The Fruit of the Spirit - SermonCentral.com
The Fruit of the Spirit - SermonCentral.com
The Fruit of the Spirit - SermonCentral.com
Summary: Like a pilot needing a co-pilot, Believers need the Holy Spirit to lead them into "open
skies".
The Fruit of the Spirit
Galatians 5:22-25: “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness,
goodness, faith, 23 Meekness, temperance: against such there is no law. 24 And they that are
Christ’s have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts. 25 If we live in the Spirit, let us also
walk in the Spirit.”
Notice that it is “fruit of the Spirit”. It’s not “works of the Spirit’, neither is it “fruit of the flesh”.
The word “works” implies “labor, strain and effort” Fruit doesn’t come from the flesh because our old
sin nature can only produce “works” (Heb. 9:14 says, “dead works”), but the Spirit produces living
fruit. This is in line with God’s plan from the beginning of the world.
Let’s turn to Genesis 1:11. “And God said, Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb yielding seed,
and the fruit tree yielding fruit after its own kind, whose seed is in itself, upon the earth: and it was
so.”
“. . . and the fruit tree yielding fruit after its own kind, whose seed is in itself”
This means apples will produce apples with apple seed, oranges will reproduce with orange seed,
grapes with grape seed, etc., so each fruit will continue to reproduce their own kind.
In the spiritual sense this would mean that as we walk in the Spirit and shed our love to others, our
love begets love, our joy begets joy, peace begets peace, and so on. It’s a sowing and reaping
principal.
It’s living fruit because it keeps on living through the lives of Believers as they plant seeds in the
world.
Back in verse 22 of Galatians 5, notice, too, that “fruit” is singular. It’s not “fruits of the Spirit are”
but “fruit of the Spirit is”. What difference does that make? It makes a lot of difference because if
you read “fruit” as singular it reads like this, “the fruit of the Spirit is love“
The word for Love in this verse is “agape” which is God’s kind of love. The highest form of love. It’s
the kind of love that God the Father has for you, to love you so much that He sacrificed His only Son
for you.
It’s the kind of Love Jesus has for you, that He was willing to die that you might live. It’s the kind of
Love that the Holy Spirit has, that of all the dwelling places, in or out of this world, He chose to live
inside you.
In John 15:5 Jesus said, “I am the vine, ye are the branches: He that abideth in me, and I in him,
the same bringeth forth much fruit: for without me ye can do nothing.”
Jesus is the vine. Love flows inside the branches. Love provides the nourishment to produce joy,
peace, longsuffering (or patience), gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, and temperance (or self
control).
That may mean going through some tough times because it means we will have to deny the flesh to
abide with Christ. We’ll have to offer our bodies up as living sacrifices.
Do you know the problem I have with offering up my body as living sacrifice? Every time I get on the
altar, someone lights a fire under it, it gets hot and I jump back off. I can’t take the heat.
That’s not abiding in the vine. The branch has to stay linked up with the Vine.
Fruit of the Spirit doesn’t grow overnight. Every Born-Again Believer has the seed planted in their
heart by the Holy Spirit . It has to be planted, weeded and cultivated.
These are all accomplished as we read the Word of God, as we fellowship, and as we yield to the
leading of the Holy Spirit. As we begin to grow in the knowledge of the Lord, the fruit in us begins to
grow.
Let’s turn to Psalm 1:1-3. It says, “Blessed is the man that walketh not .in the counsel of the
ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful. But his delight is
in the law of the Lord: and in his law doth he meditate day and night. And he shall be like a tree
planted by the rivers of water, that brinqeth forth his fruit in his season; his leaf also shall not
wither; and whatsoever he doeth shall prosper.”
Look at that again. It says, “and he shall be like a tree PLANTED by the rivers of water”
These are God’s trees and they’re planted. That means they’re not wild trees from seed that
happened to fall out of a tree and have taken root.
The trees are symbolic of Born Again Believers. I think it would be a good idea to underline the
words, “that bringeth forth his fruit in HIS season”, because Fruit is produced in God’s time, not
ours.
Isaiah 61:3 tells us, “To appoint unto them that mourn in Zion, to give unto them beauty for ashes,
the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness: that they might be
called TREES of righteousness, the PLANTING of the Lord, that He might be glorified.”
If the trees are Born-Again Believers, the “rivers of water’ must be the Word of God.
