Don’t Be Fooled: Sow to the Spirit, Not Satan’s Lies
Galatians 6:7
"Do not be deceived: God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap."
It's a heavy message but at the end we'll have a little fun with it.
There’s a lot of deception and deceivers in the world today. And with the advent of Ai, it’s even more difficult than ever before to unlock the lies. But honestly, the greatest threat to the truth is when a man deceives himself. When someone is sincerely concerned about something but that something is a corrupted concern it’s a hard thing to turn around. Once a man thinks he is onto something but he is in reality onto nothing, it’s very hard to restore that person. Self-deception is a powerful tool of Satan's.
The verse’s warning, "Do not be deceived: God is not mocked," cuts to the heart of human nature and our tendency to stray from truth, whether through external influences or self-deception. In our scripture focus today there is this agricultural metaphor which illustrates a spiritual law; our actions, choices, and beliefs have consequences. What we "sow" (in thought, word, or deed) determines the "harvest" we reap. This applies to both righteous and sinful behavior. The warning "do not be deceived" highlights the danger of being misled, whether by others, the world, or us.
Deception distorts our ability to sow rightly. Imagine a blind farmer sowing a field, hard to imagine isn't it. Yet so many enter into their religious dogma with blinders on.
Misinformation, propaganda, and manipulated narratives are rampant today and they are absolutely influencing the spiritual thoughts of many. AI, while a tool, can amplify this through deepfakes, biased algorithms, or misleading content. For believers, discernment is critical to avoid being deceived by worldly influences.
1 John 4:1-3
"Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God, for many false prophets have gone out into the world. By this you know the Spirit of God: every spirit that confesses that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is from God, and every spirit that does not confess Jesus is not from God. This is the spirit of the antichrist, which you heard was coming and now is in the world already."
Satan would love to muddle up your spiritual life. He'd love to confuse you and keep you wrapped up in his distractions. He's a Universalist and loves when you go to his churches. He wants you calling that which is good evil and that which is evil good. But the apostle Paul is reminding us about a natural law, that which a man sows, so also does he reap. You don't plant watermelon seeds and expect to grow broccoli. There is a natural order and law to these things, and yet in too many of the churches when it comes to spiritual matters, they forget to apply this natural law and deception runs rampant. Satan is forever whispering lies that blur the line between truth and falsehood. He's a master at inverting the moral truths and twisting logic. And he delights when people flock to churches that twist God’s Word, calling evil good and good evil (Isaiah 5:20).
Just as a farmer’s harvest depends on the seeds he plants, our spiritual harvest depends on what we sow in thought, word, and deed. Sow to the flesh, and you’ll reap destruction. Sow to the Spirit, and you’ll reap eternal life (Galatians 6:8). Galatians 6:7 is both a warning and a promise. The warning, "Do not be deceived: God is not mocked", reminds us that God’s truth cannot be outwitted. Satan may sow confusion, but God’s justice prevails.
When we embrace distorted beliefs or justify our sin, thinking we’ll escape the consequences, we are blinded by our beliefs, which are really just our own personal desires. Satan’s goal is to keep us spiritually confused, wrapped up in distractions like misinformation, and cultural lies. He’s thrilled when churches embracing universalism, watering down the gospel to include everyone and everything, regardless of truth. Satan blinds people to the natural laws that govern both the flesh and the spirit. He accomplishes this by making the spiritual laws both confusing and convenient. He's got the easy road and it leads to a slough of confusion. The easy road looks wonderful at first but before you know it you've wandered into a strange place of self delusion. You've entered now into a warfare between the flesh and the mind. The flesh wants to occupy the appetites, creating a longing and desire. Meanwhile the spirit is pulling at the flesh, trying to guide him free from the slough. The Holy Spirit knows that what we plant in our thoughts, desires, and actions determines our harvest. If you are planting into your mind the imaginations of the world, the many distractions, the games people play, the music, the environments, if you sow these things, what are you sowing? What are you going to reap?
How does one know they aren't sowing to the Spirit?
Beautiful liturgy, incense, architecture, shouts and many tongues, music like a rock concert, food and comforts, prophecy, dance, cosplay, all feeding the flesh. It's all the deceptive nature of Satan’s tactics, dressing up fleshly indulgences as spiritual devotion. Planting in the flesh.
