“But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desire of the flesh.” — Galatians 5:16, NASB1995
Walking by Example
“Walk by the Spirit” sounds simple—but it starts with us. We’re showing our children how to walk. If we walk in stress, fear, and selfishness, they’ll follow. But if we walk in peace, kindness, and faith, they’ll see the difference.
This isn’t about perfection—it’s about direction. Invite your children into a Spirit-led life by walking it first.
Discussion Prompt: Ask your child:
What do you think walking by the Spirit looks like in real life?
What’s one way we can do that as a family?
Prayer: Holy Spirit, guide our family’s steps. Teach us to walk in love, speak in truth, and live by faith. Amen.
“But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desire of the flesh.” — Galatians 5:16, NASB1995
Flesh vs. Spirit
The battle is real. Your flesh wants comfort, attention, control. The Spirit wants surrender, truth, obedience.
You can’t walk both paths.
When you walk by the Spirit, you’ll notice your desires changing. Not overnight. But over time, your reactions, relationships, and responses start looking more like Jesus.
It starts with a daily “yes.” Yes to prayer. Yes to truth. Yes to surrender.
Reflection: Where are you tempted to walk by the flesh today? What would walking by the Spirit look like instead?
Prayer: Holy Spirit, I choose You. Help me walk away from sin and into truth, one step at a time. Amen.
“But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desire of the flesh.” — Galatians 5:16, NASB1995
Let’s Walk Together
Have you ever taken a walk with someone? You stay close so you don’t get lost or left behind.
That’s how it is with the Holy Spirit. When you stay close to Him, He helps you do what’s right. But if you run ahead or wander off, it’s easy to make mistakes.
Let’s walk with the Holy Spirit by talking to Him, reading the Bible, and listening with our hearts.
Try This: Next time you go for a walk, imagine Jesus walking beside you through the Spirit. Talk to Him out loud!
Prayer: Holy Spirit, help me stay close to You. Show me how to follow You and say no to sin. Amen.
“But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desire of the flesh.” — Galatians 5:16, NASB1995
Step by Step with the Spirit
Walking by the Spirit isn’t a sprint. It’s the daily rhythm of surrender.
Each step is a choice—when emotions flare, when distractions lure, when temptations whisper. Will you lean into the flesh or walk in step with the Spirit?
You don’t need to muster your own strength. He leads. He strengthens. He teaches. But you must yield.
Let today be a walk—not of perfection—but of dependence.
Reflection: What’s one decision today where you need to pause and ask the Spirit to lead?
Prayer: Holy Spirit, teach me to walk with You in every step I take. Help me say no to the flesh and yes to You. Amen.
“Do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, by whom you were sealed for the day of redemption.” — Ephesians 4:30, NASB1995
Sensitivity in the Home
Sometimes, we rush through the day with so many responsibilities that we forget Someone else is in the room: the Holy Spirit.
When we speak harshly, stay angry, or refuse to forgive, it grieves Him. But when we humble ourselves, restore peace, and walk in love, He brings joy and power.
Teach your children not just to behave, but to be aware—of the Spirit’s presence in your home.
Discussion Prompt: Ask your child:
What do you think it means to make the Holy Spirit sad?
What are some ways we can make Him glad instead?
Prayer: Holy Spirit, help me create a home that honors You. Help us all walk in love and sensitivity to Your presence. Amen.
“Do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, by whom you were sealed for the day of redemption.” — Ephesians 4:30, NASB1995
Conviction Is a Gift
You know that feeling when something just doesn’t sit right after you say it or post it? That’s not guilt—it’s conviction. And it’s the Holy Spirit trying to reach your heart.
Grieving the Spirit doesn’t mean He leaves—it means He’s wounded by your choices. Not to shame you. But to restore you.
You were sealed for something greater. Don’t treat the Holy Spirit like a silent roommate—honor Him as Lord.
Reflection: Where have you been ignoring conviction or brushing off His voice?
Prayer: Holy Spirit, I want to live in a way that honors You. Speak to me when I go wrong and lead me to repentance. Amen.
“Do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, by whom you were sealed for the day of redemption.” — Ephesians 4:30, NASB1995
A Grieved Guest
The Holy Spirit isn’t an impersonal force. He’s a person—God Himself—who dwells in you. And He can be grieved.
When bitterness, harshness, or unforgiveness settle into your heart, the Spirit mourns. Not because He is surprised, but because He loves you too much to let you stay unchanged.
You were sealed for redemption. Live like it.
Let the words you speak, the thoughts you dwell on, and the choices you make honor the holy presence within.
Reflection: What attitudes or habits in your life might be grieving the Spirit?
Prayer: Holy Spirit, forgive me where I’ve grieved You. Make me sensitive to Your voice and willing to repent quickly. Amen.
