Digging Deeper: Good Fruit

 

So, we have not stopped praying for you since we first heard about you. We ask God to give you complete knowledge of his will and to give you spiritual wisdom and understanding. 10 Then the way you live will always honor and please the Lord, and your lives will produce every kind of good fruit. All the while, you will grow as you learn to know God better and better.

Colossians 1:9-10 (NLT)


 

GOOD FRUIT

 

My son recently shared a story that occurred at his work. A 7-year-old boy came in for a baseball evaluation, hoping to get private lessons set up. While chatting with the young boy, my son put some equipment out and then left him in the batting cage to grab one last thing. When he returned, the boy told him all the equipment was broken.

My son was shocked. While he was gone, the boy had knocked over the batting tee and kicked the other equipment around the cage, indeed breaking a few things. While we had a good laugh about it that evening, I offered my son one piece of advice: no one has to teach us to be bad—it’s in our nature.

This is the consequence for all of us due to Adam and Eve’s disobedience to God and their eating from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Scripture says that after they ate the fruit, they immediately felt shame (Genesis 3:7). Sin. They could not undo it. They could not change it. They could not hide it.

Eve had described the fruit as good, delightful, and desirable. Yet, there was other fruit they could eat that was just as good. There was fruit that was delightful—offered in multiple colors, shapes, and tastes that would satisfy. No other fruit was off-limits. Unfortunately, they chose to believe the serpent’s lies, and their desire for the forbidden won out.

Every day we live, there are choices to be made. The pull of our flesh to be selfish and to do what we desire is strong. It takes intention to choose God’s best and not simply give in to ourselves. Lysa TerKeurst, in her book The Best Yes, says, “The one who obeys God’s instruction for today will develop a keen awareness of His direction for tomorrow.”

Let’s take time to pray like Paul did for the Colossians in our verses today. May we all have complete knowledge, spiritual wisdom, and understanding to make choices that produce good fruit for God’s kingdom—today, tomorrow, and the next day.

 


Bridget Turner serves as the Director of Women’s Groups at NorthStar Church. She and her husband, Steve, live in Powder Springs and have two young adult children, Hannah and Joshua. She enjoys watching football, traveling and reading.

 

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