The Holy Spirit Pt 2:
Love - The Root Of Fruit
Daily Devotional

5 DAY DEVOTIONAL
Holy Spirit Part 2: Love: The First Fruit and the Root of All
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Monday, April 20, 2026
Love Begins with God
Scripture
1 John 4:7–8
“Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God... Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love.”
Devotional
When Paul lists the fruit of the Spirit in Galatians 5, he begins with love. That is not random. Love is first because love begins with God Himself. Before love is something we are called to do, it is something God is. Scripture does not merely say God is loving. It says God is love. That means love is not just one activity among many in the life of God. It is part of His very nature and character. This changes how we think about spiritual growth. Love is not simply about becoming nicer, softer, or more agreeable. Love is about becoming more like God as He has revealed Himself in Jesus. It is possible to mistake love for sentiment, politeness, or emotional warmth. But biblical love is deeper than that. It is holy. It is truthful. It is sacrificial. It is steady. It seeks the good of others even when it costs something.
The Holy Spirit forms this kind of love in us. He does not merely modify our outward behavior. He reshapes our hearts so that the character of Jesus begins to show up in the way we speak, respond, forgive, serve, and endure. Love, then, is not something we manufacture by force of will. It is the life of God being formed in us as we yield to the Spirit. So today, do not begin by asking, “How can I try harder to love?” Begin by asking, “Holy Spirit, show me the love of God again, and make me more like Jesus.”
Prayer
Holy Spirit, remind me today that love begins with God, not with me. Teach me to see love as part of Your character and not just a duty I perform. Form in me the love of Christ so that my heart, words, and actions reflect Him more clearly. Amen.
Action Step
Take a few minutes today to reflect on how God has loved you personally, and thank Him for specific ways His love has met you.
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Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Love is the Mark of a Disciple
Scripture
John 13:34–35
“A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you... By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
Devotional
Jesus made an astonishing statement to His disciples. He said the world would recognize His followers by their love. Not first by their knowledge. Not first by their gifting. Not first by their boldness. Not first by their activity. By their love. That should stop us and search us. In a world that celebrates image, visibility, and performance, Jesus points to something far deeper. The clearest evidence that we belong to Him is not merely what we say in public, but how we treat people in everyday life. Discipleship is not only about learning from Jesus. It is about becoming like Jesus. And Jesus loved in a way that was personal, sacrificial, truthful, and faithful. This means love is not an extra layer on top of the Christian life. It is at the center of it. It also means we should not define spiritual health by how busy we are in ministry or how much religious language we know. The question is whether the love of Christ is actually becoming visible in us. Are we patient with people? Are we kind when frustrated? Do we insist on our own way? Are we quick to assume the worst? Do we keep score? Do we treat people as problems to manage or as souls to love? When Jesus says love is the mark of His disciples, He invites us to let His love shape our witness. A loving church becomes a visible testimony to an invisible Christ. A loving believer makes the gospel tangible in ordinary relationships.
Prayer
Jesus, thank You for loving me first. Teach me to love others the way You have loved me. Let my life reflect Your heart so that people see something of You in the way I treat them. Amen.
Action Step
Choose one person today and intentionally show them Christlike love through encouragement, patience, or a meaningful act of kindness.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Love is the Measure of Maturity
Scripture
1 Corinthians 13:1–3
“If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am a noisy gong... If I have prophetic powers... but have not love, I am nothing.”