From the series “The Commands of Christ — Love in Action”
“Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful.” — Luke 6:36, NASB1995
In a world that rewards retaliation and celebrates harshness as strength, Jesus calls His disciples to something radically different: mercy. Not a vague kindness. Not a passive tolerance. But divine, active mercy—poured out in the likeness of our Father in heaven.
This mercy isn’t based on merit. God doesn’t wait for us to be worthy of His compassion. While we were still sinners, Christ died for us (Romans 5:8). That’s the measure of His mercy—and the model for ours.
The command is not simply to be merciful, but as your Father is merciful. This is not human compassion raised slightly; it is a divine attribute extended through Spirit-filled people. And it reaches beyond those who love us. Jesus makes that clear. The merciful do good to those who hate them. They bless those who curse them. They pray for those who mistreat them (Luke 6:27–28).
The early Church understood this calling well. Their mercy wasn’t limited to emotional sympathy—it translated into action. They rescued abandoned infants from Roman garbage heaps, cared for plague victims when others fled, and fed both Christian and pagan neighbors during famines. Their acts of mercy confused the empire and reflected the heart of their King.
They were not trying to earn salvation. They were living out the nature of the One who saved them.
Tertullian observed, “It is our care of the helpless, our practice of lovingkindness, that brands us in the eyes of many of our opponents. ‘Look!’ they say, ‘How they love one another!’” (Apology, ch. 39). Mercy was their reputation.
And it should be ours.
We don’t get to choose who deserves mercy. We simply extend it—because our Father has extended it to us. The merciful show God’s heart to a hardened world. They reflect His character and reveal His kingdom.
So, we must ask ourselves: Do our enemies see mercy in us? Do the broken, the ignored, the undeserving find the compassion of the Father in our lives?
Mercy does not ignore justice. But it doesn’t wield justice as a sword of pride. It offers restoration, dignity, and love. It leans in when the flesh wants to pull away. It opens its arms when fear says to close them.
This is what the Kingdom looks like.
Sources:
Luke 6:27–36, NASB1995
Romans 5:6–8
Tertullian, Apology, Chapter 39
The Didache (ch. 1–2): Early instructions on showing mercy to the poor, forgiving quickly, and imitating the meekness of Christ
Lactantius, Divine Institutes, Book 6: Advocates for mercy as a divine attribute believers must mirror
You’ve heard the message before. A respected teacher, a moving sermon, a popular quote—sometimes repeated so often it feels like Scripture itself. But something unsettles your spirit. You don’t reject it outright, but you also can’t move on. You open your Bible, eyes scanning the text—not to be combative, but to be faithful. That’s the posture of the Bereans.
In a world full of noise, the Bereans teach us how to listen. They show us how to search—not for confirmation bias, but for truth. In Acts 17:11, their approach is honored by the Holy Spirit as “more noble-minded.” Why? Because they searched the Scriptures daily to see if what Paul said was true.
Scripture Focus:
“Now these were more noble-minded than those in Thessalonica, for they received the word with great eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see whether these things were so.” — Acts 17:11, NASB1995
Noble-Minded: Humble, Not Gullible
The Bereans weren’t suspicious; they were eager. They wanted truth. But they also understood that truth must be tested. They didn’t elevate Paul’s reputation or passion over the written Word. They weighed every teaching against what God had already spoken. That’s humility. That’s nobility.
And unlike modern approaches that rely on theological labels or commentaries, the Bereans didn’t have creeds, councils, or catechisms. They had the Scriptures—and they had the Spirit.
They Searched Daily
This wasn’t a surface reading or proof-texting session. The Greek term anakrinontes implies a careful, judicial inquiry—testing evidence, like a courtroom. They examined the Scriptures every day, not because they were uncertain of God, but because they wanted to be certain they were following Him. That level of discernment is not suspicion—it’s devotion.
Scripture Above All
If the Bereans tested Paul—an apostle who performed miracles and was personally commissioned by Christ—should we not test every preacher, author, and influencer today?
Even Jesus rebuked religious leaders for not knowing the Scriptures (Matthew 22:29). The early Church never placed man’s words above God’s. For them, Scripture wasn’t just a guide—it was the authority. And it still is.
Fruit of Berean Faithfulness
“Therefore many of them believed…” — Acts 17:12
Notice the fruit: belief. Not skepticism, not endless debate—but genuine, Spirit-born faith. Truth examined led to truth embraced.
What This Means for Us Today
Don’t treat Scripture like a filter; treat it like a foundation.
Don’t elevate personality over truth.
Don’t accept or reject based on tradition—test it all.
And don’t stop searching. The Holy Spirit loves to reveal what He has already spoken.
Return to the Word. Return to Discernment.
The Bereans weren’t exceptional because they had more access or intelligence. They were exceptional because they were faithful. Their nobility wasn’t in status—it was in submission to Scripture. This is how the early Church stayed grounded. This is how the remnant remains faithful today.
Be a Berean. Test everything. Cling to truth. And let the Spirit illuminate the Word—daily.
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