This is one of the cases that perhaps my ignorance is most useful than all the wisdom spreaded througout this thread. I will give you my view, it is very "naively understandable", but perhaps is wrong or not so precise. In that case, please teachers, correct me:
1) In the universe there are charges going around everywhere. In some place there is some negative charge, in some other some positive charge. In some place there is some green colour charge and so on.
2) These charges are conserved globally. That is to say that if in some moment there are in the whole universe 10000 negative charges, one minute later there will be the same amount of negative charges.
3) These charges are also conserved locally. That is to say that if in some moment, in some place, there are 10 red colour charges, then, one instant later, these 10 red colour charges will be in the same place or not too far.
4) There are some theorems, Noether, Ward Takanashi, etc, that says that if you want to make a theory about systems with local charges, you can make them rather simply building an object called "Lagrangian" which can be viewed as some sort of probability density (or probability amplitud density) which have to have some sort of symmetry (and that is the only way you can make them). The theories that are constructed under this procedure are called Gauge Theories (ie pick a symmetry and find the lagrangian asociated with it)
5) The amount of different charges that you observe in experiments and the way they interact should define the sort of symmetry that the Lagrangian should have (and, in that way, its precise mathematical formulation). (This is more or less what happened with the model that describes the strong interaction which is defined as a Lagrangian with SU(3) as a gauge symmetry)
6) viceversa, we can postulate that some not yet explained phenomena should be explained through a Lagrangian with some symmetry and, as a consequence, you will have as a result, a theory of some local charges which interact in some way. (That is what happened with the model that describes the electroweak interaction which is defined as a Lagrangian with SU(2)xU(1) as a gauge symmetry).
The symbols I used (SU(2) and so on) are things used to represent symmetries. They are groups. So, in some way you can say that point 4 is a way to unifiy Group Theory with Local Charge Physics (in some way, not taking into account that there can be broken symmetries or that the same group symmetry can be used with a theory of interactions of 2 type of particles or 20 or 2000 or so on). That is to say that for every group symmetry there is (up to what I stated in the las bracket) one physics model and viceversa.
Please, take into account that what I stated is not tooooo precise and that it may contain mistakes. More or less it represents my view on the subject.