| The 
			Holy Spirit Bringing Forth in the Believer Christlike Graces of 
			Character.
			There is a singular charm, a charm that one can scarcely explain, in 
			the words of Paul in Gal. v. 22, 23, R. V., “The 
			fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness, 
			goodness, faithfulness, meekness, temperance.” What 
			a catalogue we have here of lovely moral characteristics. Paul tells 
			us that they are the fruit of the Spirit, that is, if the Holy 
			Spirit is given control of our lives, this is the fruit that He will 
			bear. All real beauty of character, all real Christlikeness in us, 
			is the Holy Spirit's work; it is His fruit; He produces it; He bears 
			it, not we. It is well to notice that these graces are not said to 
			be the fruits of the Spirit but the fruit, i. 
			e., if the Spirit is given control of our life, He 
			will not bear one of these as fruit in one person and another as 
			fruit in another person, but this will be the one fruit of many 
			flavours that He produces in each one. There is also a unity of 
			origin running throughout all the multiplicity of manifestation. It 
			is a beautiful life that is set forth in these verses. Every word is 
			worthy of earnest study and profound meditation. Think of these 
			words one by one; “love”—“joy”—“peace”—“longsuffering”—“kindness”—“goodness”—“faith” (or “faithfulness,” R. 
			V.; faith is the better translation if properly understood. The word 
			is deeper than faithfulness. It is a real faith that results in 
			faithfulness)—“meekness”—“temperance” (or 
			a life under perfect control by the power of the Holy Spirit). We 
			have here a perfect picture of the life of Jesus Christ Himself. Is 
			not this the life that we all long for, the Christlike life? But 
			this life is not natural to us and is not attainable by us by any 
			effort of what we are in ourselves. The life that is natural to us 
			is set forth in the three preceding verses: “Now 
			the works of the flesh are manifest, which are these, fornication, 
			uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry, sorcery, enmities, strife, 
			jealousies, wraths, factions, divisions, heresies, envyings, 
			drunkenness, revellings and such like” (Gal. 
			v. 21, R. V.). All these works of the flesh will not manifest 
			themselves in each individual; some will manifest themselves in one, 
			others in others, but they have one common source, the flesh, and if 
			we live in the flesh, this is the kind of a life that we will live. 
			It is the life that is natural to us. But when the indwelling Spirit 
			is given full control in the one He inhabits, when we are brought to 
			realize the utter badness of the flesh and give up in hopeless 
			despair of ever attaining to anything in its power, when, in other 
			words, we come to the end of ourselves, and just give over the whole 
			work of making us what we ought to be to the indwelling Holy Spirit, 
			then and only then, these holy graces of character, which are set 
			forth in Gal. v. 22, 23, are His fruit in our lives. Do you wish 
			these graces in your character and life? Do you really wish them? 
			Then renounce self 
			utterly and all its strivings after holiness, give up any thought 
			that you can ever attain to anything really morally beautiful in 
			your own strength and let the Holy Spirit, who already dwells in you 
			(if you are a child of God) take full control and bear His own 
			glorious fruit in your daily life. 
			We get very much the same thought from a different point of view in 
			the second chapter and twentieth verse, A. R. V., “I 
			have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I that live, 
			but Christ liveth in me: and that life which I now live in the flesh 
			I live in faith, the faith which is in the Son of God, who loved me 
			and gave Himself up for me.” 
			We hear a great deal in these days about “Ethical 
			Culture,” which 
			usually means the cultivation of the flesh until it bears the fruit 
			of the Spirit. It cannot be done; no more than thorns can be made to 
			bear figs and the bramble bush grapes (Luke vi. 44; Matt. xii. 33). 
			We hear also a great deal about “character 
			building.” That 
			may be all very well if you bear constantly in mind that the Holy 
			Spirit must do the building, and even then it is not so much 
			building as fruit bearing. (See, however, 2 Pet. i. 5-7.) We hear 
			also a great deal about 
			“cultivating graces of character,” but 
			we must always bear it clearly in mind that the way to cultivate 
			true graces of character is by submitting ourselves utterly to the 
			Spirit to do His work and bear His fruit. This is “sanctification of 
			the Spirit” (1 
			Pet. i. 2; 2 Thess. ii. 13). There is a sense, however, in which 
			cultivating graces of character is right: viz., we look at Jesus 
			Christ to see what He is and what we therefore ought 
			to be; then we look to the Holy Spirit to make us this that we ought 
			to be and thus, “reflecting 
			as a mirror the glory of the Lord, we are transformed into the same 
			image from glory to glory, even as from the Lord the Spirit” (2 
			Cor. iii. 18, R. V.). Settle it, however, clearly and forever that 
			the flesh can never bear this fruit, that you can never attain to 
			these things by your own effort that they are “the 
			fruit of the Spirit.”   |