Dixon General Baptist Church

Serve One Another

27 min · 9. kesä 2026
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Paul's paradox in Galatians is that freedom is not the absence of obligation but the ability to choose service without keeping score. The person with nothing left to prove is the only person genuinely free to serve. Peter adds the practical frame: every person in the community has been given a specific gift, the community is deliberately diverse because nobody has all of it and everybody has some of it, and the supply you draw from when you serve is not yours. You are a channel, not a reservoir. The depletion you feel is evidence you've been drawing from the wrong source. Give the gift you actually have, not the one you wish you had. And give the credit away.

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jakson Bear One Another's Burdens kansikuva

Bear One Another's Burdens

When someone in your community falls, the options are to close ranks, perform grace from a safe distance, or quietly scatter. Paul describes something different. There's a precise and necessary distinction in Galatians 6 between two kinds of weight: the baros, a crushing load too heavy for one person, and the phortion, the ordinary pack that belongs to each of us alone. The community is called to get under the baros together while never relieving someone of their own phortion. One man said "I am coming over" to a friend eleven years sober who had just relapsed, and kept coming back for months. He bore the weight. He didn't do the recovery. That distinction is everything. Burden-bearing isn't a general sentiment about being supportive. It's specific, costly, and sometimes it means driving someone to the place they're too ashamed to walk into alone.

26. touko 202633 min