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2 Corinthians 9:7, Hebrews 11:4

An Acceptable Gift

With Thanksgiving coming up this week, my focus naturally turns to—well—Thanksgiving! Not just turkey, football, and whether or not Aunt Mildred’s mystery casserole is safe to eat, but real thanks + giving. The word itself is a combination of two actions: expressing gratitude and giving something in return. Scripture ties those together repeatedly. And when it comes to giving, the Bible is very clear—not all gifts are created equal. Some are acceptable to God…and some are not. Exhibit A: Cain and Abel. Cain brought God an offering and got a cosmic thumbs-down. Abel brought his by faith, and God—a much tougher judge than Simon Cowell—accepted his gift (Hebrews 11:4). Paul echoes this principle when he praises the Philippians for their generous support, calling their gift “a fragrant offering, a sacrifice acceptable and pleasing to God.” So apparently, God does not give out participation trophies—He cares about what we give and how we give it.

One of the first questions most people ask about giving—especially when sermons turn in that direction—is, “Okay, but how much?” We want specifics, maybe even a chart or an app. But God intentionally leaves the amount up to each of us. King David once refused to give God something that cost him nothing. He said, “I will not offer burnt offerings to the Lord my God that cost me nothing” (Second Samuel 24:24). That is a powerful principle: an offering that costs us nothing means nothing. Jesus backed this up in Matthew 6:21 when He said, “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” You can put it this way—if you want to know someone’s priorities, skip the social media profile and take a peek at the checkbook. Our giving reveals the direction of our hearts.

But here is what often surprises people: God never forces giving. He invites it. In Exodus, when Moses took up an offering for the Tabernacle, he didn’t twist arms or guilt-trip the Israelites. Instead, he received contributions only from “everyone whose heart moved him to give.” Paul teaches the same principle in Second Corinthians 9:7: “Each one must give as he has decided in his heart, not reluctantly or under compulsion.” You decide the amount. God is not a tax collector—He is a Father who desires willing children. He will not pry open your hands to make you give; He waits until gratitude opens them. That is Thanksgiving. Real giving flows from a grateful heart. And a grateful heart always wants to give—because love always does.

Galatians 6:6

My Thanksgiving!

I have always appreciated Galatians 6:6 because it speaks directly to the often-overlooked relationship between spiritual teachers and those they serve. Paul writes, “Let the one who is taught the word share all good things with the one who teaches.” That verse deserves to be framed on the wall of every church boardroom—right next to the thermostat, which no pastor has ever been allowed to touch. Paul understood a simple truth: quality teaching takes time, and time requires support. Preachers do not live on sermons alone—there must also be groceries. Jesus affirmed this in Matthew 10:10 when He said, “The worker is worthy of his wages,” and again in Luke 10:7. Paul reinforces this principle in 1 Corinthians 9:14, “Those who proclaim the Gospel should get their living by the Gospel,” and once more in 1 Timothy 5:18, “The laborer deserves his wages.”

Kenneth Boles captures the heart of this when he notes that supporting teachers of the Word is more than charity—it is recognition that biblical instruction is valuable. Good preaching does not fall out of the sky on Sunday morning like manna. It takes study, prayer, preparation, reflection, and usually an extra cup of coffee or two. If we want strong spiritual leaders, we must give them the time and resources to become strong. Otherwise, pastors spend their best energy juggling side jobs while their calling is treated like a hobby. Unfortunately, some churches still think Paul was talking about starving their pastor, not supporting him.

Paul’s instruction goes beyond survival-level support. He uses the phrase “share all good things”—a phrase rooted in the idea of fellowship. Not communism, as some critics argue from Acts 2, but mutual care. Fellowship means shared life. That includes shared resources. If a congregation enjoys a reasonable standard of living, why should they expect their pastor to live on canned ravioli and instant noodles? Real fellowship means shared burdens, shared blessings, and shared beans—preferably not from a dented can.

The truth is that faithful pastoral ministry requires time, energy, and maturity—none of which come pre-packaged. No one is born a pastor. Ministry skills are forged in prayer, preaching, tears, laughter, and the glorious chaos of church life. That journey takes years—and a supportive church family. I have personally been blessed far beyond what I deserve. I have served congregations who saw my flaws, watched me fail, picked me back up, and never stopped loving me—or supporting me. Like Paul in Philippians 4, I feel profound gratitude for generous believers who “shared in my troubles.” As Thanksgiving approaches, I find myself thanking God not just for His blessings, but for His people—who shared “all good things” with me so I could share His Word with them.

