Gallio in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
gal'-i-o (Gallion): The Roman deputy or proconsul of Achaia,
before whom Paul was haled by his Jewish accusers on the
apostle's first visit to Corinth, during his second
missionary journey (Acts 18:12-17). The trial was not of
long duration. Although Gallio extended his protection to
the Jewish religion as one of the religions recognized by
the state, he contemptuously rejected the claim of the Jews
that their law was binding upon all. In the eyes of the
proconsul, the only law universally applicable was that of
the Roman code and social morality: under neither was the
prisoner chargeable; therefore, without even waiting to hear
Paul's speech in his own defense, he summarily ordered his
lictors to clear the court. Even the subsequent treatment
meted out to Sosthenes, the chief ruler of the synagogue,
was to him a matter of indifference. The beating of
Sosthenes is ascribed by different readings to "Jews" and to
"Greeks," but the incident is referred to by the writer of
Acts to show that the sympathies of the populace lay with
Paul, and that Gallio made no attempt to suppress them.
Gallio has often been instanced as typical of one who is
careless or indifferent to religion, yet in the account
given of him in Acts, he merely displayed an attitude
characteristic of the manner in which Roman governors
regarded the religious disputes of the time (compare also
LYSIAS; FELIX; FESTUS). Trained by his administrative duties
to practical thinking and precision of language, he refused
to adjudicate the squabbles of what he regarded as an
obscure religious sect, whose law was to him a subtle
quibbling with "words and names."
According to extra-canonical references, the original name
of Gallio was Marcus Annaeus Novatus, but this was changed
on his being adopted by the rhetorician, Lucius Junius
Gallio. He was born at Cordova, but came to Rome in the
reign of Tiberius. He was the brother of the philosopher
Seneca, by whom, as also by Statius, reference is made to
the affable nature of his character. As Achaia was
reconstituted a proconsular province by Claudius in 44 AD,
the accession of Gallio to office must have been subsequent
to that date, and has been variously placed at 51-53 AD
(compare also Knowling in The Expositor's Greek Testament,
II, 389-92).
C. M. Kerr
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