Showing posts with label fruit of the Spirit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fruit of the Spirit. Show all posts

September 14, 2015

Who is the Holy Spirit and What Does He Have to Do with Fruit? (Part 4)

As Christians, we're supposed to be filled with the Spirit of God. But what, exactly, does that look like? Well, for one thing, it looks like patience.
What in the Word: Galatians 5:22-25

Hang-Onto-It Verse: "The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control." (Galatians 5:22-23a)

The Backstory: 
Alright, precious girl, let's get right to it. Reread the Hang-Onto-It Verse, above. Which of the "varieties" of the fruit of the Spirit would you say is your biggest area of challenge? 

I hope I'm not alone when I say that patience is IT for me. 

I want to act now. I want to do something now. I want to figure this out now. I want resolution now. I want an answer now. I want "it" to happen now.

And while this is clearly MY issue before God, the split-second speed of our modern society doesn't support patience. If a webpage takes two seconds to load, we get irritated. We (okay, I) get annoyed if we (okay, I) have to wait a beat before the car ahead of us moves when the light turns green. We've got drive-thru dining and call-ahead seating and same-day delivery and instant-everything.

I also feel like patience carries with it a stereotype of passivity. Picture a patient person in your mind. What mental image are you painting? 

I've got a vision of someone who's sitting still, not doing much of anything, and not wanting to do much of anything. I'm thinking of someone who is not bothered by waiting. I'm picturing disinterest and dispassion...an "oh, well, whatever" approach.

Of course (you knew this was coming, didn't you?), this is not what patience is about at all.

Make your way to these verses and soak up the details surrounding the presentation of patience you find in each one.
  • Ephesians 4:2
  • Colossians 3:12
  • 1 Timothy 1:16
  • 2 Peter 3:15 
The Greek word for patience as it is used in these verses and in connection with the fruit of the spirit is makrothumia (mack-roth-oo-MEE-ah). Try saying it out loud a couple times. (Bonus points if you work it into conversation at the dinner table some night. Work it in and tell me about it, and I'll send you cookies!)

According to The Complete Word Study Dictionary: New Testamentmakrothumia means "forbearance...self-restraint before proceeding to action." And here's my favorite part: "the quality of a person who is able to avenge [herself] yet refrains from doing so." 
photo credit: http://www.prayers-for-special-help.com/

Forbearance means "to put up with." "Self-restraint" very often involves choosing not to say one thing and saying something else...or nothing at all. And being able to avenge yourself but refraining from doing it means that you have the way--and often the understandable why--to get back at someone, but you choose not to do it.

My family shows patience to me all the time by putting up with me. They show patience by (and if your mom taught you never to say "shut up," you might want to skip this part) shutting up and not yelling at me, even when I deserve it. They show patience to me by giving up their right to treat me like I treat them and by treating me with God's love instead. And they do all this because they have mercy on me: they do not give me what I deserve.

Patience puts up, shuts up, and gives up.

Patience puts up with others.
Patience shuts up what it could say and says something else...or nothing.
Patience gives up its right to do what it "deserves" to do and shows mercy instead.

I cannot write this post on patience without at some point going back to my own best
schooling on the subject to date: Beth Moore's Living Beyond Yourself: Exploring the Fruit of the Spirit Bible study. My personal workbook from this journey is underlined, starred, exclamation-pointed, and bracketed! In the video session on patience, Beth says, "Patience is not only about what we do but about what we don't...patience waits when it wants to wack."

The Take-Away:
We absolutely know what patiently waiting instead of justifiably wacking looks like: it looks like mercy. And we know what mercy looks like: it looks like God. The Creator of the universe--the Great I AM, the High King of Heaven--sees people declare that He does not exists every day. He sees governments and courts make laws that directly oppose His good and right ways. He sees evil and wrongdoing and sin and wickedness thrown in His face. Why does He not take the action that will cause every knee to bow and every tongue to confess that He is Lord? (Philppians 2:10,11)

2 Peter 3:9 puts the answer to that question so powerfully. Look up this verse and fill in these blanks: "The Lord is not slow in keeping His ___________________, as some understand slowness. He is _______________ with you, not wanting anyone to ________, but everyone to ___________ to ________________."

This is why God puts up with us! This is why He does not avenge Himself--yet--even though He has every right to do it. This is why He does not speak judgement--yet. 

