John remembers in great detail the words of Christ on the
long walk to the Garden. There was so
little time left. But in chapter 15 he
remembers the words of Christ, the answer to the question, “how” do we become
remade as in verse one Jesus continues … “I am the true vine, and my Father is
the husbandman. [verse 2] Every branch in me that beareth not fruit he taketh
away: and every branch that beareth fruit, he purgeth it, that it may bring
forth more fruit.” First Jesus
identifies Himself as the “true vine”.
In this analogy Jesus would be the source of life. Nothing would live without a connection with
Him. To reject the source of life is to
find that bearing fruit is simply not possible.
But perhaps the next most interesting concept is that in this analogy
Jesus identifies His Father as the Gardener.
In times past Jesus has said that it is His Father who brings people to
Him, draws people to Him, gives people to Him.
It is the will of His Father that ALL mankind would choose to accept the
vine and the life that it brings and be saved.
But for those who refuse to accept the source of their salvation is
Christ, for those who believe it can be done through their own power, or
through some other way that is not founded on a connection with the vine, the
Father removes those branches. But then
an even more interesting phenomenon occurs, for those who do accept that
salvation comes not from themselves but from Christ alone, the Father prunes
them.
Pieces of the branches that do accept the vine and are
bearing fruit are STILL pruned. Parts of
them are removed, but the parts that are removed, cause them to grow even more
and bear even more fruit. Remember it is
Christ who “is” the true vine. Our
ability to bear fruit at all comes from a submission to the vine, not because
we try to take root on our own. But even
when we do accept and bear fruit, the work of perfecting us, is STILL not our
own. It is the work of God the
Father. And for us to reach the
perfection He intends, there are pieces of ourselves that NEED to be removed. Most of us as plants would be perfectly
contented to be bearing fruit at all, and believe we need the parts we have in
order to do so. But here is Christ
teaching us we are mistaken. To be
perfected, we must trust the Gardener.
We must allow the Gardener to remove even the parts we thought we needed
or wanted or liked, and let the Gardener decide those things. Here is the world’s anthem of “be true to
yourself” turned on its head. It is not
“self” we must be true to, for “self” is to be wholly remade into something
else. It is the “vine” and the
connection to the Vine we need to be true to; and to the Gardener who alone
knows how we must be remade. It becomes
our goal to see the destruction of the “self” we have made, and watch as the
Gardener creates a new “self” He intended us to be.
With the garden ever closer Jesus continues in verse 3 … “Now
ye are clean through the word which I have spoken unto you. [verse 4] Abide in
me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in
the vine; no more can ye, except ye abide in me.” We are clean, ONLY when we abide in
Christ. It is our connection to the
source of life, that brings life to us.
It is our connection only to Christ that can see us transformed from who
we were. Branches without a connection
to the vine simply do not bear fruit, they are not alive, they are dead. Branches who try to do it themselves produce
nothing. This is something even the
Christian community is reluctant to accept: That we do nothing in this process,
except maintain a connection to the Vine, and even that work is done by the
Gardener (God the Father) on our behalf.
Our only function is to choose to allow it occur; not to facilitate its
occurrence. Christ provides the life,
the Father removes and prunes from us what must be taken, and the fruit that
grows is a result of our transformation, not a prerequisite to it, or a result
of anything we have done. The work is
simply not our own.
Jesus continues in verse 5 … “I am the vine, ye are the
branches: He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much
fruit: for without me ye can do nothing. [verse 6] If a man abide not in me, he
is cast forth as a branch, and is withered; and men gather them, and cast them
into the fire, and they are burned.”
When we seek to abide in Christ, when we look not to ourselves and instead
trust in Him to save us from ourselves, we bear much fruit. It is the natural consequence of embracing
Christ and the salvation He offers. But
when we look away from Christ, trusting to ourselves, our own ideas about
salvation and the interpretation of scripture and doctrine, when we replace
Christ with self-reliance, we die. Our
spiritual strength is not determined by self, or any actions we take. It is determined by how much we embrace the
Vine of Christ, the life He offers, and the salvation His Father the Gardener
is allowed to perform upon us. We can
“try” to do good works on our own, we can “try” to control our actions, but we
do not change who we are inside, and without a connection to the source of life
we dry up and die; all of our self-efforts amounting to nothing. At that point we are only good for
kindling. Our vitality, our spiritual
vitality, is determined by being connected to Christ, and allowing our Gardener
to do His work within us.
Jesus continues the analogy in verse 7 … “If ye abide in me,
and my words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto
you. [verse 8] Herein is my Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit; so shall
ye be my disciples.” When we are
transformed by the love and power of Christ, we become someone else, someone
new, someone different than who we were.
We want different things. We love
others differently than we did. We value
different things. What we ask for is now
different than it was before, because we are no longer as interested in winning
the PowerBall lottery and having a life of ease, as we are in winning one
single precious soul into the kingdom of heaven. That one life will be worth more to us than
the hundreds of millions of dollars we once put so much value in. The illusions of doing good with our wealth,
are replaced with the reality of doing good for another of an eternal
variety. Pointing a soul to Christ, to
the connection to the Vine, and KNOWING that Christ will save that soul no
matter what it looks like to you and me; is worth more than winning every
lottery since the history of lotteries were invented. This is how God values people. We are priceless to Him. Money is meaningless to Him. That kind of abandonment of self-interest is
not natural to us in our carnal state.
It can only be achieved when we allow Him to prune our lives and hearts
and minds and replace our self-focus, with a focus on loving others. When we allow Him this work, we begin to bear
REAL fruit. We lose interest in great
wealth of financial means, and find great wealth in the salvation of even a
single soul. It is not just all of us
who are precious to Him, but each of us.
