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The True Vine
Meditations for a Month
on John 15:1-16
Andrew Murray |
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I have felt drawn to try to write what young Christians
might easily apprehend, as a help to them to take up that position in which the Christian
life must be a success. It is as if there is not one of the principal temptations
and failures of the Christian life that is not met here. The nearness, the all-sufficiency,
the faithfulness of the Lord Jesus, the naturalness, the fruitfulness of a life of
faith, are so revealed, that it is as if one could with confidence say, Let the parable
enter into the heart, and all will be right.
May the blessed Lord give the blessing. May He teach us to study the mystery of the
Vine in the spirit of worship, waiting for God's own teaching.
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Table of Contents
The Vine John 15:1
The Husbandman John 15:1
The Branch John 15:2
The Fruit John 15:2
More Fruit John 15:2
The Cleansing John 15:2
The Pruning Knife John 15:3
Abide John 15:4
Except Ye Abide John 15:4
I the Vine John 15:5
Ye the Branches John 15:5
Much Fruit John 15:5
You can do Nothing John 15:5
Withered Branches John 15:6
Whatsoever ye Will John 15:7
If ye Abide John 15:7
The Father Glorified John 15:8
True Disciples John 15:8
The Wonderful Love John 15:9
Abide in My Love John 15:9
Obey and Abide John 15:10
Ye, even as I John 15:10
Joy John 15:11
Love One Another John 15:12
Even as I have Loved You John 15:12
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Christ's Friendship: Its Origin John 15:13
Christ's Friendship: Its Evidence John 15:14
Christ's Friendship: Its Intimacy John 15:15
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Election John 15:16
Abiding Fruit John 15:16
Prevailing Prayer John 15:16
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THE VINE
"I am the True Vine" --John
15:1
All earthly things are the shadows of heavenly realities--the expression, in created,
visible forms, of the invisible glory of God. The Life and the Truth are in Heaven;
on earth we have figures and shadows of the heavenly truths. When Jesus says: "I
am the true Vine," He tells us that all the vines of earth are pictures and
emblems of Himself. He is the divine reality, of which they are the created expression.
They all point to Him, and preach Him, and reveal Him. If you would know Jesus, study
the vine. How many eyes have gazed on and admired a great vine with its beautiful
fruit. Come and gaze on the heavenly Vine till your eye turns from all else to admire
Him. How many, in a sunny clime, sit and rest under the shadow of a vine. Come and
be still under the shadow of the true Vine, and rest under it from the heat of the
day. What countless numbers rejoice in the fruit of the vine! Come, and take, and
eat of the heavenly fruit of the true Vine, and let your soul say: "I sat under
His shadow with great delight, and His fruit was sweet to my taste."
I am the true Vine.--This is a heavenly mystery. The earthly vine can teach you much
about this Vine of Heaven. Many interesting and beautiful points of comparison suggest
themselves, and help us to get conceptions of what Christ meant. But such thoughts
do not teach us to know what the heavenly Vine really is, in its cooling shade, and
its life-giving fruit. The experience of this is part of the hidden mystery, which
none but Jesus Himself, by His Holy Spirit, can unfold and impart. I am the true
Vine.--The vine is the living Lord, who Himself speaks, and gives, and works all
that He has for us. If you would know the meaning and power of that word, do not
think to find it by thought or study; these may help to show you what you must get
from Him to awaken desire and hope and prayer, but they cannot show you the Vine.
Jesus alone can reveal Himself. He gives His Holy Spirit to open the eyes to gaze
upon Himself, to open the heart to receive Himself. He must Himself speak the word
to you and me.
I am the true Vine.--And what am I to do, if I want the mystery, in all its heavenly
beauty and blessing, opened up to me? With what you already know of the parable,
bow down and be still, worship and wait, until the divine Word enters your heart,
and you feel His holy presence with you, and in you. The overshadowing of His holy
love will give you the perfect calm and rest of knowing that the Vine will do all.
I am the true Vine.--He who speaks is God, in His infinite power able to enter into
us. He is man, one with us. He is the crucified One, who won a perfect righteousness
and a divine life for us through His death. He is the glorified One, who from the
throne gives His Spirit to make His presence real and true. He speaks--oh, listen,
not to His words only, but to Himself, as He whispers secretly day by day: "I
am the true Vine! All that the Vine can ever be to its branch, "I will be to
you." Holy Lord Jesus, the heavenly Vine of God's own planting, I beseech Thee,
reveal Thyself to my soul. Let the Holy Spirit, not only in thought, but in experience,
give me to know all that Thou, the Son of God, art to me as the true Vine.
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THE HUSBANDMAN
"And My Father is the Husbandman"
--John 15:1
A vine must have a husbandman to plant and watch over it, to receive and rejoice
in its fruit. Jesus says: "My Father is the husbandman." He was "the
vine of God's planting." All He was and did, He owed to the Father; in all He
only sought the Father's will and glory. He had become man to show us what a creature
ought to be to its Creator. He took our place, and the spirit of His life before
the Father was ever what He seeks to make ours: "Of him, and through him, and
to him are all things." He became the true Vine, that we might be true branches.
Both in regard to Christ and ourselves the words teach us the two lessons of absolute
dependence and perfect confidence.
My Father is the Husbandman.--Christ ever lived in the spirit of what He once said:
"The Son can do nothing of himself." As dependent as a vine is on a husbandman
for the place where it is to grow, for its fencing in and watering and pruning. Christ
felt Himself entirely dependent on the Father every day for the wisdom and the strength
to do the Father's will. As He said in the previous chapter (14:10): "The words
that I say unto you, I speak not from Myself; but the Father abiding in Me doeth
his works." This absolute dependence had as its blessed counterpart the most
blessed confidence that He had nothing to fear: the Father could not disappoint Him.
With such a Husbandman as His Father, He could enter death and the grave. He could
trust God to raise Him up. All that Christ is and has, He has, not in Himself, but
from the Father.