Because of His love. Because of His mercy. Because of His patience. 

The Truth in Action:
What person or situation in your life do you need to apply some patience to? And what will that look like when you do it? 
  • What will you say--or not say? 
  • What will you do--or not do? 
Usually, for me, patience looks like closing my mouth. Also, not slamming doors. I'm not saying this is what I do--or don't do. I'm just saying this is what it would look like if I "did" patience better and more often.

Patience, like every other spiritual discipline, takes practice. And you know what they say: practice makes perfect." Well, actually, no. There is always somewhere further we can go with God. We are always striving to model the perfection of Christ, but we are not there. But, practice does make possible. I can get better at patience. I can practice it so that the next time I need it, it's possible for me to show it.

And remember, the most important part of The Truth in Action for every part of this Fruit of the Spirit (FOTS) series is going to be the same: ask the Holy Spirit (H.S.) to give you His fruit! Listen up, precious girl, you cannot come up with the FOTS on your own. You can't will yourself to be patient, especially when you feel like you have every right to take some action and you have every right to take it now! You can't just grit your teeth and make this FOTS thing happen. You have to ask the H.S. to fill you up with His power every day. 

The great news here is that God will always say "yes" when we ask for something He wants to give (on His own perfect schedule, of course). And we KNOW He wants to give us patience and all the rest of the parts of the FOTS. You can ask for a fresh fill-up of patience to get you through your day and feel confident God is going to be all over that request. So ask! 

Ask the H.S. to give you His supernatural power, because people can't literally see God's Spirit in you, but they can see patience. And remember, you're not doing this hard thing on your own. I'm not doing it on my own. That's why it's not called the Fruit of Elizabeth or the Fruit of (your name goes here). It's the Fruit of the Spirit

His Spirit.
His fruit. 
In you. 
Sweet.
"When your words came, I ate them; 
they were my joy and my heart's delight." (Jeremiah 15:16)


What does practicing patience look like for you? 
Share it in a comment, on Facebook, or in an email!

(Looking for Part 3 of this series? Find it here.)


July 20, 2015

Who is the Holy Spirit and What Does He Have to Do with Fruit? (Part 3)

As Christians, we're supposed to be filled with the Spirit of God. But what, exactly, does that look like? Well, for one thing, it looks like peace.

What in the Word: Galatians 5:22-25

Hang-Onto-It Verse: "The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control." (Galatians 5:22-23a)


The Backstory: 

Camp out on the word peace for a little while. How do you describe peace? Then take a quick field trip to the lovely Reflect blog and pause for a few seconds on the expanded definition of shalowm you find there.

Which of these images best captures what you have in mind right now? 

                                

                       

Grab your Bible and go to Isaiah 9:6. What is the last name given to Jesus in this divine birth announcement?

What comes to mind when you read or hear the word "prince"?

My thoughts lean toward authority, rule, power. 

Head to the New Testament in your Bible and check out what Colossians 3:15 says about peace. 

This is a moment when we can just revel in the connection and completion of God's Word! Jesus is called the Prince of Peace. Princes are rulers. Colossians 3:15 counsels us to "let the peace of Christ rule" in our hearts. Aren't you just in awe of how everything fits together...how a thread started in the Old Testament gets woven into the New? Beautiful. Inspired (literally). I love this.

Peace reigns.
Peace rules.

The Main Event:
How do we get to this peace that reigns and rules?

One way is to follow the peace path. Click over to Philippians 4:6-7. Drink in these verses a couple times.

Now use these key words from that same passage to fill in the path below.

__________ ... __________ ... __________

... __________ ... __________ ... ________.

You can also look at this path as something of an equation: worry + prayer + petition + thanksgiving + requests = peace. 
  • Tell God what you're worried about. 
  • Present the facts to Him. (He knows, but He likes it when you communicate with Him.) 
  • Thank Him for what He's already done in the situation or for what He's blessed you with that gives you something to worry about in the first place. 
  • Ask Him to act. 
  • Then take a deep breath and confidently expect to feel His peace.

The Take-Away:
Worry is a window. It lets fear, despair, hopelessness, and anxiety into your mind and heart. (And, if you're like me, anger. I often act angry when I feel worried.)

