And let us not be weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not.
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Commentary
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Gill's Exposition
As we have therefore opportunity,.... Or "ability", so the phrase is sometimes used (z); as occasion requires, objects offer, as there is ability of well doing, and that continues; while the time of…
Barnes' Notes
And let us not be weary in welldoing - See the note at 1Co 15:58. The reference here is particularly to the support of the ministers of religion Gal 6:6, but the apostle makes the exhortation general.…
Adam Clarke
Let us not be weary - Well-doing is easier in itself than ill-doing; and the danger of growing weary in the former arises only from the opposition to good in our own nature, or the outward hinderances…
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…
Cambridge Bible
The metaphor which runs through these verses suggests a caution. The husbandman after committing the seed to the ground, -waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth, being patient over it … Be ye…
Cross References
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