My Father is the Husbandman.--That is as blessedly true for us as for Christ. Christ
is about to teach His disciples about their being branches. Before He ever uses the
word, or speaks at all of abiding in Him or bearing fruit, He turns their eyes heavenward
to the Father watching over them, and working all in them. At the very root of all
Christian life lies the thought that God is to do all, that our work is to give and
leave ourselves in His hands, in the confession of utter helplessness and dependence,
in the assured confidence that He gives all we need. The great lack of the Christian
life is that, even where we trust Christ, we leave God out of the count. Christ came
to bring us to God. Christ lived the life of a man exactly as we have to live it.
Christ the Vine points to God the Husbandman. As He trusted God, let us trust God,
that everything we ought to be and have, as those who belong to the Vine, will be
given us from above. Isaiah said: "A vineyard of red wine; I the Lord do keep
it, I will water it every moment; lest any hurt it, I will keep it night and day."
Ere we begin to think of fruit or branches, let us have our heart filled with the
faith: as glorious as the Vine, is the Husbandman. As high and holy as is our calling,
so mighty and loving is the God who will work it all. As surely as the Husbandman
made the Vine what it was to be, will He make each branch what it is to be. Our Father
is our Husbandman, the Surety for our growth and fruit.
Blessed Father, we are Thy husbandry. Oh, that Thou mayest have honor of the work
of Thy hands! O my Father, I desire to open my heart to the joy of this wondrous
truth: My Father is the Husbandman. Teach me to know and trust Thee, and to see that
the same deep interest with which Thou caredst for and delightedst in the Vine, extends
to every branch, to me too.
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THE BRANCH
"Every Branch in me that Beareth Not Fruit, He taketh
It away" --John 15:2
Here we have one of the chief words of the parable--branch. A vine needs branches:
without branches it can do nothing, can bear no fruit. As important as it is to know
about the Vine, and the Husbandman, it is to realize what the branch is. Before we
listen to what Christ has to say about it, let us first of all take in what a branch
is, and what it teaches us of our life in Christ. A branch is simply a bit of wood,
brought forth by the vine for the one purpose of serving it in bearing its fruit.
It is of the very same nature as the vine, and has one life and one spirit with it.
Just think a moment of the lessons this suggests. There is the lesson of entire consecration.
The branch has but one object for which it exists, one purpose to which it is entirely
given up. That is, to bear the fruit the vine wishes to bring forth. And so the believer
has but one reason for his being a branch--but one reason for his existence on earth
--that the heavenly Vine may through him bring forth His fruit. Happy the soul that
knows this, that has consented to it, and that says, I have been redeemed and I live
for one thing--as exclusively as the natural branch exists only to bring forth fruit,
I too; as exclusively as the heavenly Vine exists to bring forth fruit, I too. As
I have been planted by God into Christ, I have wholly given myself to bear the fruit
the Vine desires to bring forth.
There is the lesson of perfect conformity. The branch is exactly like the vine in
every aspect--the same nature, the same life, the same place, the same work. In all
this they are inseparably one. And so the believer needs to know that he is partaker
of the divine nature, and has the very nature and spirit of Christ in him, and that
his one calling is to yield himself to a perfect conformity to Christ. The branch
is a perfect likeness of the vine; the only difference is, the one is great and strong,
and the source of strength, the other little and feeble, ever needing and receiving
strength. Even so the believer is, and is to be, the perfect likeness of Christ.
There is the lesson of absolute dependence. The vine has its stores of life and sap
and strength, not for itself, but for the branches. The branches are and have nothing
but what the vine provides and imparts. The believer is called to, and it is his
highest blessedness to enter upon, a life of entire and unceasing dependence upon
Christ. Day and night, every moment, Christ is to work in him all he needs. And then
the lesson of undoubting confidence. The branch has no cure; the vine provides all;
it has but to yield itself and receive. It is the sight of this truth that leads
to the blessed rest of faith, the true secret of growth and strength: "I can
do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me."
What a life would come to us if we only consented to be branches! Dear child of God,
learn the lesson. You have but one thing to do: Only be a branch--nothing more, nothing
less! Just be a branch; Christ will be the Vine that gives all. And the Husbandman,
the mighty God, who made the Vine what it is, will as surely make the branch what
it ought to be. Lord Jesus, I pray Thee, reveal to me the heavenly mystery of the
branch, in its living union with the Vine, in its claim on all its fullness. And
let Thy all-sufficiency, holding and filling Thy branches, lead me to the rest of
faith that knows that Thou workest all.
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THE FRUIT
"Every Branch in me That Beareth Not Fruit, He Taketh
It Away" --John 15:2
Fruit.--This is the next great word we have: the Vine, the Husbandman, the branch,
the fruit. What has our Lord to say to us of fruit? Simply this--that fruit is the
one thing the branch is for, and that if it bear not fruit, the husbandman takes
it away. The vine is the glory of the husbandman; the branch is the glory of the
vine; the fruit is the glory of the branch; if the branch bring not forth fruit,
there is no glory or worth in it; it is an offense and a hindrance; the husbandman
takes it away. The one reason for the existence of a branch, the one mark of being
a true branch of the heavenly Vine, the one condition of being allowed by the divine
Husbandman to share the life the Vine is--bearing fruit. And what is fruit? Something
that the branch bears, not for itself, but for its owner; something that is to be
gathered, and taken away. The branch does indeed receive it from the vine sap for
its own life, by which it grows thicker and stronger. But this supply for its own
maintenance is entirely subordinate to its fulfillment of the purpose of its existence--bearing
fruit. It is because Christians do not understand or accept of this truth, that they
so fail in their efforts and prayers to live the branch life. They often desire it
very earnestly; they read and meditate and pray, and yet they fail, they wonder why?
