The Fruit of the Spirit: Faithfulness

“These will wage war with the Lamb, but the Lamb will overcome them, for He is Lord of lords and King of kings. Those who are with Him are called and chosen and faithful.” (Rev. 17:14, MEV).

Martin Luther defined faith as “a living, daring confidence in God’s grace, so sure that one would die a thousand times for it.” Faith as a fruit is clearly distinguished from the act of faith which brings initial salvation and the gift of faith which is a special operation of faith. The same God gives each. But there is growth to be achieved. The fruit must grow until faith permeates every aspect of the believer’s life.
Such synonyms as trust, faithfulness, conviction, integrity, and fidelity often translate the Greek word pistis or faith. Thus the list of the fruit of the Spirit in Galatians 5 is capable of a double meaning of faith and faithfulness, though the majority of 20th century translations prefer faithfulness or fidelity rather than the KJV’s rendition of faith. Growing out of the believer’s steadfast faith in God there is a dependability beyond the ordinary.
For example, consider Paul. God called him to be an apostle, to a life of hardship. He could have quit any time. He didn’t really need shipwreck, stripes, persecutions, hunger, thirst, imprisonment. He could have said, “This is too hard; I’ll just go back to the Sanhedrin.” But he stayed where God wanted him, and it was while he was in prison that we wrote the beautiful epistles that give God’s instructions for the early church and for our own spiritual growth.
Some Christians think that after conversion they must exercise a strenuous self-discipline so that the fruit of the Spirit can be seen in their lives. When they are persecuted, they tell themselves, “now I must show long-suffering. I must not lose my temper.” But all the time they are ready to explode. Self-discipline cannot produce spiritual things because it belongs to self. What we need is Christ discipline, or to become disciples of Christ. In John 15, Jesus says that if we let Him abide in us, we’ll produce much fruit. This fruit doesn’t apply to soul-saving or the results of our work for the Lord. This fruit is the fruit of the Spirit. When the presence of Jesus fills our lives, the faith of the Son of God will be seen in our characters.
Of all the fruit of the Spirit, faithfulness may be the most inconspicuous. The faithful one is usually taken for granted. In spite of that, however, faithfulness is one of the most necessary Christian virtues. The reliability of people shows in related attributes of loyalty, honesty, and integrity. Such a person is faithful in words, in deed, and in character. The servant of God must be faithful in the small and mundane, for those who are faithful in little will be faithful in much. God’s ideal of faithfulness is a work of the Spirit. The work of the Holy Spirit is to mold and develop Christ-like character. The believer cooperates in this by denying himself and allowing the Spirit to produce its own harvest—the fruit of the Spirit.
PR

