Editor’s Note: The AMI QT Devotionals from June 13-19 are provided by Pastor Shan Gian, who serves at Symphony Church in Boston. Shan, a graduate of University of Pennsylvania and Gordon Conwell Seminary (M.Div.), is married to Jenny, who recently gave birth to their first baby Tyler.
Devotional Thoughts for Today
Galatians 6:1
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. 2 Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.
As a self-reliant person, I like to do work on my own, figure out different problems on my own, and work through various issues on my own. I’m sure many of you are pretty similar to me in this. Self-reliance is, to an extent, a good thing, for none of us wants to be known as needy or dependent—and there are plenty of things in life that we should work through on our own. So when it comes to our spiritual lives, our tendency is to work out things with God on our own.
But this is not what God has in mind for us. In this passage, Paul tells us to, “Bear one another’s burdens.” We might think that bearing one another’s burdens is just being there for one another or supporting a friend through a hard time. But in the original language, this word for “bear” is the same word that is used when Jesus was “bearing his own cross” (John 19:17). Bearing one another’s burdens isn’t just encouraging someone with a few nice words—but it is delving deep into someone’s life and helping through their burdens of sin and shame. We’re not just called to do this for others, but we ourselves have burdens that we cannot bear on our own—meaning, we need to invite others to help restore us and carry the burdens and struggles we have.
Because we are so inclined to be self-reliant, we try to carry burdens that are meant to be carried with the community. Whether they’re sins of lust, anger, or past hurts and shames that we hold onto in our hearts, we don’t need to bear these heavy burdens on our own, as they can crush our spirits and hinder our walks with God. The book of Galatians teaches us about freedom in Christ, and one important way that we can be free in Christ is to give up our self-reliance and bring our burdens for one another to bear.
Bible Reading for Today: Psalm 76
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Lunch Break Study
Read Matthew 23:1-4: Then Jesus said to the crowds and to his disciples, 2 “The scribes and the Pharisees sit on Moses’ seat, 3 so do and observe whatever they tell you, but not the works they do. For they preach, but do not practice.4 They tie up heavy burdens, hard to bear, and lay them on people’s shoulders, but they themselves are not willing to move them with their finger.
Questions to Consider
- What were the scribes and Pharisees doing right?
- What were the scribes and Pharisees doing wrong?
- Who in your life has been there to help you with your heavy burdens? Are there people whose burdens you are helping to bear right now?
Notes
- For all of the faults that Jesus points out regarding scribes and Pharisees, He does tell us His audience to do and observe what they were teaching and preaching. It seems that in this passage, at least, Jesus was not taking issue with their teachings.
- In this passage, Jesus is more concerned about how the scribes and Pharisees would teach and preach but not even lift a finger to help the people. The teachings of the scribes and Pharisees were burdens, because they were standards of holiness and righteousness that the people were to follow, but these were too difficult to follow. These leaders only preached at the people without actually walking alongside them to help them walk in them. On the other hand, though Jesus gave an impossible standard to follow, “Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Matt 5:48), He did much more than lift a finger—He sacrificed His whole life to help us bear that burden.
- Personal reflection question.
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Evening Reflection
What burdens (yours or others’) do you feel like you were bearing today? Have you found freedom in these burdens? Take some time to surrender your burdens to Christ, but also consider reaching out to a friend to help bear your burdens.
On occasion I enjoy trying out a new recipe. For some reason, it’s fun for me to experiment with a dish that I’ve never made before. So I’ll pull up a recipe on my iPad, go into the kitchen and start mixing, chopping and mincing things. I’ll go step by step through the recipe, following all of the instructions, but unfortunately, one problem that I have (as my wife can attest to) is that I’m not always the most thorough person. So at least 10 times in my life, I’ll get to step 7 of 10 of a recipe and realize… I AM MISSING AN INGREDIENT. This, of course, is not good for cooking. I, somehow, have to stop sautéing, simmering, or baking, go outside, run to my car and buy the missing ingredient—or else my great dish will be incomplete.