But: peace is a protector. Peace stands guard at your mind and heart and denies entry to what worry would like to let in. Instead of fear, despair, hopelessness, anxiety, and anger, peace admits joy, hope, courage, encouragement, and wisdom. And because God's peace transcends (goes beyond, surpasses) understanding, you can experience this protection no matter what's going on in your life or in the world around you. 
You might understand that your friendship with your best friend is strained. You might understand that your family member's illness is serious and scary. You might understand that you don't know what to do about a big decision looming over you. But peace rises above understanding. Peace reigns and rules and exerts its authority over what you understand. 

Sometimes we think of peace as passive, but the peace that passes understanding actually brings strength. Peace captures energy stolen by worry and converts it into power to deal with that friendship, that illness, that decision.

The Truth in Action:
What are you worried about? (If you're like me, the issue isn't coming up with something; it's sorting just one thing out of a long list. This is not something I'm proud of.) Whatever is worrying you, move along the peace path with it. 

My 16-year-old daughter just got her license and is driving on her own. And because I am a normal mother, I am worried about her. So I pray: I begin a conversation with Abba and affirm my belief that He exists, that He cares about what I care about, and that He can and will do something about it! I petition Him and tell Him what He already knows about Lydia: how precious and loving and lovely she is. I thank Him for creating her and for giving her to her father, sister, and me. Then I tell Him I am concerned for her safety and ask Him to protect her and to help her to make wise decisions when she's driving. And then, even though I understand only too well (!) everything that could happen to my sweet girl when she's on the road, God's peace guards my heart and mind. (And then I pray some more. Because that's what we moms of young drivers do.)

When worry and fear try to get in the window, the protector turns them back. 

One other thing to remember: the most important part of The Truth in Action for every part of this Fruit of the Spirit (FOTS) series is going to be the same: ask the Holy Spirit (H.S.) to give you His fruit! Listen up, precious girl, you cannot come up with the FOTS on your own. You can't will yourself to be peaceful, especially on days when you feel like you're buried in worries about things that really matter! You can't just grit your teeth and make this FOTS thing happen. You have to ask the H.S. to fill you up with His power every day. 

The great news here is that God will always say "yes" when we ask for something He wants to give (on His own perfect schedule, of course). And we KNOW He wants to give us peace and all the rest of the parts of the FOTS. You can ask for a fresh fill-up of peace to get you through your day and feel confident God is going to be all over that request. So ask! 

Ask the H.S. to give you His supernatural power, because people can't literally see God's Spirit in you, but they can see peace. And remember, you're not doing this hard thing on your own. I'm not doing it on my own. That's why it's not called the Fruit of Elizabeth or the Fruit of (your name goes here). It's the Fruit of the Spirit

His Spirit.
His fruit. 
In you. 
Sweet.


"When your words came, I ate them; 
they were my joy and my heart's delight." (Jeremiah 15:16)



What steals your peace? What brings you peace?
Share it in a comment, on Facebook, or in an email!

(Looking for Part 2 of this series? Find it here.)

June 14, 2015

Who is the Holy Spirit and What Does He Have to Do with Fruit? (Part 2)

As Christians, we're supposed to be filled with the Spirit of God. But what, exactly, does that look like? Well, for one thing, it looks like joy.


What in the Word: Galatians 5:22-25

Hang-Onto-It Verse: "The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control." (Galatians 5:22-23a)


The Backstory: 

Click over to see a couple translations of Isaiah 51:3. What will be found in the place God comforts?

When I do Bible studies with my Proverbs 32 sisters, we joke that if we don't know the answer to a question in our workbooks, we just have to look at the text right after the question, and the answer is usually there. I'm following that lead here: happiness or gladness and joy are what will be found. 

Happiness and joy. Gladness and joy. In the original Hebrew language the Old Testament was mostly written in, those words are two different words. It's not just that Bible translators gave two different "definitions" to the same Hebrew word. Happiness (or gladness...same thing for our purposes) and joy are two distinct words and two different concepts. God doesn't throw words into His Word just to take up space, so there must be a reason for both.

What do you think the difference is between happiness and joy?

(Insert thinking...)

Got it? Great! Here's what I think. (Obviously it's what I think, since I'm the one writing this, but my point is that this really isn't one of those right/wrong answer deals.)

Happiness is usually based on eternal circumstances. We get that grade we want or that job we want or that dress we want, and we feel happy. We're glad for the grade, the job, the dress.

