Sunday, April 26, 2026

Fruit of the Spirit


  Pastor Fred preached the most famous passage from Galatians which is Galatians 5:22-26. This section is known as the Fruits of the Spirit passage. It’s one of the few Bible verses that I remember from kids camp because it was put into a song. Its amazing how often we remember things that are put to a popular song or jingle 

 One of the things that we have to wrestle with is are we dominated by our feelings or by Gods fruit. There isn’t anything wrong with emotions, but when we are ruled by them it’s not good. Emotions can change quicker than the weather does when the wind switches off of Lake Superior on a nice summer day. Gods fruit is filled with holiness and not only does it look at the long term, unlike our emotions, but it is Gods character dwelling inside of us. So are we seeking to run our lives through how we feel or by Gods character?

  Even though God makes the fruit grow, we still have to do our part. Anyone who has a green thumb knows that in order to harvest fruit and veggies from the garden, they need to till the land, pull weeds, actually planting the seeds and keeping the varmints from eating the garden. So are we doing the work to allow God to grow those seeds. Whether it is spending time in Gods Word, prayer and fellowship with other believers. The important part is being obedient to what we know what God has called us to do. Here is the thing about the Fruit of the Spirit, it doesn’t grow overnight, and takes patience and hard work. The Fruits will become evident when we have self control or peace, or any other of the Fruits grow. Often other people see that growth in us before we do. It’s hard to see the growth when we are in the middle of it. 

  One of the things that I was reminded of is that love and self control book ends the Fruit of the Spirits. We can’t have such things as peace, patience or humility if we don’t have Gods love and grace permeating through our lives. In essence love is what make those things real and is what drives those characteristics in our lives. Self control is what I would call the applicator of said Fruits. As people we may be naturally gifted with at least one of the Fruits, but eventually we will become unhinged and lose our peace and patience. In essence, our flesh and sinful nature take over and we worry or we have an epic meltdown. Toddlers in Wal Mart aren’t the only ones who like to kick, scream and make a scene. Self control is putting away things that will get us in trouble and to embrace and live in the freedom of boundaries. In essence, they are called Fruits of the Spirit because we can not produce them and sustain them on our own. They come from God and only grow and multiply when we are obedient to Him. 

 To close out, the Apostle Paul talks a lot about the freedom that God provides vs the deeds of the flesh and the destruction that will follow. A reminder that our actions do have consequences, both that are good and also ones that are disastrous. So do we live in the freedom of God, which allows these Fruits to grow and the world to be attracted to them, or do we live an unhinged life by doing what we want to do and suffering the pain and consequences of said choices?  So do we want to love those who are difficult to love, have patience when we don’t know what’s next or to have peace when everything is falling apart? This is when we submit everything to God and tell our flesh and Sinatra we can not do things my way.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Choosing Gods Best


   Pastor Fred got back into the book of Galatians by preaching out of 5:13-26. One of the thrust of the book is the freedom that we have in Christ and we not only should live in that freedom but we shouldn’t abuse that freedom. One of those freedoms we have is how we treat others and we can love others as Christ loved us through His power. How often do we abuse that freedom and command by tearing others down. One of the criticisms that the world has of the church is that we tend to devour our own. So my question is would we rather help raise people up or bring and to encourage them, or bring them down and continuously kick them while they are down?

  One of the things I was thinking about as I was working tonight is that often we think that true freedom is being able to what we want when we want to do it. How many of us when we were kids couldn’t wait to get out of our parents house so we could do what we wanted when we wanted? In the end and after some time, along with some maturity, we realize that are parents just may have been right. True freedom is having boundaries and living in the protection of those boundaries. When we don’t, sin takes over and we become like a dog returning to its vomit. No matter how hard we try not to, we still end up at the vomit pile. 
  One of the points of the passage is how we struggle with our flesh which is better known as our sinful nature. How often do we obey our sinful nature rather than God? If you have seen the movie The Dark Knight, and it is a battle between Batman and the Joker. I see the Joker represents our sinful nature, and just as the Jokers whose whole identity too cause chaos and destruction. Sin does the same thing, because it adds chaos and destruction into our lives and those who are close to us. It often leads us to ask the Jokers famous question of “why so serious?”