The reason is very simple: they do not know that fruit-bearing is the one thing they
have been saved for. Just as entirely as Christ became the true Vine with the one
object, you have been made a branch too, with the one object of bearing fruit for
the salvation of men. The Vine and the branch are equally under the unchangeable
law of fruit-bearing as the one reason of their being. Christ and the believer, the
heavenly Vine and the branch, have equally their place in the world exclusively for
one purpose, to carry God's saving love to men. Hence the solemn word: Every branch
that beareth not fruit, He taketh it away. Let us specially beware of one great mistake.
Many Christians think their own salvation is the first thing; their temporal life
and prosperity, with the care of their family, the second; and what of time and interest
is left may be devoted to fruit-bearing, to the saving of men. No wonder that in
most cases very little time or interest can be found. No, Christian, the one object
with which you have been made a member of Christ's Body is that the Head may have
you to carry out His saving work. The one object God had in making you a branch is
that Christ may through you bring life to men. Your personal salvation, your business
and care for your family, are entirely subordinate to this. Your first aim in life,
your first aim every day, should be to know how Christ desires to carry out His purpose
in you. Let us begin to think as God thinks. Let us accept Christ's teaching and
respond to it. The one object of my being a branch, the one mark of my being a true
branch, the one condition of my abiding and growing strong, is that I bear the fruit
of the heavenly Vine for dying men to eat and live. And the one thing of which I
can have the most perfect assurance is that, with Christ as my Vine, and the Father
as my Husbandman, I can indeed be a fruitful branch.
Our Father, Thou comest seeking fruit. Teach us, we pray Thee, to realize how truly
this is the one object of our existence, and of our union to Christ. Make it the
one desire of our hearts to be branches, so filled with the Spirit of the Vine, as
to bring forth fruit abundantly.
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MORE FRUIT
"And Every Branch That Beareth Fruit, He Cleanseth, That
it May Bear More Fruit" --John 15:2
The thought of fruit is so prominent in the eye of Him who sees things as they
are, fruit is so truly the one thing God has set His heart upon, that our Lord, after
having said that the branch that bears no fruit is taken away, at once adds: and
where there is fruit, the one desire of the Husbandman is more fruit. As the gift
of His grace, as the token of spiritual vigor, as the showing forth of the glory
of God and of Christ, as the only way for satisfying the need of the world, God longs
and fits for, more fruit.
More Fruit--This is a very searching word. As churches and individuals we are in
danger of nothing so much as self-contentment. The secret spirit of Laodicea--we
are rich and increased in goods, and have need of nothing--may prevail where it is
not suspected. The divine warning--poor and wretched and miserable--finds little
response just where it is most needed. Let us not rest content with the thought that
we are taking an equal share with others in the work that is being done, or that
men are satisfied with our efforts in Christ's service, or even point to us as examples.
Let our only desire be to know whether we are bearing all the fruit Christ is willing
to give through us as living branches, in close and living union with Himself, whether
we are satisfying the loving heart of the great Husbandman, our Father in Heaven,
in His desire for more fruit. More Fruit--The word comes with divine authority to
search and test our life: the true disciple will heartily surrender himself to its
holy light, and will earnestly ask that God Himself may show what there may be lacking
in the measure or the character of the fruit he bears. Do let us believe that the
Word is meant to lead us on to a fuller experience of the Father's purpose of love,
of Christ's fullness, and of the wonderful privilege of bearing much fruit in the
salvation of men. More Fruit--The word is a most encouraging one. Let us listen to
it. It is just to the branch that is bearing fruit that the message comes: more fruit.
God does not demand this as Pharaoh the task-master, or as Moses the lawgiver, without
providing the means. He comes as a Father, who gives what He asks, and works what
He commands. He comes to us as the living branches of the living Vine, and offers
to work the more fruit in us, if we but yield ourselves into His hands. Shall we
not admit the claim, accept the offer, and look to Him to work it in us?
"That it may bear more fruit": do let us believe that as the owner of a
vine does everything to make the fruitage as rich and large as possible, the divine
Husbandman will do all that is needed to make us bear more fruit. All He asks is,
that we set our heart's desire on it, entrust ourselves to His working and care,
and joyfully look to Him to do His perfect work in us. God has set His heart on more
fruit; Christ waits to work it in us; let us joyfully look up to our divine Husbandman
and our heavenly Vine, to ensure our bearing more fruit.
Our Father which art in Heaven, Thou art the heavenly Husbandman. And Christ is the
heavenly Vine. And I am a heavenly branch, partaker of His heavenly life, to bear
His heavenly fruit. Father, let the power of His life so fill me, that I may ever
bear more fruit, to the glory of Thy name.
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THE CLEANSING
"Every Branch That Beareth Fruit, He Cleanseth It, That
It May Bear More Fruit" --John
15:2
There are two remarkable things about the vine. There is not a plant of which
the fruit has so much spirit in it, of which spirit can be so abundantly distilled
as the vine. And there is not a plant which so soon runs into wild wood, that hinders
its fruit, and therefore needs the most merciless pruning. I look out of my window
here on large vineyards: the chief care of the vinedresser is the pruning. You may
have a trellis vine rooting so deep in good soil that it needs neither digging, nor
manuring, nor watering: pruning it cannot dispense with, if it is to bear good fruit.
Some tree needs occasional pruning; others bear perfect fruit without any: the vine
must have it. And so our Lord tells us, here at the very outset of the parable, that
the one work the Father does to the branch that bears fruit is: He cleanseth it,
that it may bear more fruit. Consider a moment what this pruning or cleansing is.
It is not the removal of weeds or thorns, or anything from without that may hinder
the growth. No; it is the cutting off of the long shoots of the previous year, the
removal of something that comes from within, that has been produced by the life of
the vine itself. It is the removal of something that is a proof of the vigor of its
life; the more vigorous the growth has been, the greater the need for the pruning.
It is the honest, healthy wood of the vine that has to be cut away. And why? Because
it would consume too much of the sap to fill all the long shoots of last year's growth:
the sap must be saved up and used for fruit alone. The branches, sometimes eight
and ten feet long, are cut down close to the stem, and nothing is left but just one
or two inches of wood, enough to bear the grapes. It is when everything that is not
needful for fruit-bearing has been relentlessly cut down, and just as little of the
branches as possible has been left, that full, rich fruit may be expected.
