Galatians 5:16-26 · Life by the Spirit
The Harvest of the Spirit, Part 1
Galatians 5:16-26
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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Many of you here this morning will remember Edward Sanford Martin’s poem, “My name is Legion.” Some of you may have memorized those poignant lines.

Within my earthly temple there’s a crown;
There’s one of us that’s humble; one that’s proud,
There’s one that’s broken-hearted for his sins,
There’s one that unrepentant sits and grins;
There’s one that loves his neighbor as himself
and one that cares for naught but fame and self
From much corroding care I should be free.
If I could once determine which is me.

Do you feel that way sometimes? Don’t we come all too frequently to those days when we are so befuddled arid immobilized by the perplexity of own human nature we wonder if we can even call ourselves a Christian? We’re so torn within. There’s so little of Christ’s peace and power in our life.

It is during those times that we appreciate old brother Paul so much. He could have written Martin’s poem. In fact he said it as grippingly, maybe more so, as he dared to include in his letter to the Ron a conversation he had with himself. Few of us would stand vulnerable, so visceral in expressing our perplexity and despair. Wrestling with himself the life and death struggle between flesh and spirit going on within, Paul concluded in Romans 7: 19 and Vt: “For the good that I would, I do not; but the evil which I would not, that I do. O wretched man that I am Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?” (KJV)

We know the struggle don’t we? In the classical scriptural language of Paul, it is the internal war between spirit and flesh.

It is easy to forget, when we read our scripture that Paul was writing to Christians who had received the spirit of God. Paul is aware of the Christian’s potential lapse into fleshly existence, the ever present possibility of falling from grace. And the answer he gives is that we must be vigilant in “walking in the spirit.”

I’m going to preach four sermons on this theme as our concluding consideration of Paul’s letter to the Galatians. Our focus will be on “the harvest of the spirit” or the “fruit of the spirit”. But we begin by focusing briefly on the on-going struggle of the Christian - the choice that is always ours - to walk, as Paul would put it in spirit or to live according to the flesh.

I

So let’s get some clarity about what Paul is talking when he puts “flesh” and “spirit” at opposite poles.

For Paul, flesh is not a reference to our body He used a different Greek word for flesh than he used for body.

Nor did Paul equate flesh and sin. Paul was talking about two domains of power in which we live. To be sure, to live in the flesh is to live as a member of human society in a physical body. Paul condemns sin not flesh.

Our predicament is not that we live in the flesh, but that we are in sin, that is, we live according to the flesh rather than the spirit, as a domain of power.

Paul is urging the Galatians to remember that, as Christians, they have received the Spirit, and they are to walk in the Spirit. The Spirit is the supreme energizing force in our lives.

For Paul, the Spirit is more than the manifestation of a supernatural power, more than the giver of dramatic gifts, more than an explosive force erupting in the believer now and then. The Spirit is the daily sustaining, inspiring, and guiding power of the Christian’s life.

Do you get the picture? As Christians we are the recipients of the Holy Spirit. A new kind of power and action a new kind of life, is now possible - but not automatic. Let me say that again. As Christians who are the recipients of the Holy Spirit, a new kind of action and power is now possible — but not automatic.

I mean by that that the struggle remains and continues: to walk in the Spirit, or live according to the flesh.

It is absolutely impossible to live within our own strength the kind of life Christ has called us to live. Is there anything more tragic than a vision without the power to live it? Is there anything more debilitating than to hear a call, to know what we are to do and how we are to be, and yet are helpless to respond?

“There’s nothing more demeaning for most people than being apprehended from the pulpit and charged with the crime of not loving enough, not being gentle or kind enough, not suffering long enough, without having our rights read to us God only requires from us what he is wiling to do through us.

“Every time we say, ‘I believe in the Holy Spirit, J.B. Phillips said, “we mean that we believe that there is a living God able and willing to enter human personality and change it.” (Lloyd John Ogilvie, The Inner Splendour p. 15).

That’s what Paul is telling us - that when we walk in the Spirit, rather than live according to the flesh, there is an auxiliary power that is given us.

I’ll be coming back to this over and over again in the next 3 sermons, but get it clearly in mind now: We do not perform out of our own strength, the fruit of the Spirit is the harvest of Christ’s life in us

Isn’t that the reason that Jesus gave us that beautiful invitation: “Abide in me, and I in you…without me you can do nothing” (John 15: ‘ KJV).

To abide in Christ as a belief as a disciple, as a loved and forgiven person, is one thing to have Christ in us as motivator, enabler, transformer of personality, is something more...much, much more. Paul was constantly singing and shouting about it – and nowhere did he sing about it more gloriously than to the Colossians when he said: You “are those to whom God has planned to give a vision of the wonder and splendor of his secret plan. And the secret is simply this: Christ in you! Yes, Christ in you, bringing with him the hope of all the glorious things to come.” (Col. 1: 26- 27 Phillips).

And what does that mean? It means that our minds, our emotions, our wills, are meant to be the post-resurrection home of the intimate, indwelling Christ!

Is that the case with you? Are you alive in Christ?

A number of years ago, a judge in Yugoslavia had a shocking experience literally! He was standing in the bathtub and reached up to turn on a light. He received a tremendous jolt of electricity and fell out of the tub. His wife called the doctor. The doctor pronounced him dead. In accordance with the government health regulations, his body was placed in a vault beneath the cemetery chapel. Some hours later, in an open casket, the judge regained consciousness. He was not dead after all. At first, he had no idea where he was or what had happened. He climbed out of the casket to find the vault door closed. He shook the door and cried for help. The guard was terrified and fled. Finally the guard got some help and came back and opened the door. The judge phoned his wife that he was coming home. She shrieked and hung up the phone — fainted. Next he tried going to several homes of his neighbors. They took one look at him, standing outside the front door, and slammed the door in his face thinking he was a ghost. At last he found a friend that had not heard that he was dead, and the friend acted as a go-between. Finally, this man was able to convince friends and family that he was alive! (Joe Hardinq, “And You Shall Live”, June 10, 1984).