Turn back to Is 55:10, “For as the rain cometh down, and the snow from heaven, and returneth not
thither, but watereth the earth, and maketh it bring forth and bud, that it may give seed to the
sower, and bread to the eater: so shall my word be that goeth forth out of my mouth: it shall not
return unto me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing
whereto I sent it.”
God wants His Word to come down like rain and water the earth. As Believers take in the Water of
the Word we grow and produce fruit.
To begin, there is love and we’ve already talked about that. What I didn’t mention is that Agape
Love, or God’s kind of love is unconditional. God doesn’t love us out of emotion; He loves us because
that’s His nature. That’s Who He is. God doesn’t “have” love. He IS love.
1 John 4:8, “He that loveth not knoweth not God; for God is love.”
He will never love us anymore than He does right now and the ultimate sign of His love for us is the
Cross.
As we walk in the Spirit, God’s unconditional love flows out of us. We find ourselves loving others
regardless of whom or what they are. This is a kind of love that the world doesn’t understand but
needs so much.
The next fruit is Joy. Joy isn’t the same as happiness. Happiness is based on circumstances. This Joy
is based in a God Who never changes. He is the source of our joy and strength.
Next is Peace. We need the peace of God when we go through the storms of life. We can draw on the
peace of the Lord Who calmed the storm on the Sea of Galilee by speaking to it. We can speak the
Word to our circumstances and have peace about it.
Longsuffering is next. Longsuffering is patience. Does yours ever run out? This is one area which
seems to be common with most people, especially with Believers. We want to serve the Lord but we
don’t like waiting while He prepares us. We need supernatural patience which only comes from the
Holy Spirit. We have to remember Psalm 1, it’s always in “His season”.
Gentleness, or kindness. This simply means being a nice person, not for gain, but out of love and
compassion. It means to say, “hello” or to smile when we meet someone and not wait for the other
to act first. It means to offer help to someone who is in need. To treat people the same way you
would like to be treated.
Goodness. This goes hand in hand with gentleness. It’s to be a blessing to others by being kind,
caring and loving. To look for the good in a person, knowing that the Holy Spirit can take care of the
bad.
Faith is the next one. It really means “faithfulness” and is different than “faith”.
Faithfulness means that you can be counted on. You are dependable.
It means if you’re married, you will be faithful to your spouse & family.
If you’re not married it means you will be faithful to the Word of God and abstain from sex until
marriage.
It means you’ll be faithful to your country and vote, pay taxes, etc.
The next fruit is Meekness. Being “Meek’ isn’t the same as being weak.
Meekness is letting the Holy Spirit work in and through you without question, without trying to
reason out the purpose of His leading.
The Bible says that Moses was the meekest man on the face of the earth in his time. But he wasn’t
weak. It took a lot of courage to lead 2 1/2 million complaining Jews out of Egypt.
In Matthew 11:29, Jesus says, “Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me, for I am meek and lowly in
heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls.”
Jesus says He is meek, yet He made a whip and ran the moneychangers out of the Temple.
He took on the Pharisees and Scribes, something unheard of in His day because of their influence in
society and religion.
He created all things, and someday will be King, but humbled Himself and was born in a manger
instead of a castle or mansion.
When on Calvary, He could have spoken one word and changed everything but out of meekness he
“for the joy that was set before him, endured the cross”. (Hebrews 12:2)
Meekness means when we walk in the Spirit we need to be submissive and not let our ego get in the
way.
The last fruit of the Spirit is Temperance, or self control. We all may have to bite the bullet on this
one but it’s one we all need because we have trouble controlling our tongues, trouble controlling our
minds, controlling our flesh and, most of all, controlling our appetites.
If we do it on our own we usually find ourselves ‘out of control”. Only the Holy Spirit can bring us
under control. He renews our minds and helps us to come into obedience to God.
The last part of Galatians 5:25 says, “Against such there is no law”
By the same token you can’t walk in the Spirit just by keeping the law. The Holy Spirit helps us to
fulfill the law by the first fruit, which is love.
To walk in the Spirit takes the leading of the Holy Spirit and a Believer who is willing to be led.
The Holy Spirit is always in front, gently leading and preparing the way.
When I was young I had a secret desire to learn to fly an airplane. I used to build those model
airplanes, the WWI, two-winged planes with the open cockpits.
