Summary: To be eligible for forgiveness we must first sin by disobeying God and, therefore, this is a blessing we are to avoid. It is a blessing to offer this forgiveness to the fallen believer, but it is not a blessing to have fallen and needing such forgiveness.

Doing your best could be the worst thing you could do. That sounds like a

contradiction, but it can be explained so that it makes sense as a paradox.

A paradox is a statement, which at first sight seems absurd, and contrary to

common sense, but which can be explained so as to be well grounded and true

in fact. It is not hard to figure out the paradox in the statement that the

new cars are wider, longer, lower, and higher. That they are lower in

relation to the ground, and higher in relation to your bank account is easy

to see. Many paradoxes are not so obvious. Some of the beatitudes of Jesus,

for example are paradoxes. Blessed are the poor in spirit; blessed are those

who mourn, and blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness sake.

These need some deeper thinking before the clouds of obscurity will clear

away, and let the light of truth shine through.

So it is with the statement, doing your best can be the worst thing you

can do. It is contrary to a normal pattern of thinking, but all it takes is

one illustration to turn it into a paradoxical statement of truth. A

minister of a large church had his assistant preach the sermon on Sunday

morning. He wanted to slip away to play golf. He drove the ball with

terrific accuracy, and everything he did seem to go perfect, and he finished

the 18 holes with a remarkable 68. It was the first time he ever broke 100.

He was over joyed and elated until it struck him, he would never be able to

tell anyone about it because of the circumstances. Had he played an average

game, there would be nothing to tell, but he had gone and done his very best,

and now he couldn't share his excitement. Doing his best under those

circumstances proved to be the worst thing he could do. His great pleasure

paradoxically became his punishment.

Doing your best at any act of evil is always the worst thing you can do.

The thing to notice about the nature of paradox is that it keeps you aware of

the complexity of reality. It keeps you aware of the danger of

oversimplification. We tend to take a legitimate aspect of reality and make

it the whole. Paradox forces us to keep an open mind, and seek to reconcile

contradictory aspects of life. The Christian who cannot accept paradox as

part of reality will often be distressed, because life refuses to conform to

the logic of what he feels ought to be. Everything can make sense, however,

to one who is willing to see the paradoxical nature of reality.

A blessed curse sounds like nonsense, but a little thought can make it a

precious truth. The Scripture says, "Cursed is every man who is hung upon a

tree." Jesus was hung upon a tree, and crucified for our sin. His curse

became the means by which all of our sins are forgiven. Who can think of a

curse that ever led to greater blessings? It was indeed a blessed curse, and

no longer a statement of nonsense. I emphasize the reality of paradox

because Paul is so paradoxical in this passage of Gal. 6. The paradox we

want to consider concerns a blessing we are to avoid. It sounds unreasonable

to even suggest that we should try and avoid one of God's blessings, but that

is exactly what God's expects us to do, and exactly what we want to do when

we understand the meaning of the paradox.

No one will doubt that guilt is one of the heaviest burdens a man can

bear, and no one will doubt that forgiveness is one of the most precious of

all blessings. Yet, as blessed as it is to be lifted, it is more blessed

never to have fallen. The blessing we are to avoid, therefore, is the

blessing of being the one who is restored through forgiveness. While helping

the fallen experience this blessing, we are to be careful to avoid it

ourselves. It is a blessing that can only come through first disobeying God.

To be eligible for forgiveness we must first sin, and, therefore, this is a

blessing we are to avoid.

A Sunday School teacher asked her class what is the first thing we must

do to obtain forgiveness of sin? A little boy spoke up and said, "Sin!" It

was not the expected answer, but a correct one, and because they only way to

obtain this goal is by the route of evil, it is a way we are not to travel.

It is a blessing we are never to chose, but one we are to receive only

because of necessity due to the fact that we have fallen.

In this first verse Paul is just as concerned that the non-fallen

Christian helper escape the necessity of this blessing, as he is that the

fallen brother find it. It is wonderful that the fallen brother can be

restored and forgiven. Yet, it would be a tragedy if another in helping him

bear his load fell himself, and needed to travel the same path. Forgiveness

is the only road to travel when one is in the valley of sin, and it is a

great blessing, but it is a curse to fall into that valley in the first

place, and so it is a blessing to be avoided. Any blessing that requires you

to sin before receiving it, is a blessing to avoid. This is why Paul limits

the task of restoring the fallen to the spiritual, that is to those who have

developed the maturity necessary to do the job without risking themselves.

Anyone who has tackled a difficult job with inadequate tools knows the

problem you can get into, and the mess you can make. The tool one must have

to effectively restore a fallen brother is the tool of meekness, or

gentleness. It is one of the fruits of the Spirit, and that is why Paul

calls upon those who are spiritual to handle this delicate matter. To be

spiritual simply means to be one who exhibits the fruits of the Spirit. If

one does not have this fruit, he should not attempt the job of restoration.

The result could be something like trying to fix a piece of broken china with

a hammer. Christians need to leave delicate jobs to those whose inner tool

chest has in it, not the sharp saw of severity, and the hard hammer of

harshness, but the smooth sander of sympathy, and the mild mallet of

meekness.

The word restore is the Greek word for setting a dislocated bone. Part

of the body of Christ is dislocated when a Christian falls into sin. There

is bound to be some pain in getting him restored, but the proper treatment

can eliminate unnecessary pain. The proper treatment that Paul calls for is

gentleness. Calvin wrote, "We are here taught to correct the faults of

brethren in a mild manner, and to consider no rebukes as partaking a

religious and Christian character which do not breathe the spirit of

meekness." Not all can lift a fallen brother by meekness, and so they should

keep their hands off.

