Galatians 6:1-5 Community
The Loving Burden Bearers
French aristocrat Baron Richard d’Arcy kept a strange pet in his home: a two-year-old lion. One night in 1977, the baron tried to make his pet enter the bathroom, where it usually spent the night, but it refused to go and leaped on its master. In a matter of minutes, the lion had clawed the baron to death.
Christians should deal with sin definitely and drastically. We must not permit any “pet” sins, since that means we are playing with evil. Only by severe dealing with a sin can we be sure that we will not become the victim of it.1282
Spirit-led communities, and Spirit-led individuals, do spiritual restoration. But they only do it—or at least only do it well—when they’re not tempted by their own pride and conceit. Thus Paul warns the Galatians, “Keep watch on yourself, lest you too be tempted” (v. 1).
The whole atmosphere of the word lays the stress not on punishment but on cure; the correction is thought of not as a penalty but as putting something right
Gazing at the final judgment ought to be a regular part of our Christian discipleship.
For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that each one may receive what is due for what he has done in the body, whether good or evil” (2 Corinthians 5:10).
But more than that, keeping our eye on the judgment is a great antidote to conceit and thus a great help to bearing burdens rather than judging one another.
Spiritual restoration is—or at least ought to be—part of the regular business of any small group. If you’re in a small group and this kind of work never happens, it may be time to ask some honest questions about the depth of spiritual maturity of the group, or the depth of intimacy and commitment within the group.
French aristocrat Baron Richard d’Arcy kept a strange pet in his home: a two-year-old lion. One night in 1977, the baron tried to make his pet enter the bathroom, where it usually spent the night, but it refused to go and leaped on its master. In a matter of minutes, the lion had clawed the baron to death.
Christians should deal with sin definitely and drastically. We must not permit any “pet” sins, since that means we are playing with evil. Only by severe dealing with a sin can we be sure that we will not become the victim of it.1282
What would you think of a doctor who, on discovering you had a tumor buried deep in your body, responded, “Take two aspirin and you’ll be just fine”?
How about a fireman who responded to a three-alarm fire by saying, “It’ll probably burn itself out soon enough,” or a policeman who, on arriving at the scene of a robbery, merely shook his head and said, “Boys will be boys”!
In each case the response is inappropriate to the situation. Is your response to sin also inappropriate?
Sin, Toleration of
For two years the hydraulic earthquake stabilizers in the thirteen-story “Nuevo Leon” apartment building in Mexico City were left out of service. Then, unexpectedly, at 7:30 A.M. on September 19, 1985, a devastating earthquake shook Mexico City. The thirteen-story building began to sway. Without hydraulic stabilizers to cushion the shocks, the building continued to sway until finally a third of it broke loose at the foundation and fell over sideways. Another third came crumbling down, floor on floor, crushed like a tin can. Only one third was left standing. For fifteen days rescuers dug through the rubble to search for survivors. Unfortunately, for most, the results of neglecting the inner defects were tragic.
So it is with our inner spiritual life and sin. To neglect the one is to open ourselves to the tragic results of the other.1289