Jesus now reveals the core of who He is, and who the Father
is in verse 9 He continues … “As the Father hath loved me, so have I loved you:
continue ye in my love.” The essence of
who God the Father is, is love. It is
the continuation of love, the expression of love, the connection to love, the
abounding of love that defines the life of Christ, and the will of God His
Father. God reveals to us that He does
not love Himself, but rather He loves others.
God the Father loves His Son and us, not Himself. He does not spend His energy trying to please
Himself, but instead spends His energy saving us. Jesus while walking to the Garden, with the
full knowledge He will be betrayed there by one He loved, does not think to
love Himself, but only still to love us.
It is a love that seeks the best interests of its objects, not of itself
that Christ has so clearly defined by His life, actions, words, motives, and
example to us. Christ and God the Father
are love incarnate, and love defined. It
is then love above all else, that Christ wishes for us to participate and
continue in.
Jesus continues in verse 10 … “If ye keep my commandments,
ye shall abide in my love; even as I have kept my Father's commandments, and
abide in his love.” Love is what
commandments are all about. Love is what
salvation is all about. Love is what God
is all about. Love for others is how we
connect with God. It is impossible to
truly love someone else and then seek to do them harm. It is impossible to love others greater than
yourself and then choose to take actions to please yourself while knowing those
actions will displease another. When you
love someone else with all your heart and mind, you seek their best interests
ahead of your own no matter what the personal consequences. Sacrifice is not even deemed sacrifice when
it is done for the object of your love.
This was the mind of Christ, and heart of God. Love for others was the embodiment of His
life’s example, and was supposed to be defined in His commandments to us. Somehow it has become easier for Christians
to focus on a list of do’s and don’ts and attempt to prescribe detailed
behaviors that can comply with the letter of the law, than to embrace the love
behind the law that would radically alter not just what we do, but how we
think.
Jesus tells us then why love is so important to us in verse
11 … “These things have I spoken unto you, that my joy might remain in you, and
that your joy might be full.” When a
life is based on love for others, not for self, that life becomes one of great
joy. This is why the life of God is one
worth living, He finds His own joy in loving us. We find His joy within us, as we love
others. Lucifer’s perversion of turning
love inwards and focusing on self, turned love into evil, and life into
death. If we are to escape evil, pain, and
death, we must learn what it really means to love, and love is not defined
inwardly, but only as it is expressed outwardly to another, to someone
else. It is that kind of power love has,
to turn an enemy into the closest of friends.
It is that kind of power love has, to redeem and forgive we who were
lost, because He loved us all just that much.
Jesus then re-summarizes all of scripture, all commandments,
the point of all the stories, the point of life itself and expresses again to
His disciples in verse 12 … “This is my commandment, That ye love one another,
as I have loved you.” Notice the
absolute absence of doctrine in this summarization of what Christ asks of
us. Notice the absolute lack of judgment
on His part, or required of us on each other, in what Christ asks of us. He does not specify the conditions under
which we should love each other, i.e. only after we are pure, forgiven, living
under a certain set of expectations, with a pure doctrinal understanding of
scripture. These men before Him were
still under the misguided belief that He was there to setup an anti-Roman
earthly kingdom that would never die.
They were all still mistaken about the most fundamental doctrine of the
Jewish faith, and still planning to profit personally from Jesus fulfilling the
misguided expectations. Their lack of
doctrinal understanding was mind-blowing, and yet fully unimportant to Christ
with respect to what was truly important – that they love each other. He did not give them a list of things to do
or not do. But instead He gave them a
principle, or a value, or an action that would exceed any list of do’s or
don’ts. There would be no limit to how
much we could love each other.
In contrast to lists that can barely scratch at the surface
of what it means to love another Christ offers a scale by which love could be
measured in verse 13 … “Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down
his life for his friends.” Christ is
telling them that even life itself is not so precious as love for others. If it comes down to a choice of life or of
love, Christ will choose love. This is the
measure by which love for us was measured out.
And even with the conscious choice that Christ will lay down His life
for them, He is still ceaselessly looking to their interests, their comfort,
their concerns, despite the long walk to the Garden of Gethsemane. It is perhaps ironic that the first
temptation and test of trust was made in a garden, and now the last one, the
last struggle will occur in a garden as well.
But even in this dire situation, with time running out, Christ is still
focused on the needs of his faithful few.
He now begins to break with rabbinical traditions, and societal
expectations. As he continues with them
in verse 14 … “Ye are my friends, if ye do whatsoever I command you. [verse 15]
Henceforth I call you not servants; for the servant knoweth not what his lord
doeth: but I have called you friends; for all things that I have heard of my
Father I have made known unto you.”
Even though He is our Lord, and rightfully so, He elevates
us from the status of servants to the status of friends. “Friends” implies community, equality, and
peer participation. Though we will never
be equal to Christ in any way, shape, or form, in spite of this fact, He still
thinks of us in the manner of being His friends. When we allow His love to bear fruit within
us, when we become part of the vine, He does not just consider us branches that
bear fruit, but instead, friends that are united in purpose with the vine
itself. Christ is still the source of
life in the vine, yet now, He thinks of us as His friends; for while we love
others as greatly as He loves us, we are more than we used to be. We are more than mere servants who follow
blindly, instead He reveals to us our shared goals, the secrets of how our
goals will be achieved, the truths of motives of our Father God. Christ offers us, His friends, the full
revelation of WHO we serve, and what it means to participate in service, and
why service is joy. The revelation He
offers us is stunning. And the status
with which He thinks of us is more stunning.
To be thought of as friends of God, despite who we really are, is yet
another measure of the power of love, His love.
But communion was not over just yet …
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