Do Not Grow Weary In Doing Good (From our 6-14-26 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/OD7xofrBVCE [https://youtu.be/OD7xofrBVCE]
Introduction: Chester Carlson and the Long Road to Xerox
Chester Carlson worked in patent departments where paperwork consumed everything. Copies were slow, expensive, and miserable to make. Because of poor eyesight, arthritis, and frustration with constant copying, he began searching for a better way in 1934.
For four years, he experimented with almost nothing to show for it. He even had failures, smoke, and fire along the way. In 1938, he finally made the first image using light and static electricity. But even after that breakthrough, companies rejected him for years. It took about 17 years from the idea to a practical copy machine.
Carlson’s story illustrates grit, resolve, and endurance. The Christian life requires the same kind of determination. Paul’s message in Galatians 6 is simple: do not quit doing good.
Main Thought
Christians will grow weary if they are not careful, but God calls us to keep sowing good seed because the harvest belongs to Him.
1. Sin Can Make Us Weary
Galatians 6:1
Helping people often means stepping into messy situations. Sin is not clean and simple; it is muddy, complicated, and draining. When we try to restore someone, we must do it with gentleness, but also with caution.
Paul warns us to “keep watch” on ourselves. Their sin may tempt us directly, or the stress of helping may tempt us toward gossip, bitterness, sinful coping, or frustration.
We cannot help someone else if we are spiritually sinking too. Restoration requires love, but it also requires spiritual stability.
Application:
Help others, but do not let their mess pull you into sin.
2. Ego Can Make Us Weary
Galatians 6:2–3
When we help someone carry a burden, we may be tempted to think we are better than they are. Pride says, “I am up here, and you are down there.”
But we must remember that we also were sinners who needed help. Pride causes us to forget grace. It can make us harsh, impatient, and unwilling to keep helping.
Application:
Bear burdens without getting “the big head.” Helping others should humble us, not inflate us.
3. Forgetting Your Value Can Make You Weary
Galatians 6:4
Thinking too much of yourself is dangerous, but thinking too little of yourself is also dangerous. Some Christians constantly tear themselves down. They keep serving, giving, smiling, and showing up, but inwardly they are empty.
No one else can out-encourage the discouragement you constantly give yourself. If you refuse to see any good in what you do, you become like a bucket with a hole in the bottom.
God values you. He sent His Son for you. You are not perfect, but you are valuable to Him and useful in His work.
Application:
It is not prideful to recognize that you did something good for God.
4. Bad Boundaries Can Make Us Weary
Galatians 6:5
We are called to bear one another’s burdens, but each person still has to bear his own load. God never asked us to drop our own responsibilities, family, health, and soul in order to carry someone else completely.
We can help people, but we cannot make them choose what is right. Jesus fed people, taught people, loved people, and still let them walk away when they refused Him.
If we tie our success to someone else’s outcome, we will burn out. Our job is to be faithful. Their response belongs to them.
Application:
Do not jump into someone else’s sinking boat. Help them, but do not let them sink you.
5. Wrong Measures of Success Can Make Us Weary
Galatians 6:6–8
Paul reminds us that we reap what we sow. The issue is not just money, but what we value and where we invest. Stewardship is not merely collecting and preserving; it is executing the Master’s will.
If we judge faithfulness only by visible results, numbers, or immediate responses, we will get discouraged. The parable of the sower shows that some seed falls on hard, shallow, or thorny soil. But the sower still sows.
God is more concerned with faithful sowing than our ability to control the soil.
Application:
Do not define success only by visible results. Every seed sown for God matters.
6. The Promise: Do Not Give Up
Galatians 6:9–10
Paul gives the encouragement: do not grow weary, because in due season we will reap if we do not give up. The harvest may not come when we expect it, or in the way we expect it, but God sees every act of service.
We must keep doing good to everyone, especially the household of faith.
Conclusion: God Values Every Seed
Isaiah 49:1–10
Isaiah describes a servant who feels like he has labored in vain, yet God says his work is not wasted. God sees, strengthens, honors, and uses His servant.
You may feel like asking, “What’s the use?” But every seed you cast for God is seen by Him. It is not wasted, worthless, or unnoticed.
Closing Thought:
You are not an Old Testament Jew, but you are still His.
You are not the first weary servant, and you will not be the last.
You may feel like, “What’s the use?” but God values every seed you sow for Him.
Invitation:
God loves you, and the church loves you. Whether you need to become a Christian, repent, ask for prayers, or simply receive help, do not carry the burden alone. Come, and let us help you.