  This chapter is known for the Fruits of the Spirit and we can’t fully embrace those fruits, we need to deal with our sinful nature first. The first thing we need to do is do some self examination and see where we sit in relation to God. Do we let our anger, lust, apathy or any number of other things run and ruin or lives. Once we become sick and tired of being sick and tired, it’s asking God to not only renew us, but change us. One we start dealing with our sin, we need to find something to replace it, or something else is going to take its place. How many people do you know who quirt smoking and they gained weight. They needed something to do with their hands and to deal with their cravings, so they switched from cigarettes to goof. It’s switching one bad habit for another. This is where the Fruits of the Spirit come in, because we are replacing our sinful nature with Gods Holiness and character. The chief fruit is love in my book, because that is how God operates and it is the basis for all other fruits. We have peace, patience and the other fruits because we love God with all we have and others as ourselves. So how well do we not only love, but sacrificially love. So how can we learn to choose Gods best and do it?

  Christianity is the only activity or even religion that one succeeds by surrendering. There can be a mindset that we have to earn our salvation or we have to control our own destiny. Now we do have some responsibilities, but we have to give up our way of seeing and doing things. We either go down that path of self destruction and we burn out, or we don’t see and participate in the bigger picture. I am sorry, but Frank Sinatra is wrong and we can’t do things our way. To close out, it is reminding ourselves and putting into practice the Lord’s Prayer of Gods of Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Or as Bob Sheen likes to tell the youth during Breakfast Club, it’s not about choosing our best and doing it but it is choosing Gods best for us and living it out. I essence when we choose our best we tend to fall flat on our faces and get ourselves in compromising situations? 

Grace and Peace,
Tom Boustead
  

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Good intentions vs Being Intentional

 

  
  Pastor Haven preached out of Acts 2 and the Day of Pentecost and the giving of the Holy Spirit and the speaking in tongues. The cool thing about the story is as the Disciples were preaching the Gospel, everyone was amazed because they heard the message in their own language. As Peter was preaching, a miracle happened and 3,000 people accepted Christ and were baptized. The religious leaders accused Peter and the Disciples of being drunk because they were not only preaching the Gospel but they were also preaching in tongues so that other people could understand it. Peter responded by rebuking the question by saying that it was only 9AM. So here are two questions, when miracles happen, do we embrace them or write them off? The other question is what are you being filled with? Is it the presence and power of the Holy Spirit or doubt and garbage that this world has to offer? 

  There is a difference between having good intentions and being intentional.  I have done an internship with the spiritual care team of a hospital and a part of the program was that I was supposed to come up with several things that I wanted to learn in that particular unit. What made it made it go from having good  intentions to being intentional was that I had to come up with ways to meet those goals and I met with my supervisor to discuss what I have learned and how it was going. One of my goals was to be able connect better with patients, so I took a six week basic sign language course to better understand the deaf  culture and to learn basic sign language. I even got to use it with a patient and his wife. A part of being intentional is having accountability, whether self induced or having someone else help me and remind be to be intentional in certain areas of my life. So are their areas where we need some goals and accountability so that we can be more diligent and intentional in doing things and connecting with others?  It is pointless to have good intentions if we don’t put then into use. 

