Many Christians have appealed to 1 Corinthians 8 to justify almost any behavior they believe falls within their Christian liberty—often pointing to their understanding of freedom in Christ, the dangers of legalism, and our release from the rituals of the Law. While those truths are indeed important, Paul insists they are never more important than love. The Corinthian believers elevated their spiritual knowledge above the call to love one another, and Paul confronts them directly, showing that knowledge without love does not produce maturity but pride. Christian liberty was never meant to be exercised in isolation from the command to love. Our first priority is to love our brothers and sisters, and that love must become both the motivation and the limitation in how we use our freedom. Liberty governed by knowledge alone inflates self; liberty governed by love builds up the church.