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The apostle Paul wrote this letter about a.d. 48. The Galatians are probably believers in the churches of the southern region of the Roman province of Galatia. Paul is more critical of his audience here than in any of his other letters.
Christ's death has brought in the age of the new covenant (3:23-26; 4:4-5; 24). People do not have to become Jews or follow the outward ceremonies of the Mosaic law in order to be Christians (2:3; 11-12; 14; 4:10). To require these things denies the heart of the gospel, which is justification by faith alone and not by keeping the "works of the law" (2:16). In this new age, Christians are to live in the guidance and power of the Spirit (chs. 5-6).
False teachers have convinced the Galatians that they are required to be circumcised. The result is division within their church (5:15). Paul gives numerous reasons why they should return to the simple truth of the gospel.
Paul's letter to the Galatians was likely written to the churches he had established during his first missionary journey (Acts 13:1-14:28). He probably wrote the letter from his home church in Antioch in Syria, sometime before the Jerusalem council (Acts 15:1–31).
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