Christian Ethics In Paul's Letter To Galatians

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In the letter to Galatians by Paul it is trying to teach them a moral lesson not just based on Christian experience and Scripture, that justice does not come from the practice of the works of the law, but from faith. But for the Apostle ethics does not consist simply in a series of exhortations and indications. Christian ethics is based on being Christian. That is why Paul had to lay such deep and profound foundations before building upon them the edifice of Christian ethical life.
False teachers, Jews supposedly converted to Christianity, who were perverting and undermining the very heart of the Gospel of grace which is "justification, salvation by faith, not works," they were teaching that to be saved, Faith in Christ was not enough, but you also needed to fulfill the law, rituals, do works.
So, Paul gives himself the task of showing us that to return to the law and to legalism is not to advance but to retreat, to abandon grace, not to gain more
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It includes the theme of the last scriptural argument: freedom in the Spirit or slavery under the law. Freedom callers can not confuse freedom with debauchery. Christ frees us to love our neighbor. This love, with its various manifestations, is, in turn, the fruit of the Spirit. That is why walking in the Spirit can be described as fraternal service. Finally, it is shown that true Christian perfection does not grow on the floor of the flesh. The eternal life of the baptized is the harvest of what man has sown on the ground of the Spirit, on the soil which God Himself has prepared for Christ is what Paul tries to teach them thru the letter.
The epistle to the Galatians has as its central theme Paul's desire for believers in that church to return to the truth of the gospel of grace. It is clear, that Paul's main concern is that the Galatians should not lose their faith in the true