Galatians 6:2-4

Bearing Each Other’s Burdens

We all carry burdens, and some days it feels like we are auditioning for the role of Atlas—only without the muscles, or the Greek mythology paycheck. One person wrestles with a difficult boss who must have graduated from Pharaoh’s School of Management. Another faces heartache at home. Some wage war with bank statements that look like horror movies—every time you open them, something inside you screams. Others battle relational conflict with people who should be their closest allies. Still others silently wrestle with habitual sins that drain joy like a slow leak in a tire. Then there are those who carry emotional scars from abuse—either given or received—that keep sleep far away. Into this heavy world, Paul speaks a simple but life-changing command in Galatians 6:2: “Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.” Paul has been arguing that the law of Christ is love, and love is not a Hallmark card slogan—it is sweaty, inconvenient, shoulder-to-shoulder help.

Christianity was never designed for solo survival. As Chuck Colson used to say, Christians are not lone rangers—and even the Lone Ranger had Tonto. André Hugel once wrote, “Behind every saint stands another saint.” John of the Cross agreed: “The virtuous soul that is alone is like a lone burning coal—it will grow colder rather than hotter.” Or as George Swinnock put it, “Satan watches for those vessels that sail without convoy.” Charles Wesley must have gotten the memo when he wrote:

Help us to help each other, Lord,
Each other’s cross to bear,
Let each his friendly aid afford,
And feel his brother’s care.

But helping others is hard if you secretly believe they deserve their misery. I confess I have struggled with that attitude. It is easy to assume that people are just reaping what they sowed—so why should I get involved? Paul saw that coming and goes straight for the ego in Galatians 6:3: “For if anyone thinks he is something, when he is nothing, he deceives himself.” My dad used to say, “Don’t kid yourself.” Paul says the same thing—just with apostolic authority and fewer dad jokes. We are not better than the people we are tempted to judge. We are fellow strugglers.

Then Paul delivers the knockout blow to our pride in Galatians 6:4: “Let each one test his own work… and not compare himself with his neighbor.” Pastor Craig Larsen explains it beautifully: some Christians are 25-watt bulbs, others shine at 50 watts, and a few at a dazzling 200 watts. But when you hold all those bulbs up to the sun, the differences become laughable. Compared to God, we all look dim. Comparison is pointless. We all have burdens—and we all need each other.

Galatians 6:1

Love Produces Gentleness

Paul spends most of Galatians celebrating God’s grace—how Christ set us free, how His love replaces law, and how faith works through love. But in chapter six, Paul moves from theology to relationships. He begins addressing what love actually does in real life. You want to know if someone truly walks in the Spirit? Watch how they treat people who fall. Galatians 6:1 says, “Brothers, if anyone is caught in any transgression, you who are spiritual should restore him in a spirit of gentleness.” That verse separates the spiritually mature from the spiritually obnoxious. Some believers treat fallen Christians like predators treat wounded antelope on the Discovery Channel—easy prey to criticize, condemn, and devour. But not Paul. For him, restoration—not humiliation—is the goal. The word he uses for restore was used in medical terms for mending a broken bone. You do that carefully, gently, and with compassion—not with a sledgehammer and duct tape.

Many say Paul is talking about restoring someone who slipped into some moral sin listed among the “works of the flesh” earlier in chapter five. But I wonder if he also has the Judaizers in mind—those legalists who had thrown the Galatians off track with their “Jesus-plus” gospel. Maybe the ones causing the problem are also the ones who need restoration. Whether it is moral failure or doctrinal confusion, Paul says the response must be the same: go get them and bring them home. Gently. He does not say, “Ignore them,” or “Tweet about them,” or “Use them as a sermon illustration.” He says restore them. And notice—he says “you who are spiritual.” Translation: Not everyone should volunteer for this assignment. The proud, harsh, and hypercritical need not apply. My wife always tells me, “If I agreed with everything you said, I would not be needed.” That reminds me God gives us people who challenge, correct, and restore us—not people who flatter our egos.

Paul adds a warning: “Keep watch on yourself, lest you too be tempted.” Nothing produces gentleness faster than remembering that you, too, are a member of the Sinner’s Club, fully capable of failure. John Butler tells the story of a pastor who needed to visit a fallen church member and asked each deacon if he could ever fall into such a sin. Most said, “Absolutely not!” But one replied, “I cannot be sure. Under the same circumstances, I might have done the same thing.” The pastor chose that man and said, “You are the one who must go with me—because you are the only one humble enough to help.” Paul would have smiled at that.

