2025-07-08

Growing Up in a Community of Love: Sharing Burdens, Living Christ's Law Scripture: Galatians 6:2

 Growing Up in a Community of Love: Sharing Burdens, Living Christ's Law

Scripture: Galatians 6:2 (NLT)
"Share each other’s burdens, and in this way obey the law of Christ."

Reflection:

  1. The Nature of the Burden (Context: Galatians 6:1): Paul sets the stage in verse 1, speaking of restoring someone "caught in a sin." The "burdens" (v2) encompass more than just physical needs – they include the spiritual and emotional weight of sin, weakness, temptation, struggle, and failure. It's the weight someone carries when they are either blind to their fault (needing gentle correction) or overwhelmed by it (needing practical support and restoration). This burden-sharing requires humility, gentleness, and self-awareness (v1).
  2. The Purpose of Sharing: Growth and Victory: Burden-sharing isn't just sympathy; it's an active partnership aimed at spiritual health and maturity. By coming alongside someone struggling – offering correction, encouragement, prayer, practical help, or simply presence – we help them stand firm, overcome their weakness, and grow stronger in Christ. We become instruments of God's grace in their journey toward victory, fostering resilience within the community. We share the load so they don't collapse under it, and together we move forward.
  3. The Law of Christ: Love in Action: Why "the law of Christ" and not the Law of Moses? This is crucial.
    • The Law of Moses: Primarily focused on defining sin and outlining standards of righteousness through external commands ("Thou shalt not..."). While holy and good (Romans 7:12), it ultimately exposed human inability and condemned sin, often fostering a spirit of judgment or legalistic striving.
    • The Law of Christ: This is the law of self-giving, sacrificial love embodied and commanded by Jesus (John 13:34-35, 15:12). It flows from the grace of salvation received through faith in Christ. Having been loved and rescued by Christ, we are empowered by the Spirit to love others as He loved us. Burden-sharing is the active expression of this love. It's not about earning God's favor through rule-keeping; it's about responding to His grace by tangibly loving our brothers and sisters. It's love made visible in the messy realities of life.

Galatians 6:2 reveals that bearing one another's burdens is the practical heartbeat of Christian community, flowing directly from the love Christ has shown us. It's how we grow together.

Application Questions:

  1. Self-Examination: Is there a burden (a persistent sin, a deep struggle, a crushing circumstance) I'm trying to carry alone out of shame, pride, or fear? How can I take a step of humility to share this with a trusted believer?
  2. Community Awareness: Who in my church family, small group, or circle might be silently carrying a heavy burden right now? How can I sensitively and practically come alongside them this week? (Think: prayer, listening, practical help, encouragement).
  3. Love vs. Law Check: When I see a brother or sister struggling, what is my first instinct? Is it judgment ("They should know better") or compassion rooted in Christ's love for me ("How can I help bear this?")? How does understanding the "Law of Christ" change my response?
  4. Practical Step: What is one specific action I can take this week to obey the "Law of Christ" by helping to carry someone else's burden?

A Short Prayer:

Lord Jesus, thank You for bearing the ultimate burden of my sin. Fill me with Your Spirit and Your love. Give me eyes to see the burdens others carry and a humble heart willing to share my own. Grant me wisdom and gentleness to come alongside those who are struggling, not in judgment, but in the grace You've shown me. Help me truly obey Your law of love by lightening the load for my brothers and sisters, as we grow together in You. Amen.

 

p.s. This post was DeepSeek’s response to my prompt:

Improve and complete the following devotion:

 

Growing Up in a Community of Love

 

Galatians 6:2 NLT

Share each other’s burdens, and in this way obey the law of Christ.

 

#1 The context in v1 tells us the burden is about the wrongs or problems one is facing. It is either they are not aware of their faults or it is they are unable to fix the faults.

#2 Sharing each other's burdens is about helping each other to overcome their weaknesses and grow up to be stronger and victorious.

#3 What then is the Law of Christ? Why did Paul not use the Laws of Moses? What are the differences?