How then can we plant in the Spirit?
Sowing to the Spirit means choosing disciplines that align with God’s truth, not our feelings or the world’s allure. Avoiding trendy worship, performative rituals, or self-glorifying acts of self-righteousness.
To begin we MUST ALWAYS begin with scripture.
1. Root Yourself in Scripture: The Spirit works through God’s Word, which is "living and active" (Hebrews 4:12). Read, study, and meditate on Scripture daily to plant seeds of truth. Replace flesh-feeding music or media with worship that exalts Christ alone. Be alert, thoughtful, and respectful to the scriptures. Do not use the timeless truths found there out of the context from which it was given. Do not let Satan turn its meaning back towards the slough of confusion. Resist cherry-picking verses to build up your identity in some worldly agenda.
2. Pray with Humility: Prayer sows' dependence on God, but it must be sincere, not performative. Ask the Spirit to guide your thoughts and expose deception (Psalm 139:23-24). Avoid showy prayers that seek attention, they feed the flesh. Pray in the Spirit to our Lord Jesus Christ, no other mediator is better or more attentive to our hearts and souls.
3. Obey in the Small Things: Deny fleshly desires for God’s glory (Luke 9:23). Choose forgiveness, service, or truth over anger, comfort, or popularity. Each obedient act is a seed of righteousness. And do not grow weary or impatient in this service. Do your work where the Lord has given you your work. Do it and stay true to it. Do not judge that work by the world's standards. Plant that seed and nurture it as God's word instructs. Plant it rightly and nurture it rightly and trust it to grow rightly. Don't keep going back every day and digging up that seed checking to see if anything is happening. It's never going to flourish if you don't let it grow because of your impatience.
4. Test Every Practice: Not every "spiritual" act is from God. Test liturgy, worship, or prophecy against Scripture (1 John 4:1). Does it confess Jesus as Lord and lead to holiness (1 John 4:2-3)? If it chases thrills or self-expression, it’s fleshly. So we MUST examine ourselves, praying for the Lord's Spirit to search our motives, and to guide us into the right path.
5. Seek Godly Community: Surround yourself with believers pursuing holiness, not hype. Avoid environments glorifying the flesh, like concert-like worship or cosplay displays. Accountability sows humility and faith. Sowing to the Spirit demands discernment to reject Satan’s counterfeits. The company you keep matters. True spirituality exalts Jesus, not the flesh, not persons, not men or women, not organizations or governments. Does your church’s worship exalt Jesus and call for holiness? If it feels like a performance, seek biblical advice and a community of believers devoted to the truth.
Just as a sidebar: I admit that I sometimes listen to a Joel Olsteen's broadcast. Mostly in the hope that he'll preach something of value. I'm usually disappointed. And I always find it ironic when he ends every episode with the same admonition for his viewers: "and get yourself into a Bible-believing church..."
And I mock him. I admit it. I usually add to his admonition, "not this church, but somewhere out there at a real Bible-believing church."
It's an amazing statement to make after feeding his church family a bunch of psychobabble and pop-Christianity. But maybe that's his Holy Spirit proviso. Maybe the Spirit is saying through him what needs to be said. Never mind all that fluff and self-help spiritual hyped deceptions, just get yourself into a Bible-believing church. Maybe that's the truest message to receive. Truest because at the end of the day it is the truth.
So, to sum it all up...
Charles Reade, an English novelist and dramatist, best known for his historical novel The Cloister and the Hearth (1861), said it like this:
"Sow an act, and you reap a habit. Sow a habit, and you reap a character. Sow a character, and you reap a destiny."
Sowing to the world’s distractions, trendy worship, performative rituals, or pop-Christian fluff, plants weeds, not wheat, reaping confusion and spiritual emptiness. "God is not mocked", the harvest reveals the truth. And we can see this now in the newest trend, a move by younger folks towards orthodoxy. There's a reason for that. People should be paying attention. Genuine worship and praise, thoughtful prayer and a love for God's scriptures. God forbid we practice what we preach.
Closing Prayer
Father, Satan lures us with counterfeit spirituality, sowing confusion. Teach us to sow acts to Your Spirit through Scripture, humble prayer to Jesus, and godly community. Guard us from fleshly hype and guide us to exalt Christ, shaping a destiny of eternal life. In Jesus’ name, Amen.