Devotional
One of the clearest lessons in the New Testament is that gifting and maturity are not the same thing. A person can be talented, articulate, knowledgeable, or visibly used by God in certain ways and still be deeply immature in character. That is exactly why 1 Corinthians 13 matters so much. Paul writes to a church fascinated with spiritual gifts and strong displays of power. But right in the middle of that conversation, he reminds them that all of it is empty without love. Without love, even the most impressive activity becomes noise. Without love, giftedness can become ego. Without love, sacrifice can become performance. Without love, ministry can become hollow. That means spiritual maturity is measured less by what flows through us and more by what has been formed in us. Are we becoming less proud? Less reactive? Less self centered? More patient? More gentle? More willing to forgive? More consistent in kindness? These are not secondary questions. These are central questions. This is where maturity is seen. It is easy to admire what is public and overlook what is personal. But the Spirit is not just concerned with what we do on the platform, in leadership, or in visible ministry. He is deeply concerned with who we are becoming in private. How we respond when tired. How we handle disappointment. How we speak in the home. How we carry ourselves when no one is watching. Love is the measure because love most clearly reflects Jesus.
Prayer
Holy Spirit, protect me from confusing gifting with maturity. Search my heart and show me where I need to grow. Form in me a love that is patient, humble, and shaped by Jesus. Amen.
Action Step
Ask the Lord to reveal one area where your responses have been unloving, then take one practical step of repentance today.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Love Has a Shape
Scripture
1 Corinthians 13:4–7
“Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way... Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.”
Devotional
Biblical love is not vague. It has a shape. Paul does not leave love undefined. He gives it texture. He gives it action. He gives it visible expression.
Love is patient.
Love is kind.
Love does not envy.
Love does not boast.
Love is not arrogant.
Love is not rude.
Love does not insist on its own way.
That means love is not just what we claim. Love is how we carry people. It is how we speak when irritated. It is how we respond when misunderstood. It is how we act when we do not get our way. Love is seen in tone, timing, patience, and posture. This passage is both beautiful and exposing. It shows us the heart of Christ, but it also reveals how much we need the Holy Spirit. Most of us can find ourselves somewhere in this list. Maybe patience is hard. Maybe kindness has been missing. Maybe irritation comes quickly. Maybe pride rises easily. Maybe love has been reduced to being right instead of being Christlike. The good news is that the Spirit produces what we cannot sustain in our own strength. Love is fruit. Fruit grows where there is life, abiding, and surrender. The answer is not to fake it. The answer is to stay close to Jesus and yield to the Spirit. The more we behold Christ, the more His love begins to take shape in us.
Prayer
Father, thank You for showing me what love looks like in Scripture. Reveal where my life does not yet match the love of Christ. By Your Spirit, make me patient, kind, humble, and steadfast. Amen.
Action Step
Read 1 Corinthians 13:4–7 slowly today and ask, line by line, where the Holy Spirit wants to grow you.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Friday, April 24, 2026
Love Must Be the Motive
Scripture
Galatians 5:22–23
“But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self control...”
Devotional
Love is not only the first fruit. It is also the motive that must shape everything else in the Christian life. That is why Paul begins with love in Galatians 5 and centers love in 1 Corinthians 13. Love is what keeps the Christian life from becoming mechanical, performative, or self-focused. It is possible to do Christian things with an unchristian heart. We can serve, lead, correct, teach, post, speak, and even sacrifice without love. Outwardly, the action may look right. But inwardly, the motive may be pride, resentment, fear, self-protection, or the desire to be seen. God is not only concerned with what we do. He also cares deeply about why we do it. Love purifies motive. Love keeps gifts from becoming ego. Love keeps truth from becoming harsh. Love keeps service from becoming bitterness. Love keeps ministry anchored in the heart of Jesus. This is especially important in a series on the Holy Spirit. We should desire the Spirit’s work in and through our lives. But before we ask what gifts He may display through us, we must ask what fruit He wants to grow within us. Fruit and gifts are not in competition, but fruit must shape how gifts are carried. Love must remain the atmosphere of our lives and witness. Today, ask the Lord not only to help you love more visibly, but also more deeply. Ask Him to purify your motives so that what you do flows from the love of Christ.
Prayer
Holy Spirit, let love become the motive behind everything I do. Purify my heart where my motives have become mixed. Help me serve, speak, lead, and respond in ways that truly reflect Jesus. Amen.