On the other hand, joy is the result of an internal reality, and it's usually tied to relationship. Our joy in God is based on our child-Abba relationship with Him. When I give my daughter a gift I know she really wants, I feel joy because I love her and because of our connection. 

Unlike happiness, joy does not depend on circumstance. In fact, we can feel joy right in the middle of very unhappy circumstances. 

When my daughter, Anna, was just 6 years old, her grandfather died very suddenly. That same day, when Anna talked on the phone with her very newly widowed grandmother, almost the first thing Anna said to her was, "Well, at least he didn't die and go to hell!" The circumstances that day were as unhappy as any we'd ever known, but at that moment, we felt joy. Because what Anna said was true. Because of our relationship with her grandfather, who was at that moment in the presence of The Great I AM. Because of the relationship he'd had with Jesus, His Savior. We did not feel happy. But we did feel joyful.

What makes you happy? What brings you joy? As you think about your answers, consider how circumstances play into your happiness and how relationships feed your joy.

The Main Event:
So where do we get this joy-that's-more-than-just-happiness? When do we get it? And what do we do once we've got it? God talks about joy a lot in the Bible. Just in the incomplete concordance in the back of my Bible, the listing for "joy" is three columns long. 

In verse after verse, the Joy-Giver tells us that 
  • sometimes we receive joy
  • sometimes we wait for joy
  • sometimes we choose joy
  • sometimes we show joy

Take in these Scriptures, and after you read each one, decide if it shines light on receiving joy, waiting for joy, choosing joy, or showing joy. (If you're just dying to know the "right" answers on this, you'll have to jump over to the Answer Key!)

"Your love has given me great joy and encouragement." (Philemon 7)

"You welcomed the message with the joy given by the Holy Spirit." (1 Thessalonians 1:6b)

"Weeping may spend the night, but there is joy in the morning." (Psalm 30:5b CSB)

"Rejoice in that day and leap for joy, because great is your reward in heaven." (Luke 6:23)

"Consider it pure joy...whenever you face trials of many kinds." (James 1:2)

"I sing for joy at the work of your hands." (Psalm 92:4b)

"Restore to me the joy of your salvation and grant me a willing spirit, to sustain me." (Psalm 51:12)

The Truth in Action:
The most important part of The Truth in Action for every part of this Fruit of the Spirit (FOTS) series is going to be the same: ask the Holy Spirit (H.S.) to give you His fruit! Listen up, precious girl, you cannot come up with the FOTS on your own. You can't will yourself to be joyful, especially on days when you hate your outfit and your hair and you're not all that crazy about the people in your life. You can't just grit your teeth and make this FOTS thing happen. You have to ask the H.S. to fill you up with His power every day. 
The great news here is that God will always say "yes" when we ask for something He wants to give (on His own perfect schedule, of course). And we KNOW He wants to give us joy and all the rest of the parts of the FOTS. You can ask for a fresh fill-up of joy to get you through your day and feel confident God is going to be all over that request. So ask! 

Ask the H.S. to give you His supernatural power, because people can't literally see God's Spirit in you, but they can see joy. And remember, you're not doing this hard thing on your own. I'm not doing it on my own. That's why it's not called the Fruit of Elizabeth or the Fruit of (your name goes here). It's the Fruit of the Spirit




His Spirit.
His fruit. 
In you. 
Sweet.


"When your words came, I ate them; 
they were my joy and my heart's delight." (Jeremiah 15:16)



What brings you happiness? What brings you joy? 
Share it in a comment, on Facebook, or in an email!

(Looking for Part 1 of this series? Find it here.)

Gratefully linked with:



May 8, 2015

Who is the Holy Spirit and What Does He Have to Do with Fruit? (Part 1)

As Christians, we're supposed to be filled with the Spirit of God. But what, exactly, does that look like? Well, for one thing, it looks like love.


What in the Word: Galatians 5:22-25

Hang-Onto-It Verse: "The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control." (Galatians 5:22-23a)


The Backstory:

You've probably heard Christians talk about "having Jesus in my heart."  Head to Ephesians 3:17a (the first half of the verse) to check out where this phrase comes from.

Okay, so through faith, you've got Jesus living in your heart. But how does this work? What does it even mean? Obviously, the physical person of Jesus is not hanging out inside our bodies. Flip to 2 Timothy 1:14. Who else is living in our hearts, according to this verse? 