Galatians 5:24-26

Love Lifted Me

The “works of the flesh” are plural because they show up in endless forms—lust, anger, envy, pride, greed, and a dozen other expressions of the same disease: self-centeredness. That is the condition we are all born into. We do not have to learn selfishness; it comes factory-installed. But something dramatic happens when the love of God enters a human life. Christ on the cross is God’s love displayed at full strength. When we receive Christ, we do not just receive forgiveness—we receive His love poured into our hearts. And when God first loves us, something awakens in us—we begin to love Him in return, and only then do we truly learn how to love others. Love does what no rule, ritual, or self-help program can do—it transforms us from the inside out. That is why Paul says in Galatians 5:24, “Those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires.” The cross is not only the place where Jesus died—it is also the place where our old life died. His crucifixion was for us, but it is also meant to be in us. Love puts the flesh to death and raises us into new life.

God’s love is not a sentimental emotion; it is a force. It teaches us, corrects us, comforts us, and restrains us when necessary. Love pulls us away from self-worship and into Spirit-led living. That is why Paul continues in verse 25: “If we live by the Spirit, let us also keep in step with the Spirit.” Notice—this is not automatic. We must choose to keep step, like soldiers marching in rhythm behind their commander. When we follow the Spirit’s lead, love becomes visible in how we treat others. So Paul concludes with a relational warning in verse 26: “Let us not become conceited, provoking one another, envying one another.” These attitudes—pride, competitiveness, comparison—are signs that the flesh is trying to climb off the cross. When love is present, we stop stepping on each other and start walking with each other.

Leroy Lawson tells a powerful story that illustrates how this transformation happens. During World War II, retreating Italian forces sabotaged the harbor of Eritrea by sinking massive concrete-filled barges to block Allied ships. The Allies could not possibly lift the barges by raw strength. So their engineers turned to a different power. They sealed enormous fuel tanks, floated them above the submerged barges, chained them together at low tide—and waited. When the tide rose, the tanks lifted the barges effortlessly and cleared the harbor. Human strength could not do it—only the rising tide could. Lawson says this is how spiritual transformation works. We cannot lift ourselves above the pull of sin by willpower. But when we are filled with the Spirit, God lifts us. He does in us what we could never do alone. That is how love takes over. That is how freedom begins—not by striving harder, but by rising higher through the power of the Spirit.

Galatians 5:22-23

Works or Fruit?

When the lawyers and religious experts questioned Jesus, they often asked the same anxious question: “What must I do to inherit the kingdom of God?” They were looking for a checklist—some spiritual formula for earning eternal life. But in Galatians 5:21, Paul crushes any hope that sinful human effort can produce kingdom life. After listing the “works of the flesh,” he warns, “Those who do such things will not inherit the kingdom of God.” Why? Because the kingdom of God is a place of purity, truth, love, and holiness—none of which can coexist with a life dominated by the flesh. The problem is not that sinners are barred from the kingdom; the problem is that sin itself is incompatible with the kingdom. Those who cling to a life of selfishness and rebellion are simply not suited for the world to come.

But the story does not end with exclusion. There is another way to live. It does not begin with self-improvement or religious achievement. It begins where the prodigal son began—in humble confession. When he finally faced himself honestly, he said, “I am no longer worthy.” That is the turning point. Christ uses God’s law to strip away our illusions of self-righteousness. The law does not save—it exposes. It shows us our condition, then drives us to grace. And grace is what God freely offers at the cross. “While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” God did not wait for us to climb up to Him—He came down to us. That is why salvation is not achieved by works of the flesh. It is received by faith in Christ alone.

Once faith opens the door of the heart, something supernatural happens—the Spirit moves in. A new life begins, not fueled by human effort but empowered by divine presence. Paul contrasts this new life with the old in Galatians 5:22–23: “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.” Notice the contrast—works of the flesh versus fruit of the Spirit. Works are manufactured; fruit grows. Works are human; fruit is divine. Paul uses “fruit” in the singular, not plural. He is not listing nine separate fruits. It is one fruit with many expressions—love being the root from which the others blossom. Love is the mark of true spiritual life because God Himself is love. Jesus said that all of God’s law rests on one command: love God and love others. Paul shows how that love unfolds—joy replaces empty pleasure, peace silences conflict, patience conquers irritation, kindness heals hurts, goodness defeats corruption, faithfulness withstands trials, gentleness breaks cycles of violence, and self-control ends the tyranny of self. The flesh produces chaos. The Spirit produces character. That is the difference between those who will not inherit the kingdom—and those in whom the kingdom has already begun.