What a solemn, precious lesson! It is not to sin only that the cleansing of the Husbandman
here refers. It is to our own religious activity, as it is developed in the very
act of bearing fruit. It is this that must be cut down and cleansed away. We have,
in working for God, to use our natural gifts of wisdom, or eloquence, or influence,
or zeal. And yet they are ever in danger of being unduly developed, and then trusted
in. And so, after each season of work, God has to bring us to the end of ourselves,
to the consciousness of the helplessness and the danger of all that is of man, to
feel that we are nothing. All that is to be left of us is just enough to receive
the power of the life-giving sap of the Holy Spirit. What is of man must be reduced
to its very lowest measure. All that is inconsistent with the most entire devotion
to Christ's service must be removed. The more perfect the cleansing and cutting away
of all that is of self, the less of surface over which the Holy Spirit is to be spread,
so much the more intense can be the concentration of our whole being, to be entirely
at the disposal of the Spirit. This is the true circumcision of the heart, the circumcision
of Christ. This is the true crucifixion with Christ, bearing about the dying of the
Lord Jesus in the body. Blessed cleansing, God's own cleansing! How we may rejoice
in the assurance that we shall bring forth more fruit. O our holy Husbandman, cleanse
and cut away all that there is in us that would make a fair show, or could become
a source of self-confidence and glorying. Lord, keep us very low, that no flesh may
glory in Thy presence. We do trust Thee to do Thy work.
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THE PRUNING KNIFE
"Already Ye Are Clean Because of the Word I Have Spoken
Unto You" --John 15:3
What is the pruning knife of this heavenly Husbandman? It is often said to be
affliction. By no means in the first place. How would it then fare with many who
have long seasons free from adversity; or with some on whom God appears to shower
down kindness all their life long? No; it is the Word of God that is the knife, shaper
than any two-edged sword, that pierces even to the dividing asunder of the soul and
spirit, and is quick to discern the thoughts and intents of the heart. It is only
when affliction leads to this discipline of the Word that it becomes a blessing;
the lack of this heart-cleansing through the Word is the reason why affliction is
so often unsanctified. Not even Paul's thorn in the flesh could become a blessing
until Christ's Word--"My strength is made perfect in weakness"--had made
him see the danger of self-exaltation, and made him willing to rejoice in infirmities.
The Word of God's pruning knife. Jesus says: "Ye are already clean, because
of the word I have spoken unto you." How searchingly that word had been spoken
by Him, out of whose mouth there went a sharp two-edged sword, as he had taught them!
"Except a man deny himself, lose his life, forsake all, hate father and mother,
he cannot be My disciple, he is not worthy of Me"; or as He humbled their pride,
or reproved their lack of love, or foretold their all forsaking Him. From the opening
of His ministry in the Sermon on the Mount to His words of warning in the last night,
His Word had tried and cleansed them. He had discovered and condemned all there was
of self; they were now emptied and cleansed, ready for the incoming of the Holy Spirit.
It is as the soul gives up its own thoughts, and men's thoughts of what is religion,
and yields itself heartily, humbly, patiently, to the teaching of the Word by the
Spirit, that the Father will do His blessed work of pruning and cleansing away all
of nature and self that mixes with our work and hinders His Spirit. Let those who
would know all the Husbandman can do for them, all the Vine can bring forth through
them, seek earnestly to yield themselves heartily to the blessed cleansing through
the Word. Let them, in their study of the Word, receive it as a hammer that breaks
and opens up, as a fire that melts and refines, as a sword that lays bare and slays
all that is of the flesh. The word of conviction will prepare for the word of comfort
and of hope, and the Father will cleanse them through the Word. All ye who are branches
of the true Vine, each time you read or hear the Word, wait first of all on Him to
use it for His cleansing of the branch. Set your heart upon His desire for more fruit.
Trust Him as Husbandman to work it. Yield yourselves in simple childlike surrender
to the cleansing work of His Word and Spirit, and you may count upon it that His
purpose will be fulfilled in you.
Father, I pray Thee, cleanse me through Thy Word. Let it search out and bring to
light all that is of self and the flesh in my religion. Let it cut away every root
of self-confidence, that the Vine may find me wholly free to receive His life and
Spirit. O my holy Husbandman, I trust Thee to care for the branch as much as for
the Vine. Thou only art my hope.
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ABIDE
"Abide in Me, and I in You" --John 15:4
When a new graft is placed in a vine and it abides there, there is a twofold process
that takes place. The first is in the wood. The graft shoots its little roots and
fibers down into the stem, and the stem grows up into the graft, and what has been
called the structural union is effected. The graft abides and becomes one with the
vine, and even though the vine were to die, would still be one wood with it. Then
there is the second process, in which the sap of the vine enters the new structure,
and uses it as a passage through which sap can flow up to show itself in young shoots
and leaves and fruit. Here is the vital union. Into the graft which abides in the
stock, the stock enters with sap to abide in it. When our Lord says: "Abide
in me, and I in you," He points to something analogous to this. "Abide
in me": that refers more to that which we have to do. We have to trust and obey,
to detach ourselves from all else, to reach out after Him and cling to Him, to sink
ourselves into Him. As we do this, through the grace He gives, a character is formed,
and a heart prepared for the fuller experience: "I in you," God strengthens
us with might by the Spirit in the inner man, and Christ dwells in the heart by faith.
Many believers pray and long very earnestly for the filling of the Spirit and the
indwelling of Christ, and wonder that they do not make more progress. The reason
is often this, the "I in you" cannot come because the "abide in me"
is not maintained. "There is one body and one spirit"; before the Spirit
can fill, there must be a body prepared. The graft must have grown into the stem,
and be abiding in it before the sap can flow through to bring forth fruit. It is
as in lowly obedience we follow Christ, even in external things, denying ourselves,
forsaking the world, and even in the body seeking to be conformable to Him, as we
thus seek to abide in Him, that we shall be able to receive and enjoy the "I
in you." The work enjoined on us: "Abide in me," will prepare us for
the work undertaken by Him: "I in you."