What about you? How do others know you are alive?

Remember how I quoted Paul earlier when he cried out, “0 wretched man that I am, who will deliver me from this body doomed to death?” Well, thank God, Paul did not stop there. He went on in exultant gratitude, pointing the way for all of us as he exclaimed, “I thank God there is a way through Jesus Christ our Lord. No condemnation now hangs over the head of those who are “in” Jesus Christ. For the new spiritual principle of life “in” Christ lifts me out of the old vicious circle of sin and death.” (Romans 7: 25 — 8: 2, Phillips).

That says it doesn’t it? We don’t walk according to the flesh – but we walk in the Spirit. And when we do, the Spirit produces a bountiful harvest in our lives. That’s our focus now and for the next two or three weeks - “The Harvest of the Spirit.”

II

Look at it what the great preacher G. Campbell Morgan called “the sublimest statement… concerning the issue and finality of Christianity”, verses 22 — 23: “But the fruit of the spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self—control.

Have you noted that Paul did not use the plural. He doesn’t say fruits of the Spirit, but rather fruit of the Spirit. He has talked about the works, plural – the works of the flesh; but now he concentrates on the fruit of the Spirit. That leads us to see that the fruit of the Spirit is love, and each fruit of the Spirit which the list is another expression of love.

Here is an experience that will put it in perspective.

“Roy Smith grew up out on the plains of Kansas when times were very hard. His father worked in the mill - never made more than a few dollars a week. Roy Smith said it was hard for his parents to scrape up enough money for him to go to college, but he wanted to go to that little college in his hometown - a Methodist college - and somehow or other his parents managed to get him enrolled. Then Roy was given a part in a debate that would put him on stage. More than anything else in the world, he wanted a new pair of shoes for the big day. Somehow, out of their meager income, his parents managed to buy some new shoes for their son. Just before Roy went on stage, someone burst through the doors of the auditorium and shocked him with the news that his father had been hurt badly in an accident at the mill. Roy Smith ran down the streets of that little town into the mill, but it was too late. His father had died. They buried him the next day, a cold and windy day; and then Roy Smith went back to the mill to get his father’s tools and the coveralls that he had been wearing at the time of the accident. Someone had thoughtfully put all of them into the tool box his father had used. They had carefully folded the bloody coveralls, and then had placed his old brogans bottom side-up there in the box. When Roy Smith opened the lid of that box, the first thing he saw was his father’s shoes. Those shoes had holes in the bottom that stretched from side to side. In that second, he realized that while stood in his new shoes, his father had stood on the cold steel floor of that mill in shoes that didn’t protect his feet. Roy Smith said he felt a numbness around his heart (Tales I Have Told Twice, Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1964).

The “numb” feelings Roy Smith sensed were the birth pangs of new life. He would never forget the love of his father. He knew that it was from that deep love that everything else flowed. That’s a faint picture of what Paul had experienced and was talking about.

He saw it clearly on the road to Damascus. He caught the vision, not of an earthly father in bare—spied shoes on the cold steel floor of a mill, living in sacrificial love for his children, but in the gift of the Eternal Father of his son Jesus, who hung bare-hearted on a cross, poured out love and poured out life, it was that love that reconciled Paul to God, and brought him together inside. It all centered in the unifying love of Christ, Thus, joy, peace, long—suffering, and the other character traits Paul lists as fruit of the Spirit were simply love in another form. The other fruit grows out of that love as the bountiful harvest of the Spirit.

We’ll talk about those love results in our life in the next weeks. For now it is enough to dwell on the one fruit — love I leave you then with two pictures from two of the world’s greatest Christians. The first, Albert Schweitzer. Someone once asked Schweitzer to name the greatest person in the world. Many would have designated Schweitzer himself for the honor. The good doctor without a moment’s thought, replied, “The greatest person in the world is some unknown individual in some obscure corner of the earth, who at this very hour has gone in love to be with another person in need.” (quoted by Don Shelby, Bold Expectations of the Gospel,” page 34)

The next picture is from Mother Theresa. In the little book, Something Beautiful for God she tells the British journalist, Malcolm Mulridge, that her aim is to help those whom nobody else will touch, the outcasts, the destitute and diseased who have been left for dead on the streets of Calcutta. Then she writes;

“The biggest disease today is not leprosy or tuberculosis, but rather the feeling of being unwanted, uncared for, and deserted by everybody. Nowadays for all kinds of diseases there are medicines and cures. But for being unwanted, except where there are willing hands to serve and there’s a loving heart to love, I don’t think this terrible disease can ever be cured.”

Deep down we all know it, don’t we? Our need, the need of everyone, is to be loved. Likewise, to be whole we need to be lovers we need to love others.

Let’s stop now and think for just a moment. Someone in your life will never know the redemptive love of Jesus Christ unless it is shared through you. Who is that person? Call them now by name, silently, to yourself.

Jules Feiffer, the celebrated cartoonist talks about these kind of people who need us and our Christ so desperately. In the successive panels of one of his poignant cartoons, a character is depicted as saying:

“I live inside a shell...
That is inside a wall
That is inside a fort...
That is inside a tunnel...
That is under the sea.
Where I am safe…from you.”

But in the last panel there is this heart-tugging word:

“If you really loved me...you’d find me!”

No wonder Paul says that’s the gift the Spirit gives us, because that’s our most desperate need, and the most desperate need of others - the most delicious, and the most nourishing, of all spiritual fruit love.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Maxie Dunnam