When Jesus' time on earth was finished and He was getting ready to go back to heaven to be with his dad, God the Father, He told His followers that He wasn't just leaving them on their own to fend for themselves: He was going to send them a Helper, a Counselor, "the Spirit of truth" (John 14:16, 17). When we put our faith in God through Christ, the Spirit of God moves into our souls. The Holy Spirit (H.S. for short) makes Himself at home in the part of us that is eternal--the "you" of you and the "me" of me. 

At that point, one of our jobs as believers is to live by the Spirit in us, not by who we are in our own nature and strength. When we live this way, we show the fruit of the Spirit. Literal fruit is the visible result of something that is planted, something that is alive and growing. In the same way, the fruit of the H.S. is something we and others can see that shows that God is planted inside us and that we are growing in our knowledge and love of Him. 

That was a really long back-story, but you need to know what you know! Now that we've hopefully accomplished that, let's get into the first characteristic of the fruit of the Spirit. (BTW: you'll often hear people refer to the "fruits" of the Spirit. Actually, there is just one fruit with different attributes. Look at it this way: an apple is an apple. But you can also describe it as red, shiny, crisp, sweet, fragrant, beautiful, delicious, etc. So the H.S. gives us His one fruit, but it has 9 different characteristics that show up in us if we cooperate and work at it. Okay, now we really, really are going to get to the fruit of the Spirit--FOTS, for short.

The Main Event:
Glance at the Hang-Onto-It Verse. What is the first characteristic of the FOTS? Why do you think it's first on the list? Here's what God has to say on the subject: "Above all, love each other deeply, because love covers a multitude of sins" (1 Peter 4:8).

What does love look like? We have to figure this out, because saying we "love" someone or that we "have love" in our hearts sounds like a nice Hallmark Valentine's card but doesn't do us a lot of good when we're dealing with our enemies or people we just don't like. 

Love from a Christian viewpoint is less about feeling and more about doing. It's about a choice we make to treat other people the way Jesus treated them. One of my favorite quotes about love is from St. Therese of Liseux: “It isn't enough to love. We must prove it.” 

My daughters (Lydia the older and Anna the younger) are typical sisters who get on each other's nerves on a regular basis. But they also love each other (love, the choice and the action, if not always the feeling). At our house on school days, we have approximately 38.5 minutes to squeeze in breakfast, wardrobe management, personal maintenance, dental hygiene, backpack loading, schedule confirmation, and quiz cramming. (Sound familiar?) In the middle of all this, one way Lydia proves love is by doing her sister's hair. On any given morning, Lydia might be tired, stressed, worried, or grumpy. She may feel all these things, but what she does is love.

What does John 15:13 say love looks like? You might think that "laying down your life" means jumping in front of the car that's about to hit your friend. Which it would be. But we're supposed to love--the verb--many times every day. How often do you get a chance to save your friend's life by putting yourself in the path of an out-of-control car? Most of the time, laying down your life means setting aside your feelings, your agenda, your plans, and doing what's good or helpful or encouraging or best for someone else. When she does Anna's hair, Lydia lays down her own schedule and plans and and picks up Anna's. My Momsage (MMSG) paraphrase of John 15:13 as it applies to this situation is, "Greater love has no teenager than this, that she lay down her biology study guide for her sister"!

The Truth in Action:
The most important part of The Truth in Action for every part of this FOTS series is going to be the same: ask the Holy Spirit to give you His fruit! Listen up, precious girl, you cannot come up with the FOTS on your own. You can't will yourself to love someone, especially if they're hard to love. You can't just grit your teeth and make this FOTS thing happen. You have to ask the H.S. to fill you up with His power every day. 

The great news here is that God will always say "yes" when we ask for something He wants to give (on His own perfect schedule, of course). And we KNOW He wants to give us love and all the rest of the parts of the FOTS. So you can ask for a fresh fill-up of love to get you through your day and feel confident God is going to be all over that request. So ask! Then, remember that love does. How can you do love today? How can you prove love today? 

Ask the H.S. to give you His supernatural power, because people can't literally see God's Spirit in you, but they can see love. And remember, you're not doing this hard thing on your own! I'm not doing it on my own. That's why it's not called the Fruit of Elizabeth or the Fruit of (your name goes here). It's the Fruit of the Spirit

His Spirit.
His fruit. 
In you. 
Sweet.


"When your words came, I ate them; 
they were my joy and my heart's delight." (Jeremiah 15:16)