Back then we used balsa wood and paper. (The fun went out of it when someone thought of making
them in plastic but they were much easier to build) I liked to imagine that I was in one of those
small planes, having a “dogfight” in the air with the enemy.
Somewhere I picked up a kit that was supposed to teach you how to fly. It consisted of a flying
manual and a card board cockpit with gauges and controls printed on it. It was really impressive
looking. It was so real to me that I used to sit in front of that cockpit at our dining room table and fly
that table all over the globe. And you know what? After just 2 or 3 lessons I was certain that I knew
how to fly a real plane if someone would give me a chance.
My problem at that time was my age. At 10 it wasn’t very likely that anyone was going to loan me
their plane so I could prove my point.
So, let’s make up a scenario. Let’s compare my experience as a young “pilot” flying a cardboard
airplane with a Born-Again Believer who would rather try to keep all the Ten Commandments instead
of letting the Holy Spirit guide him in his walk with the Lord.
Let’s say that I was 10 years old and I asked Jack to go up in a plane with me, to sit in the cockpit
and be my instructor. And let’s say he agreed to do it. I would fly the plane but Jack would be at my
side to help when I needed it.
Now, I would have my instruction book on flying so I feel his being there wasn’t really necessary.
In my mind, his sitting next to me would be for “appearances sake” because, well, you know how
people are when they see a 10 year old flying an airplane. They just lose all confidence in you.
But I have been studying the book and even have portions of it memorized.
So, Jack and I are in the cockpit, I take the joystick (the steering wheel), I rev up the engines and
get us off the ground in fine shape.
We’re up in the air and the plane is leveled off. We’re really enjoying the view from up here. The
people below look like ants and the cars look like toys.
Pretty soon soaring like an eagle gets boring and this ten year old decides he wants to go a faster.
My co-pilot, Jack, advises me to continue to soar like an eagle. So I listen to him for awhile but later
I want to try a dive and make the tail spin like they do in the movies.
I want to see how high we can go but Jack says we might pass out from lack of oxygen.
I want to try to do a "loop the loop" and Jack says, ‘you’re not ready for that yet . . . and neither am
I”
I turn the plane to the east and Jack warns of a storm coming from that direction.
About this time I’m wondering, “How does he know all that stuff?”
I’m also beginning to wonder about the book of instructions because it never mentions any of these
things. I get the book (Bible) back out and look through it to see if I missed something.
The first page says, “In the beginning, man wanted to fly”. Then it goes on to tell that there was a
man (symbolic of God) from another country who came up with a plan so anyone who wanted could
fly and soar like an eagle.
He passed his plan on to another man (Jesus) who agreed to work on it with him.
This second man dedicated his life to that purpose. He was the first to fly so others could follow.
Then, one day he retired.
Now, the book said that he’s coming out of retirement some day. Until then, we’ve got the
instruction book. The book says that until He comes back we need to have a co-pilot when we fly.
I’ve noticed something odd about the flying manual. There’s more emphasis on having another
person with you than there is instructions on how to fly by yourself. There are plenty of rules and
regulations but it says we need someone who will be with us if we ever get into trouble.
Someone, who loves flying and loves me enough to lead me away from storms and into the open
skies.
It says we’ll need someone who can put the “joy” into the joystick.
Someone who can help us keep the peace so we’re not shooting other planes down.
It has to be someone who can teach us to be patient when we’re flying in the dark of night, when it
seems that the light of day will never come.
It will take someone with enough goodness in them to care about me and my ability to fly.
The book says that I won’t need to know all there is to know about airplanes and flying if this person
will teach me to have faith enough to believe that the plane is going to stay in the air.
Flying can be a matter of life or death. So it has to be someone, by whose example, I can learn to be
meek and listen to advice rather than go it alone and in the process, making regrettable mistakes
Someone who knows what all the controls on the instrument panel are for and who can teach me all
about control. Someone who can help me keep my self-control and not do something that will cause
me harm.
I keep reading the instruction book to learn how to fly on my own but the book offers only one
alternative to having a co-pilot. It says I have to know all there is about the laws of physics,
chemistry, electricity, weather, etc.
For instance: The manual says the law of thermodynamics is about heat being converted into
energy. It says that’s important because that’s what makes the engine run.
Okay.
There are laws about wind passing over wings to cause a lift.
Then there are laws to do with magnetism, which it says is important for reading the compass and
know which direction I’m going.