In--The two parts of the injunction have their unity in that central deep-meaning
word "in." There is no deeper word in Scripture. God is in all. God dwells
in Christ. Christ lives in God. We are in Christ. Christ is in us: our life taken
up into His; His life received into ours; in a divine reality that words cannot express,
we are in Him and He in us. And the words, "Abide in me and I in you,"
just tell us to believe it, this divine mystery, and to count upon our God the Husbandman,
and Christ the Vine, to make it divinely true. No thinking or teaching or praying
can grasp it; it is a divine mystery of love. As little as we can effect the union
can we understand it. Let us just look upon this infinite, divine, omnipotent Vine
loving us, holding us, working in us. Let us in the faith of His working abide and
rest in Him, ever turning heart and hope to Him alone. And let us count upon Him
to fulfill in us the mystery: "Ye in me, and I in you." Blessed Lord, Thou
dost bid me abide in Thee. How can I, Lord, except Thou show Thyself to me, waiting
to receive and welcome and keep me? I pray Thee show me how Thou as Vine undertaketh
to do all. To be occupied with Thee is to abide in Thee. Here I am, Lord, a branch,
cleansed and abiding--resting in Thee, and awaiting the inflow of Thy life and grace.
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EXCEPT YE ABIDE
"As the Branch Cannot Bear Fruit of Itself, Except It
Abide In the Vine; No More Can Ye, Except Ye Abide in Me"
--John 15:4
We know the meaning of the word except. It expresses some indispensable condition, some inevitable law. "The branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine. No more can ye, except ye abide in me." There is but one way for the branch to bear fruit, there is no other possibility, it must abide in unbroken communion with the vine. Not of itself, but only of the vine, does the fruit come. Christ had already said: "Abide in me"; in nature the branch teaches us the lesson so clearly; it is such a wonderful privilege to be called and allowed to abide in the heavenly Vine; one might have thought it needless to add these words of warning. But no--Christ knows so well what a renunciation of self is implied in this: "Abide in me"; how strong and universal the tendency would be to seek to bear fruit by our own efforts; how difficult it would be to get us to believe that actual, continuous abiding in Him is an absolute necessity! He insists upon the truth: Not of itself can the branch bear fruit; except it abide, it cannot bear fruit. "No more can ye, except ye abide in me." But must this be taken literally? Must I, as exclusively, and manifestly, and unceasingly, and absolutely, as the branch abides in the vine, be equally given up to find my whole life in Christ alone? I must indeed. The except ye abide is as universal as the except it abide. The no more can ye admits of no exception or modification. If I am to be a true branch, if I am to bear fruit, if I am to be what Christ as Vine wants me to be, my whole existence must be as exclusively devoted to abiding in Him, as that of the natural branch is to abiding in its vine. Let me learn the lesson. Abiding is to be an act of the will and the whole heart. Just as there are degrees in seeking and serving God, "not with a perfect heart," or "with the whole heart," so there may be degrees in abiding. In regeneration the divine life enters us, but does not all at once master and fill our whole being. This comes as matter of command and obedience. There is unspeakable danger of our not giving ourselves with our whole heart to abide. There is unspeakable danger of our giving ourselves to work for God, and to bear fruit, with but little of the true abiding, the wholehearted losing of ourselves in Christ and His life. There is unspeakable danger of much work with but little fruit, for lack of this one thing needful. We must allow the words, "not of itself," "except it abide," to do their work of searching and exposing, of pruning and cleansing, all that there is of self-will and self-confidence in our life; this will deliver us from this great evil, and so prepare us for His teaching, giving the full meaning of the word in us: "Abide in me, and I in you." Our blessed Lord desires to call us away from ourselves and our own strength, to Himself and His strength. Let us accept the warning, and turn with great fear and self-distrust to Him to do His work. "Our life is hid with Christ in God!" That life is a heavenly mystery, hid from the wise even among Christians, and revealed unto babes. The childlike spirit learns that life is given from Heaven every day and every moment to the soul that accepts the teaching: "not of itself," "except it abide," and seeks its all in the Vine. Abiding in the Vine then comes to be nothing more nor less than the restful surrender of the soul to let Christ have all and work all, as completely as in nature the branch knows and seeks nothing but the vine. Abide in Me. I have heard, my Lord, that with every command, Thou also givest the power to obey. With Thy "rise and walk," the lame man leaped, I accept Thy word, "Abide in me," as a word of power, that gives power, and even now I say, Yea, Lord, I will, I do abide in Thee.
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I THE VINE
"I am The Vine, Ye Are The Branches" --John 15:5
In the previous verse Christ had just said: "Abide in me." He had then
announced the great unalterable law of all branch-life, on earth or in Heaven: "not
of itself"; "except it abide." In the opening words of the parable
He had already spoken: "I am the vine." He now repeats the words. He would
have us understand--note well the lesson, simple as it appears, it is the key of
the abiding life--that the only way to obey the command, "Abide in me,"
is to have eye and heart fixed upon Himself. "Abide in me...I am the true vine."
Yea, study this holy mystery until you see Christ as the true Vine, bearing, strengthening,
supplying, inspiring all His branches, being and doing in each branch all it needs,
and the abiding will come of itself. Yes, gaze upon Him as the true Vine, until you
feel what a heavenly Mystery it is, and are compelled to ask the Father to reveal
it to you by His Holy Spirit. He to whom God reveals the glory of the true Vine,
he who sees what Jesus is and waits to do every moment, he cannot but abide. The
vision of Christ is an irresistible attraction; it draws and holds us like a magnet.
