Commentary on Galatians 3
Though written two thousand years ago, do the words of Galatians 3:14 have meaning for us today?
Want to know God's will for your life? Start with Galatians 3:14. Paul originally directed that verse to congregations in what is now central Turkey. The Holy Spirit, however, had a much wider audience in mind. Thus, this divinely inspired letter to the Galatians became part of the Written Word through which God wishes to speak to people everywhere in every age.
Read Galatians 3:14 along with the Great Commission in Matthew 28:19-20, the Pentecost Promise in Acts 1:8, and the approximately 200 other world-missions-related Bible verses. That will make it clear that God wants all His people to support and participate in the effort to proclaim the Gospel all over the earth (see the brief video below of Dr. James Dobson on our ultimate purpose in life).
From time to time I hear or read people saying that believers are "blessed in order to be a blessing." That saying is accurate, and it does reflect the thought in Galatians 3:14 that our embracing the Gospel has obligated us to pass it on to all those who have never heard. When divine blessings flow toward us we must not start building a pond so we can keep that flow of blessings for our own personal enjoyment. We are not supposed to be pond builders. Instead, we are supposed to be making irrigation canals so that the Water of Life will flow through us to a dry and parched world.
I do not disagree with those who say that lovingly sharing Christ with those closest to us is very important. The Bible has plenty to say about our responsibility for that. However, the word "Gentiles" in Galatians 3:14 clearly points to people other than "our own kind." To First-Century Jewish Christians, 'Gentiles' did not mean their relatives or the people next door or even those on the other side of town. "Gentiles" were the whole rest of the world. Paul's declaration in Galatians 3:14 is that God redeems us so that the whole world might hear the Gospel.
Some years ago, California pastor Rick Warren wrote a book titled The Purpose Driven Life: What am I here for? That book sold over 30 million copies and thus repeatedly made the New York Times bestseller list. In his pastoral ministry, Warren insists that his parishioners support and engage in world evangelism. So, I'm sure he would not mind us saying that his book title -- The Purpose Driven Life -- could be used as a label for Galatians 3:14. The in order that phrase of Galatians 3:14 clearly points to world evangelism as a life purpose for all God's people.
What purpose drives you? Do you see your purpose as something centered on you and your personal happiness and sense of success? Or, are you driven by the Galatians 3:14 purpose of getting the Good News of the Gospel to everyone on the face of the earth?
-- Howard Culbertson,
This mini-essay on a world missions Bible passage is one of more than three dozen articles in the "Heart of God" series published in Engage, a monthly online magazine. That series explores what the Bible says about world missions.
Galatians 3:14 should be profoundly meaningful for us today. It can remind us that God's heart is for all His people to support spreading the Gospel worldwide. It uses the sense of the The "blessed to be a blessing" phrase to remind us why we should be reaching out to all nations with the Good News. Just as irrigation canals channel life-giving water to arid lands,we are called to be purpose-driven, ensuring that the Water of Life flows through us to a parched world. Let's let Galatians 3:14 challenge us to transcend personal desires and seek a purpose in some kind of involvement in world evangelism.