When many people hear the phrase “self-control,” they imagine restriction, deprivation, or grim determination. It sounds like saying “no” to everything enjoyable. Yet the Bible presents self-control very differently. In Galatians 5:22–23, self-control appears as the final fruit of the Spirit—not as a human achievement, but as something the Holy Spirit grows within us. It may be last on the list as a kind of capstone. Or perhaps self-control is like a container in which all the other fruit burst into life.
Our culture often tells us that freedom means following our desires wherever they lead. If you feel it, do it. If you want it, have it. Yet experience teaches us otherwise. The person who cannot control their temper is not free. The person mastered by anxiety, greed, habits, or impulses is not free. We do not become free by obeying every desire; we become free when we learn which desires deserve our obedience.
The Apostle Paul compares the Christian life to an athlete preparing for a race (1 Corinthians 9:24–27). Athletes willingly submit to training because they have a goal. They say no to certain things so they can say yes to something greater. In the same way, Christian self-control is not about denying ourselves for the sake of denial. It is about refusing lesser things so that we may pursue greater things—holiness, faithfulness, love, and service to Christ.
Dallas Willard famously distinguished between “trying” and “training.” Many Christians spend their lives trying harder to be patient, faithful, or disciplined. God invites us instead into a life of training under his grace. Through prayer, Scripture, worship, fellowship, and obedience, the Spirit gradually reshapes our hearts and desires.
But in all of this, the good news is that self-control is not merely gritting our teeth and relying on willpower. It is the work of God’s Spirit producing in us the character of Jesus himself. As we walk with Christ, we discover that self-control is not the loss of freedom, but its fulfilment—the freedom to say no to what diminishes us and yes to the life God calls us to live.
This Sunday, come and hear more about this beautiful fruit that God wants to grow in all of us.
Julian Holdsworth
BSBC Pastor
