Friday, June 26, 2026

The Universal Fruit of the Spirit


For much of my life I was taught that the gifts of the Spirit were proof that a person belonged to the "right" church or held the "right" theology. Depending on who was doing the teaching, that meant speaking in tongues, prophecy, healing, words of knowledge, or some other supernatural manifestation. Every tribe seemed to have its own list of qualifications and its own explanation for why everyone else was mistaken. Looking back, I realize that the conversation was rarely about the Spirit itself. It was about tribal identity. We wanted the gifts to validate our beliefs instead of allowing the gifts to point us toward the God who gives them.

My own journey has made that way of thinking impossible for me to maintain. I have lived as an evangelical Christian. I have lived as a Mormon. I have explored New Age spirituality. Through each of those seasons, I encountered experiences that I can only describe as genuine manifestations of the gifts of the Spirit. I witnessed healing. I experienced words of knowledge. I saw prophecy. Those experiences did not suddenly disappear because I crossed the boundaries of one religious system into another. If the gifts were supposed to belong exclusively to one denomination or one theological framework, then my own life became a living contradiction to that claim.

That forced me to ask a different question. Instead of asking, "Which religion owns the Spirit?" I began asking, "What is the source of these experiences?" My conclusion has gradually become that the source is not a particular church, denomination, or religion. The source is the indwelling Logos, the divine presence that enlightens every person who comes into the world. The Logos is God's living presence within humanity. Religions interpret that reality differently, but none of them owns it. Christianity does not own the Logos. Mormonism does not own the Logos. The New Age movement does not own the Logos. The Logos belongs to God alone and is available to every human being.

This understanding has also changed how I evaluate spiritual experiences. I no longer believe that gifts alone prove anything. A person can claim visions, miracles, prophecies, or supernatural power and still completely miss the heart of God. Jesus himself warned about this. On one occasion, when his disciples wanted to call down fire from heaven on those who rejected him, he rebuked them by saying that they did not know what spirit they were of. They were thinking in terms of power, judgment, and victory. Jesus redirected them toward mercy, compassion, and love. That moment has become one of the lenses through which I now understand spirituality. Not every spiritual manifestation reflects the Spirit of Christ.

For me, the true evidence of the Holy Spirit is not found primarily in spectacular gifts but in the fruit of the Spirit. Love. Joy. Peace. Patience. Kindness. Goodness. Faithfulness. Gentleness. Self-control. Those qualities reveal the character of God far more reliably than any miracle ever could. If a person's spirituality consistently produces fear, arrogance, hatred, division, or superiority, then I have to question the spirit behind it, regardless of how impressive the supernatural claims may be. But wherever I find genuine love growing, wherever compassion deepens, wherever mercy triumphs over judgment, wherever humility replaces pride, I believe I am witnessing the work of the Spirit.

This conviction has also changed how I view other religions and spiritual traditions. History is filled with accounts of indigenous shamans who were regarded by their communities as healers, prophets, and people whose prayers affected nature itself. Mystics from many traditions have reported profound encounters with the divine. Contemplatives have experienced extraordinary insight. Spiritual leaders from cultures all over the world have demonstrated remarkable wisdom and compassion. I do not have to accept every claim or every doctrine to recognize that something genuine may be taking place. If their lives increasingly express love, peace, compassion, kindness, and self-giving service, then I see evidence of the divine Logos at work. The fruit matters more than the label.

This does not mean that every spiritual path is identical or that every belief is equally true. Ideas matter. Discernment matters. Jesus himself spoke of discerning spirits. But I think we have often used the wrong test. We have tested people by asking whether they belong to our denomination, affirm our creed, or interpret Scripture exactly as we do. Perhaps the better question is much simpler: What kind of fruit does this produce? Does it make people more loving? Does it make them more patient? Does it deepen compassion? Does it cultivate humility? Does it awaken a greater awareness of God's presence in themselves and in others? If it does, then I believe the divine Logos is present and active.

That realization has been deeply freeing for me. It has allowed me to appreciate truth wherever I find it without feeling threatened by it. It has allowed me to see brothers and sisters where I once saw only outsiders. It has allowed me to recognize that God has always been bigger than our theological systems. We have divided ourselves into countless tribes, each claiming to possess the fullness of truth, yet the Logos has never been confined by our boundaries. Like the wind Jesus spoke of, the Spirit blows where it wills. We may hear its sound, but we cannot control it or claim exclusive ownership of it.

Today I no longer ask, "What denomination are you?" or even, "What religion are you?" Those questions have become far less important to me. Instead, I ask, "What spirit is being revealed through your life?" If I encounter love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control, I recognize something familiar. I recognize the presence of the divine Logos. The gifts may differ. The rituals may differ. The doctrines may differ. The language may differ. But love is universal because the Logos is universal. Wherever divine love is expressed and bears good fruit, there God is present. That has never belonged to one tribe. It has always been the inheritance of humanity.

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The Universal Fruit of the Spirit

For much of my life I was taught that the gifts of the Spirit were proof that a person belonged to the "right" church or held the ...