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Sep 28 / Chuck Smith, Jr.

A Different Gospel – 09/28/2025

Podcast

Welcome and Prayer: Jim Calhoun

Come Lord, Join us this morning
Our lives are fragile
And our need for you is great

Life can change in a minute
Our security stripped
Our work arounds crumbled
Our lives at risk
Our true situation made plain

Sometimes our need for you
Fosters resistance
Fosters pride
And we step out on our own
Still, eventually,
The course of life
brings us back
to the lived reality
Of every human:
We are dependent
Creatures in this world
In need

If we are in resistance
Call us gently to you
With your great good love
Assure us of your care
And strength
And your desire to make us whole
As we navigate
And negotiate
Our lives

We thank you Lord
for meeting us in our need
As well as in our resistance
Each day
Each moment
Amen

Morning Talk: chuck smith, jr.

Let us not become conceited, provoking one another, envying one another.
Brothers and sisters, 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. Galatians 5:26-6:2

Intro: Years ago, and in another life, I had a feisty personal assistant

Although she is genuinely compassionate, she had a favorite line: “Get over yourself”
– I think that held her together through a hard and complicated season of her life
• she said it to herself, to he friends, to people who called the church office for help,
◦ and more than once she said it to me–her boss
• but she never said it when I didn’t need to hear it
◦ Paul’s next lesson in this letter to the Galatians is, “Get over yourself”
– the chapter break here is unfortunate
• his contrast between the works of flesh and fruit of Spirit ended at chapter 5, verse 25
◦ verse 26 fits perfectly with where chapter 6
◦ now he begins to stress the importance of caring for each other
• “conceit” interferes with that personal care
◦ rather than assisting each other, conceit provokes others
◦ rather than respecting others, conceit envies others
“Get over yourself so you can be here for those who need you”

Paul sets off in this direction with an unexpected example

He begins by addressing a negative problem and how to deal with it
(compare this with places where his instruction to believers is encouraging and positive)
“Let each of us please his neighbor for his good, to build [them] up” (Rom. 15:2)
“Therefore encourage one another and build one another up, just as you are doing” (1 Thes. 5:11)
– here he jumps right into helping someone who has taken a fall
• I suppose this happens frequently enough that everyone in the spiritual community must prepare for it
◦ in fact, that’s what this entire letter has been until now,
◦ Paul leading the Galatians back to Jesus and the true gospel
• the way Paul sees the Christian family is that everyone is affected by one person’s slip-up
◦ the goal in this instance is restoration (the same Greek word is used for mending nets, Mt. 4:21)
– his specific advice is excellent
first, identify the agents who need to be deployed to help this person
“you who are spiritual”
◦ no doubt, these people display the “fruit of the Spirit” he had just gone over
next, they’re to approach this person “in a spirit of gentleness”
◦ in my experience, this is a rarity
◦ often people who assume this role show no hint of “gentle,”
but go in a spirit that is judgmental, or self-righteous, or aggressive
third, those who go must be watchful of their own issues
◦ of course, we all have our own temptations
◦ but may Paul means they may be tempted to be too harsh with the person who slipped

This is just one example of how we help others with their burdens
– there are also financial burdens, health burdens, grief burdens, mental burdens, and so on
• the nature of our burdens shift as we age
◦ and so does the kind of help we’re able to give
• when we were young, we did a lot of physical labor
◦ now we may be more with providing money, or meals, or emotional support, or spiritual counsel

I’m not sure, but here’s what I think Paul had in mind
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 6:3-5

Some people are unwilling to do anything for anyone else
– Paul says they think they are something “special”
• like they’re above helping someone carry a heavy object
◦ “Why should I help them when I have my own burdens?”
• perhaps Paul means, if you’re not helping, then you’re not something, you’re nothing
Dad used to say, “If you’re not good for something, you’re good for nothing”
– you can see that God swings back to conceit, which is where he started into these things
• when people think they’re something when they’re not, Paul says they are lying to themselves
• and the only ones deceived are themselves
◦ everyone else sees the truth of what they are

Paul issues a challenge to his readers
– “test” often refers to a method used to check the strength, quality, or purity of a metal, a jewel, a blood sample, etcetera
• so the challenge is to examine your own work
◦ its value, effect, quality, and quantity
• then, if you prove to be talented, gifted, brilliant, or generous
◦ you will have earned your bragging rights
◦ also, you won’t be comparing yourself to anyone else
– again, I am guessing that Paul is saying,
• we each have to deal with our own issues, carry our own load
◦ but that doesn’t mean we’re exempt from helping others
◦ here is how the these verses appear in the Message Bible:
“Make a careful exploration of who you are and the work you have been given, and then sink yourself into that. Don’t be impressed with yourself. Don’t compare yourself with others. Each of you must take responsibility for doing the creative best you can with your own life”

