Pastor, you want to see fruit—in your life and in the people and ministry of your church. The Bible calls that “the fruit of the Spirit”—“love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control” (Galatians 5:22–23 NIV).
These nine qualities describe the character of a mature disciple and the kind of leader you’re becoming.
So how does God grow this fruit in you? He uses a process. Here are two facts you need to know if you want to cooperate with that process.
1) Spiritual growth is a partnership.
Paul writes, “Work out your salvation . . . for it is God who works in you” (Philippians 2:12–13 NIV).
That’s not a contradiction—it’s a paradox. You don’t work for your salvation. You work out what God has already put in. In a physical workout you develop muscles you already have; in a spiritual workout you cultivate the new life God has already given you.
God has a part in your growth, and you have a part. He provides the power—but you need to flip the switch. Your job is to cooperate with what he’s doing.
2) Spiritual fruit ripens over time.
There’s no such thing as instant spiritual maturity. It takes time for fruit to ripen—and when you try to rush fruit, you ruin the flavor. The same is true in ministry. You can accelerate activity, but you can’t microwave character. God grows fruit season by season.
Immerse yourself in Scripture. Read, study, memorize, and meditate so God’s Word reshapes your thinking.
Pray honestly. Talk with God about everything you’re facing. Invite the Spirit to search you and lead you.
Surrender daily. Give the Holy Spirit free rein—no compartments and no conditions.
Receive your circumstances. Trust that God is using both pleasant and painful seasons to form Christlike character.
Respond like Jesus. Ask, “What would Christ’s love, patience, or gentleness look like right here?” Then do it.
God wants to produce the fruit of the Spirit in your life and leadership. Will you cooperate with him in this life-changing process?