The book goes on and explains that there are laws concerning mechanics, heat, light, electricity,
sound, electronics and then it gets into the really hard stuff like molecular structure, protons,
neutrons, etc.
Reading the manual is as boring as soaring like an eagle so I say to myself, “I’ve got plenty of time.
I’ll just learn one of these at a time. Then I can fly on my own.”
We’re still soaring steadily. Then I see another plane in the sky and turn the plane towards it. This is
going to be great; it’s something I’ve always wanted to do, pretending to be John Wayne who’s going
to knock an enemy plane out of the sky!
I turn and ask my co-pilot, Jack, if he checked the ammunition before taking off. He mentions
something about “peace” and how we shouldn’t be fighting with other planes. I don’t remember
what else he said except practicing self-control or something like that.
Jack is beginning to get on my nerves. I hand him the only parachute and, with a smile, ask him to
show me how it goes on.
I couldn’t have asked for a nicer co-pilot than Jack. But, it’s been too much of a struggle with him,
he doesn’t want to do the things that I want to do.
I know he’s usually right. He advises me for my own good but there are so many things I haven’t
tried with the plane and I can’t do them with him constantly advising me not to do what I want to
do.
So, I open the door and give him a little shove. Out he goes! His parachute opens and he’s slowly
floating in the air.
Finally, now I’m on my own and can do what I want without him trying to ruin all my fun. If any
problems come up, I’ve got the manual with the laws, rules & regulations and it’s just a matter of
looking them up.
I turn back to shooting down that other plane when all of a sudden my plane jerks and sputters.
Oh, oh, the fuel gauge is on empty. I look in the book and in what seems like an eternity, I find the
problem. One of the laws has been broken.
The law of thermodynamics says that without fuel heat can’t be converted into energy. It’s funny
that I missed that; otherwise I would have checked it before taking off.
Now the tail spin begins to spin. This is what I wanted to do so badly and Jack wouldn’t let me. But
for some reason I can’t stop it.
I’m headed down fast and I’m discovering Newton’s’ Law of Gravity which states: What goes up
must come down.
There he is, just below me floating down. He sees me and asks, “Need help?”
Now I’ve passed him and looking up I reply, “No problem I’ll figure it out, somehow”.
Okay. So I broke one little law by not filling the fuel tank. I’ll just pull back on the stick a little
harder.
No use. The ground is coming up fast and I’m on my way to earning my wings. Not as a pilot but as
a heavenly host.
End of scenario.
The Holy Spirit is our co-pilot. We have the instruction book (Bible) but it takes more than that to fly.
And it takes more than that to walk the walk. It takes the Holy Spirit to understand the book.
He’s our helper to keep us out of trouble. And the best part about Him is: He’ll never bail out on you.
Let’s go back to Galatians 5:24, “And they that are Christ’s have crucified the flesh with the
affections and lusts.”
In Gal. 2:20 we learn that we were crucified with Christ. And here again the word is “crucified”, past
tense.
When Christ died, we died. Now we’re raised up in a new spirit, with a resurrected, living Christ.
We’ve conquered death and hell because He did.
And the victory was achieved not by struggling, but by surrendering to Christ. That’s the way our
walk in the Spirit should be, a yielding to Him, and not a struggle with Him.
Galatians 5:25, “If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit”
The word “if” could also be “since” because Paul never doubted the presence of the Holy Spirit in his
life or the Galatians. Then it would read “Since we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit”
The word “walk” means to keep “in step”. In this case it would be to keep in step with the Holy
Spirit. It’s like “following the leader”. He leads, we follow.
The last verse in chapter 5 is verse 26, “Let us not be desirous of vain glory, provoking one another,
envying one another.”
Paul could have ended with verse 25 and I think we would have felt a lot better if he had.
In order for fruit to grow there has to be a proper climate and the same is true of the fruit of the
Spirit.
He says to us as well as to the church in Galatia; don’t let your pride enter in to your walk. Don’t
give in to envy and don’t cause problems within a fellowship by needless talk or gossip. It just slows
the growing process.
Finally, we should remember that fruit is produced to be eaten. Not to satisfy our own hunger, but
the hunger of others in & world that is starving for:
love,
joy,
peace,
patience,
gentleness,
goodness,
faith,
meekness,
and self-control.
If the Body of Christ will produce the fruit, a starving world will eat, and God will get the glory.