  How are you connecting with God and others. Haven referenced something similar in his message, there is a saying that we are the sum of the five people we either spend the most time with or who have the loudest voice in our life. So if we spend slot of time with people who watch sports, chances are we are going to become sports fans. We often pick up the language, attitudes and habits of those we spend the most time with. I’m all for connecting with people who look, think and act differently than we do, but are we seeking to show them Gods light or are they changing us for better or worse? This may be a challenge, but find a small group of people that are like minded that you not only support each other, but challenge each other to grow. In that group, have someone who is wiser and more mature and even older, so they can pour out their wisdom and experience so that we can learn from it. In the same vain we should be that person to someone else. I was a little bummed that I had to miss Easter dinner with my family because I had to work. As I was finishing up some stuff so I could go to lunch, my phone dinged and it was a message from one of the youth volunteers saying that there was a group meeting at church that night and it was open to ever wanted to come. So I went over on my lunch and we all just shared about life and had quite a few laughs and it made my night. Are the people who speak into your life worth listening too? Also, what prevents is from finding people to speak hard truth and to receive it?

  What do we need to be more intentional with? In essence what are the areas where we need to grow. If we say we believe in God, but we would rather spend more time mindlessly scrolling through social media than spending time in prayer or reading Gods Word, there might be a problem. We can’t expect our relationships to grow with God if all we do is spend thirty seconds on prayer and reading a two minute devotional. If you consistently only spent five minutes a day with your significant other, the relationship will fail. Our relationship with God is just one thing. I’m sure God is tugging at our hearts to be mote intentional, whether it’s our relationship with Him or others, to habits we either need to develop or to quit and either developing or letting go of relationships with other people. I challenge all of us this week to find more ways we can be intentional and do it

Grace and Peace
Tom Boustead

Saturday, April 4, 2026

Resurrection Sunday

 


  Pastor Fred kicked off the Easter sermon by reading out of Mark 16. There are several things that caught my eye. The first one is that we are not much different than the disciples. The disciples spent three years with Jesus and still had trouble believing in Him. So one of the questions that came to me, are we more concerned about making Jesus our Lord or for Him to make our lives easier? The disciples saw countless miracles and heard Jesus preach countless messages and yet they still had a hard time believing that He was the Messiah. Maybe that’s why everyone was asking for one more miracle because they either wanted to put off making Jesus as their Savior or they were more interested in living comfortably than denying oneself. This is a guess, but there were probably people who followed Jesus around for the dog and pony show and just wanted to be entertained. So my question is, do we do the same thing?

  In high school, I took a class at a neighboring school and when the school van brought me over, we listened to Paul Harvey and the rest of the story on the radio. The concept of the segment was that Paul would give the epilogue to either a famous or not so famous story. They usually had a happy ending and it encouraged people to look at life differently. I wonder if Paul Harvey would do a rest of the story on Nicodemus. In John 3 Nicodemus started off such a religious skeptic with Jesus that he had to visit Him in the cover of darkness. We see through out the Gospel of John that Nicodemus moved from a religious skeptic to a follower of Jesus, to the point of making it so that he couldn’t participate in the most holy of Jewish Holidays, the Passover, because he was unclean for taking the body of Jesus and placing it in a tomb. So here is my question, are we willing to either deal with our preconceptions or hurts surrounding religion and Jesus, or are we going to wallow in them? Remember, Christianity is more than a list of rules, but it’s a relationship. For those of you who are in a serious relationship or even people who have some friends that know everything about you, how would the relationships do if was strictly based on rules. Those relationships would be purely transactional, robotic and filled filled with unmet expectations. This is how are are relationship with God would  be if we focused on rules and not being relational. In essence rules can lead to more of what I can do for God instead of what God does through me. 

  To wrap up, here are some thoughts. Easter has to be more than ham dinners, Easter eggs and pastel colored church cloths. Easter needs to be about the Son of God coming to earth not only to dwell among His creation but to show us who the Father is and to provide a way to be reconciled with the Trinity in heaven. The Apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 15 that death has been swallowed up and that it has lost its sting. So my question is are we willing to put are stupid riles away, have Jesus heal our hurts and instead of asking for one more miracle so we can be entertained? Remember Easter believing in what Christ did for us and have Him go from some guy with good things to say to making Him the Lord of our life. 

Grace and Peace

Tom Boustead