Listen ever to the living Christ still speaking to you, and waiting to show you the
meaning and power of His Word: "I am the vine." How much weary labor there
has been in striving to understand what abiding is, how much fruitless effort in
trying to attain it! Why was this? Because the attention was turned to the abiding
as a work we have to do, instead of the living Christ, in whom we were to be kept
abiding, who Himself was to hold and keep us. we thought of abiding as a continual
strain and effort--we forget that it means rest from effort to one who has found
the place of his abode. Do notice how Christ said, "Abide in Me; I am the Vine
that brings forth, and holds, and strengthens, and makes fruitful the branches. Abide
in Me, rest in Me, and let Me do My work. I am the true Vine, all I am, and speak,
and do is divine truth, giving the actual reality of what is said. I am the Vine,
only consent and yield thy all to Me, I will do all in thee."
And so it sometimes comes that souls who have never been specially occupied with
the thought of abiding, are abiding all the time, because they are occupied with
Christ. Not that the word abide is not needful; Christ used it so often, because
it is the very key to the Christian life. But He would have us understand it in its
true sense--"Come out of every other place, and every other trust and occupation,
come out of self with its reasonings and efforts, come and rest in what I shall do.
Live out of thyself; abide in Me. Know that thou art in Me; thou needest no more;
remain there in Me."
"I am the Vine." Christ did not keep this mystery hidden from His disciples.
He revealed it, first in words here, then in power when the Holy Spirit came down.
He will reveal it to us too, first in the thoughts and confessions and desires these
words awaken, then in power by the Spirit. Do let us wait on Him to show us all the
heavenly meaning of the mystery. Let each day, in our quiet time, in the inner chamber
with Him and His Word, our chief thought and aim be to get the heart fixed on Him,
in the assurance: all that a vine ever can do for its branches, my Lord Jesus will
do, is doing, for me. Give Him time, give Him your ear, that He may whisper and explain
the divine secret: "I am the vine." Above all, remember, Christ is the
Vine of God's planting, and you are a branch of God's grafting. Ever stand before
God, in Christ; ever wait for all grace from God, in Christ; ever yield yourself
to bear the more fruit the Husbandman asks, in Christ. And pray much for the revelation
of the mystery that all the love and power of God that rested on Christ is working
in you too. "I am God's Vine," Jesus says; "all I am I have from Him;
all I am is for you; God will work it in you." I am the Vine. Blessed Lord,
speak Thou that word into my soul. Then shall I know that all Thy fullness is for
me. And that I can count upon Thee to stream it into me, and that my abiding is so
easy and so sure when I forget and lose myself in the adoring faith that the Vine
holds the branch and supplies its every need.
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YE THE BRANCHES
"I Am The Vine, Ye Are the Branches" --John 15:5
Christ had already said much of the branch; here He comes to the personal application:
"Ye are the branches of whom I have been speaking. As I am the Vine, engaged
to be and do all the branches need, so I now ask you, in the new dispensation of
the Holy Spirit whom I have been promising you, to accept the place I give you, and
to be My branches on earth." The relationship He seeks to establish is an intensely
personal one: it all hinges on the two little words I and You. And it is for us as
intensely personal as for the first disciples. Let us present ourselves before our
Lord, until He speak to each of us in power, and our whole soul feels it: "I
am the Vine; you are the branch."
Dear disciple of Jesus, however young or feeble, hear the voice. "You are the
branch." You must be nothing less. Let no false humility, no carnal fear of
sacrifice, no unbelieving doubts as to what you feel able for, keep you back from
saying: "I will be a branch, with all that may mean--a branch, very feeble,
but yet as like the Vine as can be, for I am of the same nature, and receive of the
same spirit. A branch, utterly helpless, and yet just as manifestly set apart before
God and men, as wholly given up to the work of bearing fruit, as the Vine itself.
A branch, nothing in myself, and yet resting and rejoicing in the faith that knows
that He will provide for all. Yes, by His grace, I will be nothing less than a branch,
and all He means it to be, that through me, He may bring forth His fruit." You
are the branch.--You need be nothing more. You need not for one single moment of
the day take upon you the responsibility of the Vine. You need not leave the place
of entire dependence and unbounded confidence. You need, least of all, to be anxious
as to how you are to understand the mystery, or fulfill its conditions, or work out
its blessed aim. The Vine will give all and work all. The Father, the Husbandman,
watches over your union with and growth in the Vine. You need be nothing more than
a branch. Only a branch! Let that be your watchword; it will lead in the path of
continual surrender to Christ's working, of true obedience to His every command,
of joyful expectancy of all His grace. Is there anyone who now asks: "How can
I learn to say this aright, `Only be a branch!' and to live it out?" Dear soul,
the character of a branch, its strength, and the fruit it bears, depend entirely
upon the Vine. And your life as branch depends entirely upon your apprehension of
what our Lord Jesus is. Therefore never separate the two words: "I the Vine--you
the branch." Your life and strength and fruit depend upon what your Lord Jesus
is! Therefore worship and trust Him; let Him be your one desire and the one occupation
of your heart. And when you feel that you do not and cannot know Him aright, then
just remember it is part of His responsibility as Vine to make Himself known to you.
He does this not in thoughts and conceptions--no--but in a hidden growth within the
life that is humbly and restfully and entirely given up to wait on Him. The Vine
reveals itself within the branch; thence comes the growth and fruit, Christ dwells
and works within His branch; only be a branch, waiting on Him to do all; He will
be to thee the true Vine. The Father Himself, the divine Husbandman, is able to make
thee a branch worthy of the heavenly Vine. Thou shalt not be disappointed.
Ye are the branches. This word, too Lord! O speak it in power unto my soul. Let not
the branch of the earthly vine put me to shame, but as it only lives to bear the
fruit of the vine, may my life on earth have no wish or aim, but to let Thee bring
forth fruit through me.
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MUCH FRUIT
"He That Abideth in Me, and I in Him, the Same Bringeth
Forth Much Fruit" --John 15:5
Our Lord had spoken of fruit, more fruit. He now adds the thought: much fruit.
