When Faith Trumps Performance
What’s Galatians 3 about?
Paul delivers one of Scripture’s most powerful arguments about why faith, not religious performance, is what actually connects us to God. He’s writing to people who started well but got sidetracked by thinking they needed to earn what had already been freely given.
The Full Context
Picture this: Paul had planted churches in Galatia (modern-day Turkey), and these new Christians were thriving. They’d experienced God’s power, received the Holy Spirit, and were living transformed lives. But then some religious teachers showed up after Paul left, insisting that faith in Jesus wasn’t enough – they also needed to follow Jewish law, particularly circumcision, to be “real” Christians. Paul was absolutely livid.
Galatians 3 sits at the heart of Paul’s theological argument in this letter. After his emotional opening chapters, he now shifts into lawyer mode, building a systematic case from Scripture itself. This chapter contains some of Paul’s most sophisticated theological reasoning about justification, the nature of faith, and how God’s promises work. It’s also where he introduces the revolutionary idea that all of God’s promises to Abraham find their fulfillment in Christ – making this passage foundational for understanding how the Old and New Testaments connect.
What the Ancient Words Tell Us
When Paul asks in Galatians 3:2 whether they received the Spirit “by works of the law or by hearing with faith,” he’s using a Greek phrase that’s absolutely loaded. The word for “hearing” (akoē) doesn’t just mean listening – it implies hearing with understanding and response. It’s the same word used when someone “hears” a call to action and actually does something about it.
But here’s what’s fascinating: Paul uses the phrase “works of the law” (erga nomou) repeatedly throughout this chapter. In Greek, erga means actions or deeds, but it carries the connotation of things you accomplish through effort and skill. Think of it like a craftsman’s handiwork – something you can point to and say, “I made that.”
Grammar Geeks
When Paul writes about being “justified by faith” in Galatians 3:8, he uses the Greek word dikaioo, which literally means “to declare righteous” or “to vindicate.” It’s a legal term – like a judge banging the gavel and declaring, “Not guilty!” The tense Paul uses suggests this is a one-time declaration, not an ongoing process you have to maintain through performance.
The contrast Paul’s drawing isn’t between faith and good deeds generally – it’s between trusting God’s promise versus trying to achieve righteousness through religious performance. The Galatians weren’t being told to stop helping their neighbors; they were being told they needed to get circumcised and follow dietary laws to be fully accepted by God.
What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?
For Paul’s original readers, this chapter would have been earth-shattering. Most people in the ancient world believed that maintaining good relationships with the gods required careful ritual observance. Miss a festival, skip a sacrifice, eat the wrong food, and you might find yourself cursed. The Jewish law was actually unique in many ways because it provided clear guidelines for staying in God’s good graces.
So when these Galatian Christians heard visiting teachers say, “Faith in Jesus is great, but you also need to follow the law,” it probably sounded reasonable. After all, wouldn’t God want them to be as obedient as possible?
Did You Know?
In the ancient world, adoption wasn’t typically about childless couples wanting families. It was usually a business and legal arrangement where a wealthy person would adopt an adult heir to carry on their name and inherit their property. When Paul talks about being “adopted as sons” in Galatians 3:26, his readers would have understood this as receiving full legal rights and inheritance – not just a warm, fuzzy family feeling.
But Paul’s argument in Galatians 3:15-18 would have been brilliant to ancient ears. He’s using a legal principle everyone understood: you can’t modify a contract after both parties have already signed it. God made promises to Abraham 430 years before the law was given at Mount Sinai. So the law can’t change the terms of what God already committed to do through faith.
Wrestling with the Text
Here’s where things get really interesting – and honestly, a bit puzzling. In Galatians 3:19, Paul asks, “Why then the law?” It’s like he’s anticipating his readers thinking, “Wait, if faith is what matters, why did God bother giving the law at all?”
Paul’s answer is that the law was “added because of transgressions, until the offspring should come to whom the promise had been made.” But what does that actually mean? The Greek word for “because of” (charin) could mean “to restrain transgressions,” “to reveal transgressions,” or even “to provoke transgressions.”
Wait, That’s Strange…
Paul says in Galatians 3:20 that “a mediator implies more than one party; but God is one.” This is one of the most debated verses in Galatians. Some scholars think Paul is saying that because the law required a mediator (Moses), it was inherently temporary and indirect, while God’s promise to Abraham was direct and therefore permanent. Others see it as contrasting the law’s bilateral nature (requiring human obedience) with the gospel’s unilateral nature (dependent only on God’s faithfulness).
The image Paul uses in Galatians 3:24 is equally fascinating. He calls the law our “guardian” (paidagōgos) – but this wasn’t a teacher in our modern sense. A paidagōgos was typically a slave who walked children to school, made sure they didn’t get into trouble, and sometimes disciplined them. But once the child came of age, the paidagōgos was no longer needed.
How This Changes Everything
The revolutionary truth Paul is unveiling here is that God’s acceptance has always been based on faith, not performance. Abraham was declared righteous in Genesis 15:6 – before he was circumcised, before the law existed, simply because he trusted God’s promise.
This means that all the religious anxiety about whether we’re doing enough, following the right rules, or measuring up to God’s standards misses the point entirely. Galatians 3:28 makes clear that in Christ, all the human categories we use to determine worth – ethnicity, social status, gender – become irrelevant when it comes to our standing before God.
“Faith isn’t about performing perfectly; it’s about trusting completely in the One who already has.”
But here’s what Paul isn’t saying: he’s not suggesting that how we live doesn’t matter. Later in Galatians, he’ll talk extensively about the “fruit of the Spirit” and living worthy of our calling. The difference is motivation and source. We don’t live well to earn God’s favor; we live well because we already have it.
The practical implications are staggering. This means you can stop keeping score. You can stop the exhausting cycle of spiritual performance anxiety. You can rest in the finished work of Christ. And paradoxically, this freedom often leads to more genuine transformation than all the rule-keeping ever could.
Key Takeaway
Faith isn’t a work you perform to earn God’s approval – it’s simply trusting that God has already given what He promised. The moment you start adding “but you also need to…” to the gospel, you’ve missed the point entirely.
Further Reading
Internal Links:
External Scholarly Resources:
- The Letter to the Galatians by F.F. Bruce
- Galatians by Timothy George
- The Theology of Paul the Apostle by James D.G. Dunn
Tags
Galatians 3:2, Galatians 3:8, Galatians 3:24, Galatians 3:28, Genesis 15:6, Romans 4:16, faith, justification, works, law, grace, Abraham, adoption, inheritance, circumcision, Holy Spirit, covenant, promise