‘But the fruit of the Breath is practical beneficial love, joy, peace, patient forbearance, useful kindness,’ (Galatians 5 v 22).
The first three qualities of the Fruit of the Breath are love, joy and peace. The source of all three of these lies in the Christian’s relation to God and they are the result of union with the Messiah by means of the Breath. The free gift of the practical, beneficial love of the Messiah is the source of these other aspects of the Fruit of the Breath. Having looked at ‘love’ in the previous section, I now move on to look at these other qualities.
Joy, gladness, delight The objects of this joy, gladness and delight are God the Father and His only-begotten Son. God is the God of deliverance, clothing the Christian with the robe of his Son's righteousness, pardoning their self-forfeiture, with full atonement being made by the sacrifice of the Messiah. The foundation of this joy and delight lies in these spiritual realities, and arises from the Christian’s apprehension and persuasion of their interest in them, resulting in divine judicial approval, pardon, peace, adoption, and eternal praise. This joy and gladness also extends to a joy in fellow Christians as those brought forth by God, and these affections to God, the Messiah and fellow Christians are unique to those who possess the Breath and shared between them.
Peace. Meaning ‘wholeness when all essential parts are joined together’. The Breath of God produces wholeness in consequence of the enlightenment and persuasion of the reconciliation being made by the spilt lifeblood of the Messiah. The lifeblood of the Messiah is applied to Christians for the sending away of their self-forfeiture. The set-apart Breath establishes union with the Messiah, applying divine judicial approval to the Christian. The result is peace – wholeness – down from reconciliation with God. This wholeness is once again unique to those who possess the Breath – Christians - and it is shared between them.
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