Editor’s Note:
Os Guinness, a Christian author, says that there are two types of freedom: negative freedom and positive freedom. Negative freedom is freedom from oppression like political oppression, while positive freedom is freedom for something—freedom with a purpose. The problem in our culture is that freedom is only seen in light of negative freedom. Americans will loudly declare that they have freedom of speech or freedom to do whatever they want to do. Kids can’t wait until they have freedom from being under their parents’ rule or until they have freedom from school and homework.
Being convicted of a crime and doing jail time is probably as low as it can get for any person. There is so much shame and humiliation that goes with it. And yet when we look at the recidivism rate (the percentage of former prisoners being rearrested) in the United States, over 60% of ex-convicts end up back in prison. These are men and women who have experienced the rock bottom of being imprisoned and have then experienced the joy and the freedom of being released, and yet, over 60% of them find themselves submitting again to the yoke of slavery.
When God called Abraham to leave all that he had to follow Him, He promised to make Abraham a father of a great nation; however, Abraham had no son since Sarah was barren. Having waited many years, they began to waver in their faith in God’s promise. After more than ten years passed and still no son, where Sarah was way beyond the natural-child bearing age, Abraham and Sarah probably began to wonder if they had heard God wrong. Sarah ended up reasoning that perhaps through Hagar, her servant, they would be able to have children. Hagar ended up conceiving, and gave birth to a son, Ishmael. However, Ishmael was not the son who was to fulfill the promise of God. Fourteen years later, Sarah, at the age of 90, gave birth to Isaac—the son that God had promised to Abraham.
We are all susceptible to having counterfeit gods in our lives. What are counterfeit gods? Timothy Keller explains it as “anything in life [that] is an absolute requirement for your happiness and self-worth.” We can easily jump from one idol to another, thinking that we have overcome idolatry, but actually falling prey to another false god. There are so many false idols in this world that continue to pull for our attention—power, sex, social media, etc. But often the moment we feel like we have broken free from the grips of one god, we realize we have been enslaved by another god.
The Gentiles were able to become a part of Israel if they were circumcised and kept the law, identifying themselves with the nation of Israel (Ex. 12:48). The Judaizers that were trying to get the Gentile converts to be circumcised were trying to be faithful to that command. But Paul is proposing that they have entered into a new season, where the way to come to God was through Jesus. Whether you were a Jew, under the guardianship of the Law, or a Gentile, an outsider adopted into the family, the promise was now fulfilled in Jesus. There is no differentiation between the adopted son and natural born son – both were heirs to the inheritance through faith in Jesus.
The giving of the law seemed contrary to the promise of God that salvation was purely by grace. Is salvation by human effort or by God’s grace? So this is a valid question: Did God mess up? Is God contradicting himself? Paul is saying, “Absolutely not!” Law and grace do not contradict one another, but actually complement one another in God’s plan of salvation for His people. Philip Ryken uses this baseball analogy as an illustration to help us understand this:
When I was a child, my dad would often have to go on business trips, sometimes very long trips to Taiwan. I didn’t like that he was away and thought that if only he had a private jet, he could come back much faster. So, one day, I promised him that I would grow up to make a lot of money and buy him his own personal private jet. I guess he didn’t believe me, because he wanted proof of it, a written contract if you will. So I drew an airplane on a piece of paper, signed my name on it, and handed it to him. I hope he doesn’t find that contract, because I don’t think I will ever be able to honor it.
Editor’s Note: The AMI Devotional QT from June 6-12 are written by Phillip Chen, college pastor intern at Church of Southland. Philip, a graduate of University of California, San Diego, is currently studying at Talbot School of Theology. He is married to Esther.
Have you ever tried to use something that it wasn’t designed to do and found it to be incredibly inefficient and frustrating? I was once at a house where the showerhead wasn’t working (or so we thought). I ended up crouching in the tub trying to cup the water that came out of the faucet and splash it on myself to rinse off the soap. It was incredibly inefficient and a lot of water was wasted.