Ordained by Grace Alone: The Priesthood of All Believers
Galatians 1:3-5
"To the churches of Galatia:
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ, who gave himself for our sins to deliver us from the present evil age, according to the will of our God and Father, to whom be the glory forever and ever. Amen."
The apostle Paul is again exhorting the foundling churches that are being set upon by legalistic religious people who are teaching a different gospel; a teaching contrary to the gospel of grace. If not for Paul, empowered by the Holy Spirit, the early Christian communities would have devolved into nothing more than another form of a Jewish sect.
The churches in the region of Galatia were facing pressure from legalistic influencers, the Judaizers, those "believers who were pushing a "different gospel" that added the works of the law (like circumcision) to faith in Christ, undermining the pure grace message Paul had preached.
And the main issue at hand is ordination. By which authority Paul was teaching the gospel of Jesus.
Paul laid claim to authority through the ordination of Jesus Christ, King of the Universe. Not through the ordinances of men. And the fact of the matter is, Paul’s apostolic authority is directly from Christ (not from human ordination or intermediaries).
The Judaizers weren’t just adding requirements like circumcision; they were challenging the very source of Paul’s message and ministry, implying his gospel was diluted or unauthorized because he wasn’t commissioned through the Jerusalem apostles or traditional Jewish channels. And so, Paul counters this negative energy forcefully from the very first verse, though verses 3-5, weaving the gospel itself into his greeting as proof of the authority behind it.
And so he begins his exhortation,
"Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ."
No fooling around, direct and to the point. He opens with an authoritative and direct call to the source of all life and being. And in doing so, he establishes the fact that NO MAN, no human authority, can ordain the minister who is working for Jesus Christ. No man can qualify a minister by laying hands upon him. He might simply ratify him, present him as a man of God in a legalistic manner. Sort of like licensing him, as far as the state, or faith community is concerned. And unfortunately this is proved true in that the history of the church is littered with ordination papers that were bestowed upon many scoundrels.
So Paul opens up his greetings with no warm-up, no deference to earthly gatekeepers. He declares his apostleship as "not from men nor through man, but through Jesus Christ and God the Father." He calls directly upon the ultimate Source; the Father who willed salvation and the Son who executed it through self-sacrifice.
Amen to that!
Folks, right now the world is under the influence of the Devil. And the men and women of the world are subjects of his will. And no laying on of hands is going to change that. That practice is not a magic incantation that transforms the person, anymore than the water of baptism does, or swallowing bread or drinking wine makes your stomach or bowels holy.
The world indeed lies under the sway of the evil one, and humanity apart from Christ remains enslaved to sin’s dominion and Satan’s influence. But for those who are in Christ, followers of Him and his teachings, they are ordained by his mercy and grace.
1 John 5:19
"We know that we are from God, and the whole world lies in the power of the evil one."
This is the glorious flip side of the coin we’ve been turning over in Galatians. While the world remains under the evil one’s influence, with unbelieving humanity enslaved to sin and Satan’s schemes, those who are in Christ experience a radical reversal. And that's a holy thing. No longer defined by that dominion; instead, we are ordained, set apart, appointed, called, by God’s sovereign mercy and grace alone.
That same grace that rescued Paul from persecutor to preacher is the grace that calls every believer. It’s not earned by merit, ritual, or human approval, it’s God’s merciful initiative, revealing Christ in us so we might live for Him.
Galatians 1:5-6
"...But when he who had set me apart before I was born, and who called me by his grace, was pleased to reveal his Son to me, in order that I might preach him among the Gentiles..."
This extends beyond the apostles to all who belong to Christ. Scripture affirms that believers collectively form a royal priesthood; a direct echo of God’s promise to Israel now fulfilled in the church through Christ.
1 Peter 2:9
"But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light."
Every sincere follower of Jesus is "ordained" in this sense. Grace given to each one, according to the measure of Christ’s gift, consecrated by The Holy Spirit. Every believer receives grace-gifts from Christ Himself for building up the body, no human ordination is required to activate them.
This is the priesthood of all believers, and it demolishes any notion of a special class elevated by rituals or human hands to mediate grace. This isn’t a downgrade or replacement; it’s fulfillment through the Messiah. Every sincere follower of Jesus is incorporated into this identity. Not by bloodline or merit, but by God’s sovereign election in grace. We all share in Christ’s priestly office.
Then and now, in Christ, the veil is torn (Matthew 27:51); and we all stand on equal footing before God, called by His mercy to proclaim His excellencies and mysteries. If we cannot follow this, we are then proclaiming that the Holy Spirit is incapable of making disciples without the help of human works. We are then establishing a "different" gospel.
And people did just that, then and still do now. They imply the Holy Spirit is insufficient, that Christ’s finished work needs supplementation, that the priesthood Christ established isn’t truly universal or empowered. Paul thunders against this in Galatians 1:6-9, and he's astonished at their deserting of grace. Their adding of human mediation or works to steal glory from God and bind the people back under their bondage, through institutional gatekeeping, sacramental legalism, or cultural pressures to "earn" spiritual status.
But Scripture stands firm; the Spirit makes disciples, equips believers, and empowers proclamation without needing human crutches. Our "ordination" is by mercy and grace alone, direct from Christ. And this truth should fuel bold, yet humble service today in a world still under the evil one’s influence.
So what good is this whole idea of ordination?
Simply put, for the sake of order, unity, and witness in the body, we call believers into service, as did the first Christians. It symbolizes the church’s agreement with their service.
"We see what God is doing in you; and we affirm your call; we set you apart publicly for this service."
It means they recognize Christ at work in you. The transformation, the filling with the Spirit, the character, the gifting, all was already the Spirit’s work beforehand. Nothing the congregation did caused the transformation in you, though no doubt they nurtured it. Ultimately, the Holy Spirit was responsible. What they do is "officiate" that call, like a licensing or public proclamation of Christ's authority in you. Ordination (or commissioning) doesn’t elevate someone into a superior spiritual class or mediate grace; it publicly declares and equips for specific roles within the body, always under Christ’s headship.
At the end of the day, genuine ministry flows from inner transformation by grace, not outward ceremony. And we should resist thinking otherwise. The church’s role is a humble one; to discern, support, pray, affirm, and send forth that which God has already initiated. When done rightly, it builds up the body without creating hierarchies that undermine the universal priesthood or add dogma to the gospel.
This humble role protects the church from two dangers:
Prideful hierarchy, and ritualistic legalism.
And so we must resist this temptation. When the church discerns rightly, supports prayerfully, affirms joyfully, and sends forth humbly, it builds up the body beautifully. It nurtures the transformation the Spirit began, providing accountability, encouragement, and structure for effective service.
But the glory ALWAYS belongs to God.
"Not to us, O Lord, not to us, but to your name give glory" - Psalm 115:1
When you sing that, really mean it. Don't just mouth the words, let them become within you. Drive out all spirits that try to step into His place. Drive out any system that makes human acts essential for ministry, authority, or standing before God drifts toward the "yoke of slavery" that Paul warns against.
May the God of all grace, who called you out of darkness into His marvelous light through the finished work of His Son, Jesus Christ, continue to guard your hearts and minds in the pure gospel of grace.
Amen!