To try and restore a brother in the attitude of arrogant superiority is

to fall into the category of those Paul mentions in verse 3 who think

themselves to be something when they are nothing. Here is another paradox:

To be something we must recognize we are nothing. John Wesley recognized he

was nothing apart from Christ, and he really became something. He lifted

gamblers, drunkards, and rough sinners from all walks of life by the power

of gentleness. G. W. Langford wrote-

Speak gently! Tis a little thing

Dropped in the heart's deep well;

The good, the joy that it may bring

Eternity shall tell.

If you don't have the tools, leave the task of restoring to those who

can do it in the spirit of meekness. A Christian doing good in the wrong way

can do more harm than good. The Christian who has the right tools, however,

ought not to be deceived into thinking he is immune to danger. There is

always a risk involved in bending over a pit to lift another out. It is

possible for the helper to end up in the pit. Paul, therefore, gives a warning

even to those who are spiritual. It is a blessing to know they can be restored

if they fall, but it is a blessing they are to avoid.

I think it is extremely important that we see Paul's attitude concerning

the Christian and sin. Paul feels that no one is ever so mature, and so

spiritual, that they can afford to be careless. Paul assumes that the finest

Christians can fall if they are not cautious. To think that a wonderful

Christian cannot fall into serious sin is to be ignorant concerning spiritual

warfare. Some people blame emotionalism for the fact that Christians fall

into sin. They feel that many conversions are only a momentary experience of

excitement that do not last. Others feel the problem lies with those

churches which stress conversion as a process of education. These, they say,

are not truly born again, and have only a head knowledge, and that is why

they fall to the temptation. Both are right, and there are many

illustrations to prove their point, but both are wrong in thinking they can

explain, by their view, why Christians sin.

The method by which one comes to Christ is not the determining factor at

all. The important thing is what one thinks of himself after he does accept

Christ. If he thinks he is now safe from the enemy of his soul, and has

arrived, he is in serious trouble. His deception at this point will leave

him wide open to enemy attack. If he realizes the battle has just begun, and

that now, more than ever, he needs the whole armor of God, and much caution,

then he is likely to stand, and be a good soldier of Christ. It is pride

that leads the Christian to fall, for the proud Christian no longer fears his

own weakness. He feels he does not need to be careful in the way he walks.

It is the humble Christian who will stand, for he is fully aware of his

weakness, and the danger of falling.

Paul makes it clear that the most mature Christian must be aware that

the tendency to sin is still in them, and that a proud and careless attitude

can lead them into the very pit they hope to lift others out of. An honest

Christian is one who is able to say, I am capable of committing that very sin

that ensnared my brother. Therefore, I must avoid certain circumstances.

Consider thyself is what Paul says.

Keep and attentive eye on yourself is another version. Help another with an

attitude of pride, thinking you are superior because you did not fall, and

you could very well be the next one there pulling out of the pit.

History is full of spiritual persons who are naive at this point. The

Bible does not give useless warnings, and so we need to take them seriously.

In I Cor. 10:12 Paul says, "Therefore let anyone who thinks he stands take

heed lest he fall." David was a man after God's own heart, but he fell.

Peter was the leader of the Apostles, but he fell. You can go through the

list of Bible heroes, and the same can be said for just about all of them.

The wise Christian agrees with the ancient saying, "Know thyself." To be

ignorant of what you are capable of doing is to be blind, and not having an

honest knowledge of yourself, and this will lead you to ignore the warnings

that would help you to escape when the battle is more than you can handle.

Tis one of human nature's laws,

To see ourselves without our flaws.

This is one law we are to break, and not submit to being blinded by our

nature which loves to be deceived about our defects. If we are not honest

with ourselves, we will fail to see ourselves in the mirror of God's Word.

We will be like the dog who always went wild when he saw his reflection in

the mirror. He thought is was another dog, and he was ready for a fight. If

we think all the warnings of Scripture are directed to someone else, we are

as foolish as that dog. The heart is deceitful above all things, and we need

to see that refers to our heart, and not just the heart of others. Fenelon

said, "As light increases we see ourselves to be worse than we thought." The

purpose of seeing yourself as you are is not to give you a guilt complex, but

to show you just how weak you are without the Lord's help. It is to keep

you alert, knowing that a sudden attack can take you by surprise and leave

you wounded.

Look to yourself says Paul; know yourself; know your own weakness and

tendency to sin, and you will be more useful in gaining back the fallen

brother, for your caution and stability will increase his security, and give

him an example to follow in the future. This is doing for a brother what

Jesus did for us all. Had He not stopped to lift us, and had He not faced

all temptations and remained sinless, we would have no hope, and no security,

and no basis for forgiveness.

Nietzsche thought this was the way to produce a world of weaklings.

The strong ought not to stoop to help the weak, he said. This puts them all

on the dead level of mediocrity. The strong are to move on higher, and step

on the weak to do it. This is the only road to the super race. Hitler and

Stalin both put this philosophy into practice, and history has recorded the

tragic results. One of the paradoxes of history is that power and might does

not conquer in any lasting way. What it gains, soon crumbles. Eternal

victories are gained by love, which is willing to stoop and lift. Gentleness

which is willing to put up with the weaknesses of men, and seek to lead them

to higher ground, is the way to build what is lasting. If Christians

cooperate, they can turn an apparent victory for evil into a final victory

for good. Let the fall of a brother in Christ teach you caution, and your

caution will teach him how to avoid another fall, and both will be better

prepared to not experience the blessing we are to avoid.