The Apostle Paul
Galatians 6:9KJV·traditional attribution

And let us not be weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not.

John Calvin Reformed

Well-doing means acts of kindness toward our neighbors, not merely duty. We grow cold through ungrateful recipients, endless needs, and the world's hindrances; Paul rightly commands us not to relax. Whoever does not persevere resembles an idle farmer who sows but abandons the field, the fruit comes only to those who press forward to the end.

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Matthew Henry Presbyterian

The apostle having, in the foregoing chapter, exhorted Christians by love to serve one another (Gal 6:13), and also cautioned us (Gal 6:16) against a temper which, if indulged, would hinder us from showing the mutual love and serviceableness which he had recommended, in the beginning of this chapter he proceeds to give some further directions, which, if duly observed, would both promote the one...

Commenting on Galatians 6:1-10

John Gill Reformed Baptist

Do good to all men whenever ability and occasion permit, strangers, enemies, every nation. Yet the household of faith, believers who hold the doctrine and confess Christ, deserve our particular care and liberality, as they are God's own family.

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