There is in the Vine such fullness, the care of the divine Husbandman is so sure
of success, that the much fruit is not a demand, but the simple promise of what must
come to the branch that lives in the double abiding--he in Christ, and Christ in
him. "The same bringeth forth much fruit." It is certain.
Have you ever noticed the difference in the Christian life between work and fruit?
A machine can do work: only life can bear fruit. A law can compel work: only love
can spontaneously bring forth fruit. Work implies effort and labor: the essential
idea of fruit is that it is the silent natural restful produce of our inner life.
The gardener may labor to give his apple tree the digging and manuring, the watering
and the pruning it needs; he can do nothing to produce the apple: "The fruit
of the Spirit is love, peace, joy." The healthy life bears much fruit. The connection
between work and fruit is perhaps best seen in the expression, "fruitful in
every good work." (Col. 1:10). It is only when good works come as the fruit
of the indwelling Spirit that they are acceptable to God. Under the compulsion of
law and conscience, or the influence of inclination and zeal, men may be most diligent
in good works, and yet find that they have but little spiritual result. There can
be no reason but this--their works are man's effort, instead of being the fruit of
the Spirit, the restful, natural outcome of the Spirit's operation within us.
Let all workers come and listen to our holy Vine as He reveals the law of sure and
abundant fruitfulness: "He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth
forth much fruit." The gardener cares for one thing--the strength and healthy
life of his tree: the fruit follows of itself. If you would bear fruit, see that
the inner life is perfectly right, that your relation to Christ Jesus is clear and
close. Begin each day with Him in the morning, to know in truth that you are abiding
in Him and He in you. Christ tells that nothing less will do. It is not your willing
and running, it is not by your might or strength, but--"by my Spirit, saith
the Lord." Meet each new engagement, undertake every new work, with an ear and
heart open to the Master's voice: "He that abideth in me, beareth much fruit."
See you to the abiding; He will see to the fruit, for He will give it in you and
through you.
O my brother, it is Christ must do all! The Vine provides the sap, and the life,
and the strength: the branch waits, and rests, and receives, and bears the fruit.
Oh, the blessedness of being only branches, through whom the Spirit flows and brings
God's life to men! I pray you, take time and ask the Holy Spirit to give you to realize
the unspeakably solemn place you occupy in the mind of God. He has planted you into
His Son with the calling and the power to bear much fruit. Accept that place. Look
much to God, and to Christ, and expect joyfully to be what God has planned to make
you, a fruitful branch. Much fruit! So be it, blessed Lord Jesus. It can be, for
Thou art the Vine. It shall be, for I am abiding in Thee. It must be, for Thy Father
is the Husbandman that cleanses the branch. Yea, much fruit, out of the abundance
of Thy grace.
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YOU CAN DO NOTHING
"Apart From Me Ye Can Do Nothing"
--John 15:5
In everything the life of the branch is to be the exact counterpart of that of
the Vine. Of Himself Jesus had said: "The Son can do nothing of himself."
As the outcome of that entire dependence, He could add: "All that the Father
doeth, doeth the Son also likewise." As Son He did not receive His life from
the Father once for all, but moment by moment. His life was a continual waiting on
the Father for all He was to do. And so Christ says of His disciples: "Ye can
do nothing apart from me." He means it literally. To everyone who wants to live
the true disciple life, to bring forth fruit and glorify God, the message comes:
You can do nothing. What had been said: "He that abideth in me, and I in him,
the same beareth much fruit," is here enforced by the simplest and strongest
of arguments: "Abiding in Me is indispensable, for, you know it, of yourselves
you can do nothing to maintain or act out the heavenly life."
A deep conviction of the truth of this word lies at the very root of a strong spiritual
life. As little as I created myself, as little as I could raise a man from the dead,
can I give myself the divine life. As little as I can give it myself, can I maintain
or increase it: every motion is the work of God through Christ and His Spirit. It
is as a man believes this, that he will take up that position of entire and continual
dependence which is the very essence of the life of faith. With the spiritual eye
he sees Christ every moment supplying grace for every breathing and every deepening
of the spiritual life. His whole heart says Amen to the word: You can do nothing.
And just because he does so, he can also say: "I can do all things in Christ
who strengtheneth me." The sense of helplessness, and the abiding to which it
compels, leads to true fruitfulness and diligence in good works. Apart from me ye
can do nothing.--What a plea and what a call every moment to abide in Christ! We
have only to go back to the vine to see how true it is. Look again at that little
branch, utterly helpless and fruitless except as it receives sap from the vine, and
learn that the full conviction of not being able to do anything apart from Christ
is just what you need to teach you to abide in your heavenly Vine. It is this that
is the great meaning of the pruning Christ spoke of--all that is self must be brought
low, that our confidence may be in Christ alone. "Abide in me"--much fruit!
"Apart from me"--nothing! Ought there to be any doubt as to what we shall
choose?
The one lesson of the parable is--as surely, as naturally as the branch abides in
the vine, You can abide in Christ. For this He is the true Vine; for this God is
the Husbandman; for this you are a branch. Shall we not cry to God to deliver us
forever from the "apart from me," and to make the "abide in me"
an unceasing reality? Let your heart go out to what Christ is, and can do, to His
divine power and His tender love to each of His branches, and you will say evermore
confidently: "Lord! I am abiding; I will bear much fruit. My impotence is my
strength. So be it. Apart from Thee, nothing. In Thee, much fruit."
Apart from Me--you nothing. Lord, I gladly accept the arrangement: I nothing--Thou
all. My nothingness is my highest blessing, because Thou art the Vine, that givest
and workest all. So be it, Lord! I, nothing, ever waiting on Thy fullness. Lord,
reveal to me the glory of this blessed life.
