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Let us this morning continue in our series, “Cultivating the Fruit of the Spirit” today is part 4 entitled “The Fruit of Patience”.
Up to this point we have look within the fruit basket and explored closer the fruits of love, joy, and peace.
These three are very nice often understood to some degree and sound very spiritual and almost heavenly.
However, the fruit of patience brings with it a different reality.
Because love, joy peace sound sound so noble, good and wonderful.
We love talking about those attributes.
But what about patience?
Lets read the text this morning Galatians 5:22-23
Galatians 5:22–23 (NKJV)
22 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
23 gentleness, self-control.
Against such there is no law.
The word Paul uses literally means “long suffering” it can be also translated to mean “forbearance” a word we don't use very often anymore.
Both words help us to get the full flavor of this Spiritual fruit.
Patience as fruit of the Spirit means the following:
The ability to endure for a long time whatever opposition and suffering many come our way, and to show perseverance without wanting retaliation or revenge.
The ability to put up with the weaknesses and shortcomings of others (including other believers), and to show forbearance toward them, without getting quickly irritated or angry enough to want to fight back.
So patience is a tough sort of word.
It demands strength and stamina, and it depends on being able to exercise control over our reactions to others.
None of that is easy.
It doesn’t come naturally to us, which is why we need the Spirit of God to make it grow in our lives.
But before we think about how we should behave, we should start by thinking about the patience of God himself.
Remember, when we talk about the fruit of the Spirit, it means that God’s own character is bearing fruit in our character.
The life of God is at work within our life.
So lets first take a quick look at the patience of God in the OT.
THE PATIENCE OF GOD IN THE OLD TESTAMENT
We may not think of the patience of God in the OT.
Many people think that the OT God was always angry.
Now there are certainly times when God’s anger against people’s sin was demonstrated through His disapproval in form of His wrath upon their wickedness.
However, when God identified and described Himself to Moses this is what He had to say: Ex. 34:6
“Slow to Anger” is a good way of expressing what is meant by patience.
God showed this attribute many times within the OT.
Take for example the great sin by the people of Israel at Mt. Sinai.
It was their apostasy and idolatry with the golden calf (Ex.
32) where God had every right to exercise judgment on that occasion.
But instead showed mercy and patience.
The very famous verse (Ex.
34:6) is echoed quite often through out the OT.
One of the most beautiful examples of this is found in Psalm 103:8-10
Even when judgment is clearly deserved, God is patient, especially when there is a chance of repentance.
That’s what Jonah discovered.
Well, actually Jonah knew it already, and so he criticizes God for being so patient and forgiving!
Jonah was embarrassed and angry by the very quality that God had so often shown to Israel, when it was for the benefit of hated foreigners (Jon 3:10–4:4).
“Slow to anger,” said God about himself.
And even when God’s anger is rightly and necessarily aroused by human wickedness and sin, his anger does not last forever.
Micah saw that aspect of God’s character (that he does not stay angry forever) as something unique about Yahweh the God of Israel, something that was not true of other alleged gods.
All throughout the OT we find this attribute of God.
From Hos.11:1-4, Jer.
3-25, and into book of Isaiah.
Through the prophet Isaiah God was foretelling a time that would come when God would demonstrated His loving patience and mercy by coming down Himself in the form of flesh and taking sin upon himself.
God borne our sin, carried it himself in the person of His Son, taking upon His own shoulders his righteous anger against all evil and wickedness.
That is the true cost of God’s patience.
And that leads us directly to Jesus.
THE PATIENCE OF JESUS
The patience of Jesus with his disciples was tested a lot, as they were so often slow to understand what he was saying and doing (but I don’t think any of us would have done any better).
Nevertheless, Jesus persevered with them.
As John put it in John 13:1
Jesus loved them from the beginning to the end and continues to pour out His love upon all who trust in His name.
Jesus had persevered with them patiently through all their faults and failings.
The supreme patience of Jesus is demonstrated, of course, as he endured the violence, cruelty, and injustice of the cross.
And he did that precisely in order to “bear/carry” our sins—without retaliation, but trusting in his Father God.
In other words, in his suffering and death, Jesus was bearing not only the immediate hostility of those who demanded and carried out his crucifixion, but also the sin of the world, including yours and mine.
Peter sees the patient suffering of Jesus as a model for our own endurance, in words that echo and quote Isaiah 53.
The power of the fruit of Spirit is illustrated by Peter, in 1 Peter 2:20-24
Naturally, therefore, if the Spirit of God is the Spirit of Jesus (as the New Testament sometimes says), then this is one of the ways that he will make us more like Christ, by following his example.
The fruit of the Spirit will include the quality of patience that reflects how Christ bore the suffering he endured for our salvation.
So that brings us at last to ourselves.
We’ve seen something of the patience of God in the Old Testament and the patience of Christ in the New Testament.
What will it look like when that God-like patience grows like fruit in our own lives?
PATIENCE IN CHRISTIAN LIVING
Lets go back to those two words that we mentioned at the start.
Long-suffering and forbearance.
Long-suffering meaning (endurance of persecution) and forbearance meaning (forgiveness of one another), both the word patience is used in both ways in the NT.
First lets look closer at Endurance of suffering.
The Bible teaches us very clearly that God’s people will suffer from the hostility of those who are enemies of God and God’s people.
And so Christ’s example becomes crucial for us.
And when we think about Christ’s suffering, what matters is not just the fact that he suffered, but the way he endured that suffering.
Listen to how Peter expresses this in 1 Peter 4:12-14
Here is the message from these verses.
When Christians suffer for Christ’s sake, there should be the following.
1.
No surprise (we have been warned by Jesus and the apostles again and again to expect it).
2. No retaliation (because we follow the example of Christ, who did not fight back, not even in words when he could have called on an army of angels).
3.
No quitting (when we commit our cause to God, we do not then sit back and wait, we carry on doing what we are called to do, and that is doing God’s good).
Paul even said the following about his own sufferings. 2 Tim.
3:10-12
So when we read about the Fruit of Patience this what Paul is referring to - Long suffering, but like I said this word in the Greek not only has one meaning but two and so Patience also means Forbearance with others.
Forbearance is Forgiveness of one another.
Jesus being the ultimate example, when He was on the cross He cried out the Father, “Father forgive them for they no not what they do” This was Christ showing forbearance towards those who were causing His sufferings.
Also Paul in various places through his letters to the churches said the following about having this kind of patience.
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