Saturday, March 10, 2007

Love – the ultimate Fruit of the Spirit

“Wait a moment!” - you may object. “I thought that fruits of the Spirit were love + joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance” (Galatians 5:22-23) Right?

Please note that the fruit is in singular!!! Ever noticed that? The final and ultimate fruit of the Spirit is Love! The rest is it’s constituent working parts. So, let me amend the translation: The fruit of the Spirit is Love, which is: joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. WOW! That’s exactly what I said this week in my devotional study.

Each individual term reflects shades of Love.

Joy is Rejoicing Love. Geek chara means happiness as divine gift, same word from which we get Grace. The whole Gospel is the Word of Joy. It’s same kind of joy with which the seventy came back after doing wonders in Jesus name (Luke 10:17)

Peace is Reconciling Love. Greek eirene is equivalent for Hebrew shalom. It’s the harmony that God brings in creation from chaos, it’s the climate of the New Jerusalem. This is what Paul is talking about in his letter to Romans 12:16 “live in harmony with one another.”

Patience is Enduring Love. Greek for patience is makrothymia, meaning holding back the thymos, anger, for a long, long time. Just as James puts it “be patient, do not grumble against each other.” (5:7-9)

Kindness is Amiable Love. Greek term chrestotes is always expressed in relationships: being interested in others, giving gifts, showing attention, listening to people, remembering names. Kind of love that the Good Samaritan showed on the Jericho Road. (Luke 10:30-35)

Goodness is Correcting Love. Greek term agathosyne means striving for the standards which God defined as “good.” It’s the attitude of opposition to all forms of evil in our life and in lives of others. Kind of love Jesus showed overturning tables cleansing the Temple (Mark 11:15-17)

Faithfulness is Reliable Love. Greek here is the same as faith – pistis. Love that can be trusted. Remember that parable of the talents (Matthew 25:14-30)? Just as God entrusted his riches to us, so does He expect our trust. Jesus said whoever can be trusted with little can be trusted with much (Luke 16:10-12)

Gentleness is Humble Love. Greek praytes is opposite of argumentative, self-righteous stubbornness. Gentle people submit easily to God and others. True leadership is characterized by gentleness (1st Timothy 3:3) The kind of leadership shown by Jesus washing disciples feet. It’s carrying each other burdens (Galatians 6:1-3)

Self-control is Disciplined Love. The Greek word egkrateia is semantically related to askeo, meaning sobriety and restraint to the point of ascetism. Paul knew well this discipline as he writes in 1st Corinthians 9:24-27 “I restrain my body not to be disqualified from the prize.”

So, How Loving are You? The basic condition for the church to be healthy is being loving, which means: rejoicing, reconciling, enduring, amiable, correcting, reliable, humble and disciplined. Welcome to my dream church!

No comments:

Post a Comment