John
15:1-8
Fifth
Sunday of Easter
In
John's Gospel Jesus gives a number of speeches on his own identity.
Sometimes these are call the great “I AM” passages of John – in
fact we had one last week, in which Jesus declared, “I AM the Good
Shepherd”. Today he uses another grand metaphor to illustrate who
he is, and what is his relationship with us, his people.
Jesus
is the true vine, and we are the branches. The Father is the
gardener, and the fruit we bear is good works. Some vines,
unbelievers, bear no fruit. They are condemned to the fire. Simple
enough?
And
yet there is much to learn from this teaching. There is great
comfort in knowing Jesus the Vine, and know what it means to be a
branch grafted into him.
But
first a reminder – that apart from Christ, there is no fruit.
Severed from the True Vine, there is no hope. These are the
unbelievers, who have no connection to Christ, no faith or trust in
him. Their destiny is destruction. And this would be you... if not
for God's grace in Christ!
This
takes faith to see. For the eyes of the world will see all sorts of
“fruit” in our lives and the lives of unbelievers. You don't
have to be a Christian to feed the poor, care for the sick, be a good
citizen, or raise your children to be respectful. You don't have to
believe in Jesus to be nice to people, or to be regarded as a “good
person”. The world looks at the outward things, the surface, and
sees what it considers good according to its own standard.
But
don't be tempted to do the same! Jesus is quite clear. “Apart
from me you can do nothing!” In other words, apart from Jesus,
none of these so-called good works amount to a hill of beans. You
could win all the accolades of man and affect the lives of millions
of people for the better and it would still not be fruitful in the
eyes of God. Your good works, even the best of them, would be filthy
rags. Your towering moral achievements wouldn't stand the test of
God's perfection. You are, after all, like all of us, sinful. And
even your best is corrupt and wicked and stinks of death.
If
I do good, am I not proud of it? Haven't I done it with some
expectation of selfish gain? Am I doing it truly out of love for
neighbor, or with some other motivation or agenda? Or perhaps I do
it, but grudgingly, and only to avoid looking bad or some other
punishment. Sinful man can appear to do all sorts of good things,
when the fruit is rotten on the inside, and is really no fruit at
all.
“Apart
from me you can do nothing” Nothing good, that is. Nothing but
sin, rebel, and make your situation with God worse.
But
Jesus is the true vine. And we are not apart from him, we are in
him. We are in him by the grafting in of Holy Baptism, where we are
made members of his kingdom. The word he speaks to us cleanses us.
That word is his Gospel – the good news of salvation that comes by
the fruits of his cross. His blood shed for you and me, his life
given for you and me, there, is the source of our life. And we are
in him, and we have that life, as we abide in his word, believing and
trusting that what he says is true – even when it doesn't look to
be.
So
when he says, “Whoever
abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit”. We
believe that too, even though it doesn't look like it. And here is
great comfort. I know that, looking at myself, my good works amount
to little. Against the perfect standard of the law, they don't stand
up. But there is this promise of Jesus that we will bear much fruit.
And so we believe it. No matter what it looks like, we know that in
him, abiding in him, the fruit will come.
One
commentator puts it this way, “From
God's point of view the entire life of the Christian, by virtue of
the fact that he is attached to Jesus, the Vine, is a good work. No
wonder Jesus uses the expression "MUCH fruit" twice... It's
either MUCH
fruit
or none.”
But
he never says it's our job to assess our own fruitfulness. What
branch does that anyway? That's the gardener's job. We are directed
to trust in the word, to remain in Christ, and thus receive our life
from the True Vine.
The
fruitless branches he casts away and burns. And the fruitful
branches, he makes even more fruitful – by pruning.
Here
again we call on faith to trust the word where our eyes say
different. The branch probably doesn't like being pruned. It's
damaging. It probably feels like being cut off. Why would that
crazy gardener come and cut off parts of me, the branch might think.
Martin
Luther expanded the pruning metaphor, and imagined the gardener also
applying manure. But it all starts with Christ himself. Here's how
Luther said Christ could put it:
"
(They) will throw manure at Me and will hack away at Me. They will
shamefully revile and blaspheme Me, will torture, scourge, crucify,
and kill Me in the most disgraceful manner, so that all the world
will suppose that I must finally perish and be destroyed. But the
fertilizing and pruning I suffer will yield a richer fruit: that is,
through My cross and
death I shall come to My glory, begin My reign, and be acknowledged
and believed throughout the world.
Later on you will have the same experience. You, too, must be fertilized and cultivated in this way. The Father, who makes Me the Vine and you the branches, will not permit this Vine to lie unfertilized and unpruned."
Later on you will have the same experience. You, too, must be fertilized and cultivated in this way. The Father, who makes Me the Vine and you the branches, will not permit this Vine to lie unfertilized and unpruned."
And
for Luther, the Devil is God's manure: "God
takes him in hand and says: “Devil, you are indeed a murderer and
an evildoer; but I will use you for My purpose. You shall be My hoe;
the world and your following shall be My manure for the fertilization
of My vineyard.”
So
too, the believer, when God “prunes” us to make us more fruitful.
He does things in our lives, allows troubles in our lives, that we
don't always understand or like. He allows suffering, perhaps even
sends it at times. But the purpose and end of it are his own – to
make us more fruitful. Though it may be painful, though it may
require endurance, God is in charge of his vineyard, and he knows
better than we do. So trust. Endure. And abide in Christ.
One
final comforting promise, “If you abide in me, and my words abide
in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you.” Ah,
but words that are often misunderstood and misapplied. This isn't
Jesus as the wish-granting genie of the lamp, “your wish is my
command”. It's not “Jesus make me rich”, “Jesus if you're
real heal my disease” or even, “Jesus take my suffering away”.
He
says whatever you ask, abiding in my word, it will be done for you.
But what kind of prayers do we pray, abiding in his word? Prayers of
faith. Prayers that trust him to do what is best. Prayers of thy
will, not my will be done, Oh Lord. Prayers that know he will
answer, in his way, at his time. Prayers that know and trust that in
the end he will make all things new, and right, and good.
Prayers
that are rooted in the true vine – the source of our life- Jesus
Christ. Apart from him we can do nothing, no good works, not even
pray. But in him is all hope and comfort and life. Even when we are
pruned, we know it is for God's good purposes. We have the promise
that more fruit will come.
No comments:
Post a Comment