
Scripture Reference: Galatians 3:25-4:7
Knowing Who We Really Are – Continued
As Paul stated in Ephesians 1:3, he says the same thing to the Galatians, but from a slightly different perspective when he states, “For you are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:26). To modern ears such a statement might come across as sexist, and indeed some translators prefer to paraphrase the text at this point with “sons and daughters” to ease the supposed offensiveness of such male-only language. But to do this is to completely miss the point, not only of what Paul is saying, but also how his words would have been heard by women in that first century world. In those times daughters had few if any rights under the culture of their day. So for Paul to say that “all” believers, male and female, were regarded and treated as “sons” was little short of revolutionary: even more so because they were “sons of God.”
There is no discrimination of blessing between men and women, old and young, rich or poor, or whatever permutation we might choose, when it comes to being in the family of God. The apostle makes that point very clear in a couple verses later in Galatians 3:28.
The apostle goes on to explain how this is so:
“For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ” (Galatians 3:27).
He uses the language of baptism to convey the weight of significance bound up with this symbol and all that it represents. Far from using this language merely as a picture, he is reminding his readers it is also a pledge. Just as for Abraham under the Old Covenant the rite of circumcision was not only a “sign”, but also a “seal” of the righteousness promised in God’s gracious covenant with Him (Romans 4:11), so also baptism is a symbol as one of the two covenant signs and seals Christ instituted for the church in the New Covenant era. It points to the depth of our identification with Christ and of Christ with us.
Paul fleshes this out further by saying to these Galatian Christians that they had also “put on Christ.” What we wear says a great deal about who we are and what we are like (Pastor/Preacher Tim Keller used to use uniforms as a vivid illustration of this) so for Christians to be “clothed with Christ” speaks volumes about our true identity. In Galatia it was obvious how “the circumcision party” (Galatians 2:12 ESV) got its nickname. So too, throughout the history of the church, it has often been the case that God’s professing people have been too eager to be identified by their own particular doctrinal obsession rather than by the One for whom they were named in their baptism.
To Be Continued

























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