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Theme:
"Living
and Enjoying
the Fruit of the Spirit"

Day
8
Fruit:
Faithfulness


Day
Verse:
"Greater
love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his
friends. ye are My friends, if ye do whatsoever I command
you" --John 15:13, 14


Our
English word "faith" is from a Greek word that means
faithfulness and loyalty--not faith exercised by the mind.
How can a Christian be so faithful and loyal that she can bear
this fruit abundantly? Through the working of the faithful
Holy Spirit who dwells within the hearts of all true believers in
Christ (I Corinthians 6:19). Faith is the foundation of
salvation (Romans 10:8-10), but faithfulness is a fruit of
the Spirit.
Because
our Lord is always faithful, and our life comes from Him, He can
expect us to be faithful. We have been singing about His
faithfulness and we find evidences of it on every page in the
Bible.
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FAITHFULNESS
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GOD'S
WORD |
How
grateful we should be that God's Word, too, is faithful,
dependable, and teaches us "sound doctrine"! (Titus
1:9) Archaeologists are digging up more evidences every year
which prove the Bible to be a faithful record. And nothing
will bolster up our faithfulness more than to read in the Bible
about our faithful Lord.
"Semper
Fidelis" (Always Faithful) is a favorite Sunday school class
motto, but it sets a pretty high standard of loyalty. Jesus
told His disciples, "I no longer call you servants, for a
servant does not know what his master is working out; but I have
called you friends, because I have acquainted you with everything
I heard from My Father" (John 15:15, Berkeley). Friends
share each other's problems and stand up for one another.
Think of being in on Jesus' confidences with His Father!
Isn't that an incentive to be faithful and loyal to our Savior?
Jesus
also told His disciples that He had chosen them for the very
purpose that their characters should be fruitful and that such
fruit should remain--not be fully ripe and mature one day
and shriveled and dried up the next.
An Old
Testament verse warns us that there are little foxes that spoil
the fruit of the vine (Song of Solomon 2:15). Hungry little
foxes don't bother with shriveled or withered fruit, but go after
the grapes that are tender, ripe, and luscious. If these
slippery little creatures are able to sneak in at all, they do
great damage! They prowl about at night when they are not
easily seen, and trample upon the branches of the vine in their
effort to eat the "tender grapes." No, they may
not eat all the fruit, but they do trample over the branches and
spoil both fruit and branches. And, of course, the grapes at
which the foxes have nibbled are half eaten or may even be
devoured!
Have
you been conscious of the "little foxes" of pride and
selfishness stalking your fruit? Remember, when
stalking their prey, sly little foxes approach it quietly and
capture it with a quick rush! Pride is one of the most sly
of all sins--it slinks in when we least expect it and nibbles away
alarmingly at our faithfulness and at all our other
character-fruit, too. Elfishness, too, is a foxy vice and
just as destructive as pride.
To continue
this study of "The Fruit of the Spirit"
of Faithfulness, just click NEXT below:

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Midi Playing:
"Great is Thy
Faithfulness"
Great
is Thy faithfulness!
Great is Thy faithfulness!
Morning by morning new mercies I see.
All I have needed Thy hand hath provided;
Great is Thy faithfulness, Lord, unto me!
--Text:
Thomas O. Chisholm
Music: William M. Runyan
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