Showing posts with label Galatians 6. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Galatians 6. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Burden-Bearing



“Brothers, if anyone is caught in any transgression, you who are spiritual should restore him in a spirit of gentleness.  Keep watch on yourself, lest you too be tempted.  Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.  For if anyone thinks he is something, when he is nothing, he deceives himself.  But let each one test his own work, and then his reason to boast will be in himself alone and not in his neighbor.  For each will have to bear his own load.” –Galatians 6:1-5 (Read 6:1-10.  ESV).

Christians are to be burden-bearers, both for themselves and for others.  This puts into practice what Jesus taught us to do and to be.  Jesus was the ultimate burden-bearer, taking upon Himself the sin curse of mankind.  Paul instructs the Galatian Christians that bearing each other’s burdens is fulfilling the law of Christ.  The Christian is free from obeying the Jewish ceremonial law that had become a burden itself to those under that law.  Yet “the law of Christ” embodies the ethical and relational teachings that Jesus gave when He walked among His disciples.  For example, Jesus said, “Love your neighbor as yourself” (Matthew 22:39, John 13:34).  If we as Christians could ever learn the depth of what Jesus meant by this law of love, we would be at the very heart of “fulfilling the law of Christ.”  But in our humanness, we fall far short of that measure of burden-bearing.  Most of us fall far shy of treating others in such a loving, forgiving manner.  Yet that should remain, still, our ultimate goal. 

At first we might think that Paul wrote in a somewhat contradictory manner in this passage from Galatians 6.  He stated in verse 2:  “Bear ye one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.”  Then almost immediately in 5 he writes:  For each will have to bear his own load (burden).”  The Greek word translated “burden” in verse two, and also “burden” (or load) in verse 5 is different in the Greek.  In verse two we are urged to share each other’s cares and sorrows and thus fulfill the royal law of love.  This is to empathize with, to have genuine sensitivity to the troubles and concerns of others, to seek to understand and to console, to bear with.  The interim verse 4 has been translated by Dr. J. R. Dummelow to read: “Let each man test his actions on their own merits and not by comparison with other men” (p. 956-57, One-Volume Bible Commentary.\, 1958).  He gives verse 5 as, “For each must bear his own load of responsibility” (ibid.).  Burden (or load) in this verse uses the Greek word for accountability and indicates that each person is ultimately responsible for his own choices and actions—even those of helping others.  In bearing burdens, that of a brother or sister in Christ—or one’s own—we have the difference in approaching them from a legal standpoint, because we feel an obligation to do so according to the law, or we want to do so because we are motivated by love.  The Christian is accountable, and has a higher law—the law of love—by which to gauge his deeds and actions. A great portion of the eastern coast of our country has been hit by Hurricane Sandy and grave suffering is now occurring as an aftermath of that storm.  Because we are a caring people, we want to share with those who suffer.  Many will go to the stricken areas as volunteers, many at risk to their own lives and certainly with expenditure of their own money, time and energy.  Those of us who cannot go will seek to pray and to give to authentic charitable means of helping to relieve the suffering.  This is part of bearing one another’s burdens.  We have been (and are still in) a “Unite-in-Prayer” effort to pray earnestly for America and that the upcoming election will go according to God’s plan and purpose for our nation’s leadership.  When we learn the outcome, we will need to live with and pray for our leadership and do what we can to strengthen and support them and our nation.

Prayer:  God, teach us truly what burden-bearing and accountability mean that we can fulfill the law of love.  Amen.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

In the Spirit of Love, Bear Each Other’s Burdens

“Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ”. – Galatians 6:2.  “We who are strong have an obligation to bear with the failings of the weak, and not to please ourselves.” –Romans 15:1.  “Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends.” –John 15:13 (ESV).


Two days we thought about Jesus’ teaching that the greatest of the commandments is for us to love one another.  We looked at the family unit based on love, mutual respect and the desire to help each other grow into loving, serving individuals.  Today we consider helping others bear their burdens as being a result of the love we feel in our hearts for our fellow human beings.  “But I have enough burdens of my own,”  you might say, “without seeking to help others with their life loads.  I am limited in what I can do, and my own come first.”  Yes; we are limited, oftentimes in time, energy and means to help.  Yes, those closest and dearest to us are our main responsibility.  But if we take a narrow view on the parameters of love as we learn it from the Lord, we will miss blessings for ourselves and rob others of the blessings of being helped and loved.  Galatians 6:1 states that “you who are spiritual should restore anyone caught in transgression in a spirit of gentleness.”  Burden-bearing for others requires a gentle touch and a walk that is close to the Lord.  We go back to Galatians 5:22-23 to see the characteristics of such a walk, one who is capable of being a burden bearer.  “The fruit of the spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.  And Ephesians 5:25 tells us not to “become conceited, provoking one another, envying one another.”  To bear one another’s burdens is the supreme imitation of Jesus, for He was the exemplary burden-bearer.  Jesus taught, “love your neighbor as yourself” (Matthew 22:39). 

Paul admonished that it is even our obligation to bear the infirmities of the weak.  An illustration comes from the mission field that shows the strength the burden-bearer receives.  In Aftica where medical missionary Dr. Lambie worked, he had to cross many swift streams without bridges.  The natives taught him their way of not being swept downstream by the waters.  They told Dr. Lambie to get a heavy stone and carry it with him as he waded across the stream.  It would act as ballast, causing his feet to be more firmly planted on the bottom of the stream so that the water would not sweep him away.  The doctor tried this advice and it worked.  That action provided a good illustration for him to use in teaching the Christian truth of burden-bearing to those to whom he ministered.  While we cross the dangerous stream of life, we need the ballast of bearing others’ burdens—and even burdens of our own—to keep us solid and focused on the important things of life.  Who is not personally made stronger by bearing a burden for another?  Jesus taught that the law is to bear a soldier’s pack for a mile, but He told us to go two miles.  That of course indicates that we are to seek to help not just in the expected manner, but to go the second mile.  If a persons has no food to eat, we give him food to satisfy hunger.  But going the second mile would be to seek to show him how to earn his livelihood so he can purchase his own food.

Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends”  (John 15:13).  We must remember that love is not just an emotion, a feeling; it is an act of the will.  And love seeks the best for others, even to being willing to lay down one’s life (denying self) in order to help a friend.  We heard, especially during World War II, of heroic deeds when one soldier performed an act of bravery that cost him his life but saved others in his unit.  We may not always be called upon to die for others, but to live for them and seek to lead them in right pathways sometimes requires “laying down one’s life” in great sacrifice of time, money and guidance.  Anne Sullivan laid down her life in this way to teach the severely handicapped child, Helen Keller.  Think of the rewards for both Helen and Anne.  We need to look about us every day and pray:  “Lord, to whom can I minister today?  Who has a burden I can help them bear?”  While you’re praying to be shown that person, pray for strength to meet whatever circumstances arise.