Galatians 5:7, John 15:9

Tripped up by the Law

I once watched a highlight reel of bizarre football moments—miracle catches, crazy laterals, and plays that made you wonder if physics had taken the day off. But one clip stood out. A kickoff returner caught the ball on his own two-yard line, weaved through defenders like a man late for dinner, and broke free down the sideline. With nothing but daylight ahead, he was all but guaranteed a touchdown—until someone on the opposing bench stuck his foot out and tripped him! The crowd gasped. The officials threw a flag. The guilty player never belonged on the field in the first place. Paul must have seen that clip, because he uses the exact same imagery in Galatians 5:7: “You were running well. Who hindered you from obeying the truth?”

The Galatians had started strong—running in the freedom of grace, living in joy, growing in love. Then the Judaizers stepped in from the sidelines and stuck out a legalistic foot. They had no right to interfere, but they did it anyway. Paul says earlier in Galatians that they “slipped in to spy out our freedom,” and once they were in, they began demanding religious rituals and law-keeping as conditions of being right with God. They tripped up the Galatians with what could be called “the leg of the law,” and the race of grace turned into a collision of confusion. I have seen it happen in churches too. A body of believers will be growing, worshiping, and serving—then someone sneaks in with a rulebook thicker than the Bible and starts handing out spiritual red tape. Suddenly grace seems suspicious and joy dries up. Legalism never joins the game to help—it joins to hinder.

That is why Paul’s question matters: “Who hindered you from obeying the truth?” To disobey the truth is not to fall into scandalous sin—it is to abandon salvation by grace and return to salvation by works. Gary Richison writes, “We get off the road of grace when we descend into the belief that we can impress God by what we do.” That is Satan’s favorite strategy: tempt Christians into thinking they can earn God’s approval by performance. When that happens, faith becomes a treadmill of guilt and anxiety. Martyn Lloyd-Jones offered a wise antidote: “When you realize your love is weak and poor, stop thinking about your love, and realize that in spite of its poverty, He loves you.” Jesus said, “As the Father has loved Me, so have I loved you” (John 15:9). Legalism trips us with doubt; grace lifts us with love. We run well when we run with our eyes fixed on Christ—not on our performance.

Galatians 5:21

Warning! Warning!

Paul continues his diagnosis of human nature in Galatians 5:21 by finishing his list of the “works of the flesh” with a final wave of painful honesty: “…envy, drunkenness, orgies, and things like these.” Just in case anyone thought they escaped the earlier list in verses 19–20, Paul widens the net. He knew how slippery the human heart can be when it comes to admitting sin—we always want to downgrade our faults or compare downward: Sure, I have issues, but at least I’m not as bad as so-and-so. Then Paul drops the word envy right next to drunkenness and orgies and closes the escape hatch. Envy? Really? That little internal grudge I carry when someone else succeeds? Yes—because sin is not measured by public scandal but by inward corruption. Jesus taught the same truth. You may never fire a gun in anger, but hatred pulls the same trigger in the heart. You may never commit adultery physically, but lust writes the script internally. Sin is not merely what we do—it is what we are without Christ: selfish, inward, and bent toward self-gratification.

Galatians 5:21 comes with a sober warning: “I warn you, as I warned you before, that those who do such things will not inherit the kingdom of God.” At first glance, this sounds terrifying—like Paul is saying, “If you ever commit one of these sins, you lose your salvation.” Many preachers have used this verse like a spiritual cattle prod—motivating through fear. But that interpretation would directly contradict everything Paul has been teaching in Galatians. If inheriting the kingdom depended on avoiding these sins, salvation would depend on our behavior rather than Christ’s finished work. That would mean the Judaizers were right after all—that salvation really is “Jesus plus good behavior.” Charles Spurgeon saw through that confusion when he wrote:

“If ever it should come to pass
That sheep of Christ might fall away,
My fickle, feeble soul, alas!
Would fall a thousand times a day.”

Paul is not threatening loss of salvation—he is warning about rejecting salvation by grace. To choose a life ruled by the flesh is to turn away from the transforming power of the Spirit. It is to refuse God’s love, resist God’s Spirit, and rely instead on self-righteousness or self-indulgence—two sides of the same fleshly coin. The law can expose sin, but it cannot produce love. It can restrain behavior, but it cannot change hearts. Only grace does that. Only faith in Christ brings us into the kingdom—and keeps us there. Paul has not changed subjects in this passage. He is still confronting the Galatians for drifting from grace back to law, from the Spirit back to self, from Christ’s righteousness back to their own. His warning is clear: do not go back. Do not trust the flesh. Trust Christ alone.

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