The law of Christ is about loving others after being saved by Christ. Saved for the good work of love.

The laws of Moses are about trying to fulfil God's demands. More passive in Not to sin.

 

Application Questions

 

A Short prayer

2025-07-06

Fret Not of the Seemingly Success of the Evil and Just Trust God - Ps 37

 A good friend once told me that his friend who betrayed and cheated him seems to be living in great success and riches, and why this is so. Then, I came across this psalm 37. So I shared it with him. With today's GenAI, I asked DeepSeek for a devotion on the psalm. I like the answer.

Here’s a heartfelt devotion on Psalm 37, focusing on its timeless wisdom for navigating life’s injustices and uncertainties:


Devotion: Fret Not of the Seemingly Success of the Evil and Just Trust God

Scripture: "Do not fret because of those who are evil or be envious of those who do wrong; for like the grass they will soon wither, like green plants they will soon die away." (Psalm 37:1–2, NIV)


The Struggle We All Face

Look around: the wicked seem to prosper. Corruption goes unpunished; arrogance is rewarded. Meanwhile, the faithful face hardship, and prayers feel unanswered. Psalm 37 speaks directly to this tension. David, no stranger to betrayal and injustice, urges us: "Fret not... do not envy." Why? Because earthly success is fleeting. The wicked may bloom like grass, but they’ll fade just as quickly. God’s economy operates on eternal scales.


God’s Counterintuitive Commands

David doesn’t just say "stop worrying." He gives active steps to replace anxiety with faith:

  1. TRUST in the Lord (v. 3)
    • Place your weight fully on His faithfulness. He can bear it.
  2. DELIGHT in the Lord (v. 4)
    • Find joy in His presence, not outcomes.
  3. COMMIT your way to Him (v. 5)
    • Surrender your plans; His path is secure.
  4. BE STILL before Him (v. 7)
    • Wait patiently. His timing is perfect.

"He will make your righteous reward shine like the dawn, your vindication like the noonday sun." (v. 6)


Two Destinies in Sharp Contrast

  • The Wicked: Temporary power, permanent ruin (vv. 9–10, 35–36).
  • The Righteous: Inherit the land (v. 11), upheld by God (v. 17), satisfied in famine (v. 19), and guided step-by-step (v. 23).

God’s promise isn’t the absence of pain—it’s the presence of purpose. Even when you stumble, "the Lord upholds your hand" (v. 24). Your story isn’t over.


The Anchor for Your Soul

"The salvation of the righteous comes from the Lord; He is their stronghold in time of trouble." (v. 39)

When injustice screams, quiet your heart with truth:

  • God sees all (v. 13).
  • He defends the humble (v. 14).
  • Your future is secure in Him (v. 18).

What looks like a delay is divine precision. The wicked build sandcastles; you’re building on the Rock.


Reflection Questions:

  1. Where am I "fretting" over others’ success instead of trusting God’s plan?
  2. How can I "delight in the Lord" today amid uncertainty?
  3. What step of faith (big or small) can I commit to His care right now?

Prayer

Father, when my eyes fixed on the temporary triumphs of evil, pull my gaze back to You. Teach me to trust when I don’t understand, to delight when I feel empty, and to wait when I want to rush. Remind me that my inheritance is not of this world—it’s You. Uphold me by Your hand. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


Psalm 37 isn’t a promise of easy roads—it’s the assurance that walking with God leads to an unshakable destination. Rest in His rhythm. 🌿

 See also my reflection in Reflections on Chinese New Year - Trust & Fret Not

This is the essence of living out Psalm 37. It's a daily choice to:

  1. Shift Focus: From others' apparent success to God's character and promises.
  2. Cultivate Contentment & Joy: In God Himself and in the genuine success of others (rejoicing with them).
  3. Act in Faith: Keep doing good, trusting that God sees and honors integrity.
  4. Surrender Control: Commit your path, bend your desires to His will.
  5. Embrace Patient Expectation: Wait wisely, knowing His timing is perfect and His promises are sure.