proposed that Acts was produced in the
second century A.D.1 According to the Tubingen scholars,
Acts was concerned with the problems of second century
Christianity and therefore did not apply to the church in the
first century. This theory regarding Acts held sway until the
turn of the century. W. M. Ramsay, himself heavily influenced by Baur's ideas about Acts, performed extensive
historical/archaeological studies of the Asia Minor area. His
findings forced him to conclude that the book of Acts
presented historically reliable data concerned with the first
century rather than the second. Ramsay's thesis concerning
the historical reliability of Acts has not gone without its
challengers, but has been accepted generally. A. N. SherwinWhite, the most recent classical historian to study the
problem of the historical value of Acts, states: "Any attempt
to reject its [i.e., Acts'! basic historicity even in matters of
detail must now appear absurd."2
Regarding the second problem area, recent study on the
subject of the chronology of Acts has involved the relationship of the data found in the Pauline epistles, especially
Galatians, with Acts. There are those such as John Knox,
Robert Jewett, and Gerd Ldemann who construct a
chronology of Paul's life with little or no regard for the
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