We’re all responsible for what grows in our spiritual garden|
Let the one who is taught the word share all good things with the one who teaches. Do not be deceived: God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap. For the one who sows to his own flesh will from the flesh reap corruption, but the one who sows to the Spirit will from the Spirit reap eternal life
Galatians 6:6-8

Again, deception is an issue – Greek word for deceived here means “led astray”
– I find it significant, when the disciples asked Jesus,
“what will be the sign of your coming and of the end of the age?”
• in his first words of warning he used this word:
“See that no one leads you astray” (Mt. 24:3-4)
• it’s as if there will be so many wrong ideas and wrong teaching
◦ that we will hardly be able to trust anyone
“And many false prophets will arise and lead many astray” (Mt. 24:11)
– Paul gives one of the clearest explanations of a spiritual principle in the entire Bible
• it is so simple, anyone can understand it
◦ what plants do we want to grow in our garden? what sort of life do we want to live?
◦ well, what thoughts are on our mind much of the time?
what desires do we hold in our hearts?
what feelings do we hang on to? (resentment? regret? impatience?)
what habits do we want to form?
(constant worry or constant prayer? getting along with our neighbors or fighting everyone?)
• think about it – this has to with everything!
– Paul has brought us back to the opposition of the flesh and the Spirit
• the contrary dynamics of works versus fruit

Years ago, a television commercial ran for a glue that formed a super powerful bond. Two pickup trucks were lined back to back and chained to each other, with glue holding the chains together. Then both truck revved their engines, trying to pull away from each other, but the glued chains held them in place. Now as I think about, it seems there was more than met the eye. But being a kid, I was more interested in how I could get one truck to defeat the other truck and drag it away. The simplest solution I could think of, was don’t put gasoline in one of the trucks, and the other would win with no problem. That’s like the advice I hear Paul giving the Galatians.

If you don’t want to grow weeds in your life’s garden, stop planting them
– this analogy makes understanding the solution very simple
• but that may give us the impression that it’s easy–it’s not!
• like any garden, it takes effort, diligence, and self-discipline

Paul delivers his application to our real-life situation
And let us not grow weary of doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not give up. So then, as we have opportunity, let us do good to everyone, and especially to those who are of the household of faith Galatians 6:9-10

Does it ever break your heart,
– that with all the good many wonderful Christians are doing in the world, there is still so much suffering?
• so much deadly poverty?
• so much violence and warfare?
• so many unmet needs?
• and just so much apparent insanity?
– Paul tells us specifically what we should be planting
• and not get weary of it, even if we’re working under a hot sun and our backs ache
“doing good”–it confounds me that some Christians reject this word
◦ they assume if you’re not preaching at people, handing out tracts, converting them,
◦ but “only” feeding them, providing clean water, clothing them, and giving them soup without a sermon,
that your work is worthless
◦ that keeping people alive physically is not Christian, if at the same time we’re not saving their souls

Contemplative spirituality is learning to always be aware of God in the moment
– we are living in the moment but not for the moment – we always lean toward the future
• and so, “in due season we will reap”
“For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven” (Ecc. 3:1)
• I was a silly child the first time I tried planting a peach seed
◦ I figured there would be no need to wait for my parents to go to the store if I could just go and pull a peach off of my own tree
◦ so I planted my seed and watered it every day for a week
◦ then I dug it up to see if it was growing roots, but it looked just the same
◦ so I kept watering it and kept digging it up every couple of days
◦ finally I gave up and threw it over the fence into the neighbor’s yard
• Paul assures us there will be a harvest, a reward, even if we have to wait for it

“So then, as we have opportunity, let us do good to everyone”
– I promise you, if we look, we will find an “opportunity” every day to do good for someone

Conclusion: Maybe this next week I can be a little bit better person than last week

And when I get to the end of this week,
maybe the following week I can be a little better than that

Paul has shown us a sample of what “doing good” looks like
He’s also shown us the things that tend to gets in the way
Yesterday, reading in 1 John, it struck me that we have a way to see who is a real deal Christian
and who is not
And it’s so simple!
“By this it is evident who are the children of God, and who are the children of the devil: whoever does not practice righteousness is not of God, nor is the one who does not love his brother or sister”
And this is his commandment, that we believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ AND love one another, just as he commanded us (1 Jn. 3:10 & 23)
Political affiliation does not determine who is a Christian,
nor does it set limits on who we love, whether Republican or Democrat,
or even whether Capitalist or Socialist!
The question is,
Are we showing love to our human siblings?
It’s as simple as that

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