Acts 20:35 carries a quiet but immovable weight. In the middle of Paul’s farewell to the Ephesian elders, there is a word that refuses to remain theoretical. It is the word must.
“I have shown you in all things that by working hard in this way, you must assist those who are weak…”
Notice what that word does. It removes the comfortable distance between belief and obligation. Paul does not frame generosity as an admirable trait or a spiritual aspiration. He frames it as a necessity. A follower of Christ is not merely encouraged to help the weak; he must.
Without that word, helping others could remain a matter of mood, timing, or convenience. A person could wait until circumstances feel favorable or until resources feel abundant. But must closes the door on hesitation. It insists that compassion is not something we schedule; it is something that governs us. Opportunities to do good are not meant to be postponed when they appear before us — Ga. 6:9, 10.
And Paul ties that obligation directly to effort.
“By working hard in this way…”
The assistance he describes does not come from leftovers. It grows out of labor. It requires energy, attention, and sometimes sacrifice. Strength is not given merely for preservation; it is given so that it can support weakness — Ro. 15:1.
But Paul does not stop with the command to act.
There is another must in the sentence.
“…and you must keep in mind the words of the Lord Jesus…”
The disciple is not only commanded to help. He is commanded to remember. The teaching of Jesus must remain present in the mind, active in the conscience, shaping the instinct of the heart. Forgetting would weaken the command. Memory strengthens it.
What are we required to keep in mind?
“There is more happiness in giving than there is in receiving.”
That statement is not merely encouragement; it is orientation. It corrects the natural pull of the human heart toward accumulation and replaces it with a different compass. A person who forgets those words slowly drifts back toward self-protection. A person who keeps them before his mind is constantly drawn outward — Pr. 11:25.
In that sense, the second must guards the first.
If the words of Jesus remain alive in the mind, helping the weak will not feel like a reluctant duty. It will begin to feel natural. The heart will expect joy on the other side of generosity.
This is the pattern Christ Himself lived. His ministry consistently moved toward the burdened, the overlooked, and the weary — Mt. 9:36; Lu. 14:13, 14.
That same word now stands before every disciple.
Must.
We must help.
And we must remember.
Because forgetting the words of Christ weakens the impulse to act, while remembering them strengthens the resolve of the heart. When weakness appears—material, emotional, or spiritual—the disciple does not first measure convenience. The presence of need becomes the summons — 1 Th. 5:14.
In that sense, the word must is not a burden. It is a compass. It keeps the heart from drifting into the quiet selfishness that can disguise itself as prudence. True devotion reveals itself not in restrained concern but in deliberate generosity — Jas. 2:15, 16.
And when both commands are obeyed—when the disciple both remembers and acts—the promise of Jesus proves true.
The giver discovers a happiness that cannot be manufactured by acquisition.
Because the deepest joy is not found in what we keep.
It is found in what love compels us to give.