Action Step
Before doing any major task, conversation, or responsibility today, pause and pray, “Lord, let this be shaped by love.”
Holy Spirit Part 2: Love: The First Fruit and the Root of All
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Monday, April 20, 2026
Love Begins with God
Scripture
1 John 4:7–8
“Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God... Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love.”
Devotional
When Paul lists the fruit of the Spirit in Galatians 5, he begins with love. That is not random. Love is first because love begins with God Himself. Before love is something we are called to do, it is something God is. Scripture does not merely say God is loving. It says God is love. That means love is not just one activity among many in the life of God. It is part of His very nature and character. This changes how we think about spiritual growth. Love is not simply about becoming nicer, softer, or more agreeable. Love is about becoming more like God as He has revealed Himself in Jesus. It is possible to mistake love for sentiment, politeness, or emotional warmth. But biblical love is deeper than that. It is holy. It is truthful. It is sacrificial. It is steady. It seeks the good of others even when it costs something.
The Holy Spirit forms this kind of love in us. He does not merely modify our outward behavior. He reshapes our hearts so that the character of Jesus begins to show up in the way we speak, respond, forgive, serve, and endure. Love, then, is not something we manufacture by force of will. It is the life of God being formed in us as we yield to the Spirit. So today, do not begin by asking, “How can I try harder to love?” Begin by asking, “Holy Spirit, show me the love of God again, and make me more like Jesus.”
Prayer
Holy Spirit, remind me today that love begins with God, not with me. Teach me to see love as part of Your character and not just a duty I perform. Form in me the love of Christ so that my heart, words, and actions reflect Him more clearly. Amen.
Action Step
Take a few minutes today to reflect on how God has loved you personally, and thank Him for specific ways His love has met you.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Love is the Mark of a Disciple
Scripture
John 13:34–35
“A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you... By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
Devotional
Jesus made an astonishing statement to His disciples. He said the world would recognize His followers by their love. Not first by their knowledge. Not first by their gifting. Not first by their boldness. Not first by their activity. By their love. That should stop us and search us. In a world that celebrates image, visibility, and performance, Jesus points to something far deeper. The clearest evidence that we belong to Him is not merely what we say in public, but how we treat people in everyday life. Discipleship is not only about learning from Jesus. It is about becoming like Jesus. And Jesus loved in a way that was personal, sacrificial, truthful, and faithful. This means love is not an extra layer on top of the Christian life. It is at the center of it. It also means we should not define spiritual health by how busy we are in ministry or how much religious language we know. The question is whether the love of Christ is actually becoming visible in us. Are we patient with people? Are we kind when frustrated? Do we insist on our own way? Are we quick to assume the worst? Do we keep score? Do we treat people as problems to manage or as souls to love? When Jesus says love is the mark of His disciples, He invites us to let His love shape our witness. A loving church becomes a visible testimony to an invisible Christ. A loving believer makes the gospel tangible in ordinary relationships.
Prayer
Jesus, thank You for loving me first. Teach me to love others the way You have loved me. Let my life reflect Your heart so that people see something of You in the way I treat them. Amen.
Action Step
Choose one person today and intentionally show them Christlike love through encouragement, patience, or a meaningful act of kindness.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Love is the Measure of Maturity
Scripture
1 Corinthians 13:1–3
“If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am a noisy gong... If I have prophetic powers... but have not love, I am nothing.”
Devotional
One of the clearest lessons in the New Testament is that gifting and maturity are not the same thing. A person can be talented, articulate, knowledgeable, or visibly used by God in certain ways and still be deeply immature in character. That is exactly why 1 Corinthians 13 matters so much. Paul writes to a church fascinated with spiritual gifts and strong displays of power. But right in the middle of that conversation, he reminds them that all of it is empty without love. Without love, even the most impressive activity becomes noise. Without love, giftedness can become ego. Without love, sacrifice can become performance. Without love, ministry can become hollow. That means spiritual maturity is measured less by what flows through us and more by what has been formed in us. Are we becoming less proud? Less reactive? Less self centered? More patient? More gentle? More willing to forgive? More consistent in kindness? These are not secondary questions. These are central questions. This is where maturity is seen. It is easy to admire what is public and overlook what is personal. But the Spirit is not just concerned with what we do on the platform, in leadership, or in visible ministry. He is deeply concerned with who we are becoming in private. How we respond when tired. How we handle disappointment. How we speak in the home. How we carry ourselves when no one is watching. Love is the measure because love most clearly reflects Jesus.
