We now move onto the topic, “Faith in Action” focusing on: “Living out discipleship tangibly, as early believers did.”
Today we consider “Acts of Service” – Galatians 5:13-14 “My friends, you were chosen to be free. So don't use your freedom as an excuse to do anything you want. Use it as an opportunity to serve each other with love. All the Law says can be summed up in the command to love others as much as you love yourself.”
Reflection: I read of someone who was once sitting in a café, listening to two people at the next table talking about whether to join a local group. Every suggestion was weighed with the same unspoken question: How much time will it cost me? What will I get out of it? Will it help me feel better, look better, or get ahead?
Nothing they said was unreasonable. In fact, it all sounded very sensible. And yet beneath every sentence ran a quiet refrain: “What’s in it for me?”
That question has become the subtext of so much of modern life. We don’t often say it out loud, but it shapes our choices — relationships, church, work, even faith. We ask it when deciding whether to commit, whether to forgive, whether to serve. If the return on investment looks too small, we step back.
The gospel, of course, turns that question on its head. Jesus rarely asks, “What will you gain?” Instead, he asks, “Whom will you love?” and “Whom will you follow?” Discipleship is not a transaction but a transformation — a move from what’s in it for me to how might God use me for others.
And perhaps that’s the quiet challenge Jesus places before us: not to silence the question entirely, but to let it be reshaped, so that the deeper question becomes, “What’s in it for the kingdom of God?”
Prayer
Father, open my heart to the astounding truth of my freedom in Christ. Holy Spirit, conform my heart to be like Jesus' heart. Open my eyes to how I can serve others and bless them as they seek to walk in the light of their freedom in Christ. In His name, I pray. Amen.
Challenge: Serving others without seeking recognition.