Prayer
Holy Spirit, protect me from confusing gifting with maturity. Search my heart and show me where I need to grow. Form in me a love that is patient, humble, and shaped by Jesus. Amen.
Action Step
Ask the Lord to reveal one area where your responses have been unloving, then take one practical step of repentance today.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Love Has a Shape
Scripture
1 Corinthians 13:4–7
“Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way... Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.”
Devotional
Biblical love is not vague. It has a shape. Paul does not leave love undefined. He gives it texture. He gives it action. He gives it visible expression.
Love is patient.
Love is kind.
Love does not envy.
Love does not boast.
Love is not arrogant.
Love is not rude.
Love does not insist on its own way.
That means love is not just what we claim. Love is how we carry people. It is how we speak when irritated. It is how we respond when misunderstood. It is how we act when we do not get our way. Love is seen in tone, timing, patience, and posture. This passage is both beautiful and exposing. It shows us the heart of Christ, but it also reveals how much we need the Holy Spirit. Most of us can find ourselves somewhere in this list. Maybe patience is hard. Maybe kindness has been missing. Maybe irritation comes quickly. Maybe pride rises easily. Maybe love has been reduced to being right instead of being Christlike. The good news is that the Spirit produces what we cannot sustain in our own strength. Love is fruit. Fruit grows where there is life, abiding, and surrender. The answer is not to fake it. The answer is to stay close to Jesus and yield to the Spirit. The more we behold Christ, the more His love begins to take shape in us.
Prayer
Father, thank You for showing me what love looks like in Scripture. Reveal where my life does not yet match the love of Christ. By Your Spirit, make me patient, kind, humble, and steadfast. Amen.
Action Step
Read 1 Corinthians 13:4–7 slowly today and ask, line by line, where the Holy Spirit wants to grow you.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Friday, April 24, 2026
Love Must Be the Motive
Scripture
Galatians 5:22–23
“But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self control...”
Devotional
Love is not only the first fruit. It is also the motive that must shape everything else in the Christian life. That is why Paul begins with love in Galatians 5 and centers love in 1 Corinthians 13. Love is what keeps the Christian life from becoming mechanical, performative, or self-focused. It is possible to do Christian things with an unchristian heart. We can serve, lead, correct, teach, post, speak, and even sacrifice without love. Outwardly, the action may look right. But inwardly, the motive may be pride, resentment, fear, self-protection, or the desire to be seen. God is not only concerned with what we do. He also cares deeply about why we do it. Love purifies motive. Love keeps gifts from becoming ego. Love keeps truth from becoming harsh. Love keeps service from becoming bitterness. Love keeps ministry anchored in the heart of Jesus. This is especially important in a series on the Holy Spirit. We should desire the Spirit’s work in and through our lives. But before we ask what gifts He may display through us, we must ask what fruit He wants to grow within us. Fruit and gifts are not in competition, but fruit must shape how gifts are carried. Love must remain the atmosphere of our lives and witness. Today, ask the Lord not only to help you love more visibly, but also more deeply. Ask Him to purify your motives so that what you do flows from the love of Christ.
Prayer
Holy Spirit, let love become the motive behind everything I do. Purify my heart where my motives have become mixed. Help me serve, speak, lead, and respond in ways that truly reflect Jesus. Amen.
Action Step
Before doing any major task, conversation, or responsibility today, pause and pray, “Lord, let this be shaped by love.”