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WITHERED BRANCHES
"If a Man Abide Not in Me, He is Cast Forth as a Branch,
and is Withered; and They Gather Them, and Cast Them into the Fire, and They are
Burned" --John 15:6
The lessons these words teach are very simple and very solemn. A man can come
to such a connection with Christ, that he counts himself to be in Him, and yet he
can be cast forth. There is such a thing as not abiding in Christ, which leads to
withering up and burning. There is such a thing as a withered branch, one in whom
the initial union with Christ appears to have taken place, and in whom yet it is
seen that his faith was but for a time. What a solemn call to look around and see
if there be not withered branches in our churches, to look within and see whether
we are indeed abiding and bearing fruit!
And what may be the cause of this "not abiding." With some it is that they
never understood how the Christian calling leads to holy obedience and to loving
service. They were content with the thought that they had believed, and were safe
from Hell; there was neither motive nor power to abide in Christ--they knew not the
need of it. With others it was that the cares of the world, or its prosperity, choked
the Word: they had never forsaken all to follow Christ. With still others it was
that their religion and their faith was in the wisdom of men, and not in the power
of God. They trusted in the means of grace, or in their own sincerity, or in the
soundness of their faith in justifying grace; they had never come even to seek an
entire abiding in Christ as their only safety. No wonder that, when the hot winds
of temptation or persecution blew, they withered away: they were not truly rooted
in Christ.
Let us open our eyes and see if there be not withered branches all around us in the
churches. Young men, whose confessions were once bright, but who are growing cold.
Or old men, who have retained their profession, but out of whom the measure of life
there once appeared to be has died out. Let ministers and believers take Christ's
words to heart, and see, and ask the Lord whether there is nothing to be done for
branches that are beginning to wither. And let the word Abide ring through the Church
until every believer has caught it--no safety but in a true abiding in Christ. Let
each of us turn within. Is our life fresh, and green, and vigorous, bringing forth
its fruit in its season? (See Ps. 1:3; 92:13, 14; Jer. 17:7, 8.) Let us accept every
warning with a willing mind, and let Christ's "if a man abide not" give
new urgency to His "abide in me." To the upright soul the secret of abiding
will become ever simpler, just the consciousness of the place in which He has put
me; just the childlike resting in my union with Him, and the trustful assurance that
He will keep me. Oh, do let us believe there is a life that knows of no withering,
that is ever green; and that brings forth fruit abundantly!
Withered! O my Father, watch over me, and keep me, and let nothing ever for a moment
hinder the freshness that comes from a full abiding in the Vine. Let the very thought
of a withered branch fill me with holy fear and watchfulness.
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WHATSOEVER YE WILL
"If Ye Abide in Me, and My Words Abide in You, Ask Whatsoever
Ye Will, and it Shall be Done Unto You"
--John 15:7
The Whole place of the branch in the vine is one of unceasing prayer. Without
intermission it is ever calling: "O my vine, send the sap I need to bear Thy
fruit." And its prayers are never unanswered: it asks what it needs, what it
will, and it is done.
The healthy life of the believer in Christ is equally one of unceasing prayer. Consciously
or unconsciously, he lives in continual dependence. The Word of his Lord, "You
can do nothing," has taught him that not more unbroken than the continuance
of the branch in the vine, must be his asking and receiving. The promise of our text
gives us infinite boldness: "Ask whatsoever ye will, and it shall be done unto
you." The promise is given in direct connection with fruit-bearing. Limit it
to yourself and your own needs, and you rob it of its power; you rob yourself of
the power of appropriating it. Christ was sending these disciples out, and they were
ready to give their life for the world; to them He gave the disposal of the treasures
of Heaven. Their prayers would bring the Spirit and the power they needed for their
work. The promise is given in direct connection with the coming of the Spirit. The
Spirit is not mentioned in the parable, just as little as the sap of the vine is
mentioned. But both are meant all through. In the chapter preceding the parable,
our Lord had spoken of the Holy Spirit, in connection with their inner life, being
in them, and revealing Himself within them (14:15-23). In the next chapter He speaks
of the Holy Spirit in connection with their work, coming to them, convincing the
world, and glorifying Him (16:7-14). To avail ourselves of the unlimited prayer promises,
we must be men who are filled with the Spirit, and wholly given up to the work and
glory of Jesus. The Spirit will lead us into the truth of its meaning and the certainty
of its fulfillment.
Let us realize that we can only fulfill our calling to bear much fruit, by praying
much. In Christ are hid all the treasures men around us need; in Him all God's children
are blessed with all spiritual blessings; He is full of grace and truth. But it needs
prayer, much prayer, strong believing prayer, to bring these blessings down. And
let us equally remember that we cannot appropriate the promise without a life given
up for men. Many try to take the promise, and then look round for what they can ask.
This is not the way; but the very opposite. Get the heart burdened with the need
of souls, and the command to save them, and the power will come to claim the promise.
Let us claim it as one of the revelations of our wonderful life in the Vine: He tells
us that if we ask in His name, in virtue of our union with Him, whatsoever it be,
it will be done to us. Souls are perishing because there is too little prayer. God's
children are feeble because there is too little prayer. We bear so little fruit because
there is so little prayer. The faith of this promise would make us strong to pray;
let us not rest till it has entered into our very heart, and drawn us in the power
of Christ to continue and labor and strive in prayer until the blessing comes in
power. To be a branch means not only bearing fruit on earth, but power in prayer
to bring down blessing from Heaven. Abiding fully means praying much. Ask what ye
will. O my Lord, why is it that our hearts are so little able to accept these words
in their divine simplicity? Oh, give me to see that we need nothing less than this
promise to overcome the powers of the world and Satan! Teach us to pray in the faith
of this Thy promise.
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IF YE ABIDE
"If Ye Abide in Me, and My Words, Abide in You, Ask Whatsoever
Ye Will, and it Shall be Done Unto You" --John 15:7
The reason the Vine and its branches are such a true parable of the Christian
life is that all nature has one source and breathes one spirit. The plant world was
created to be to man an object lesson teaching him his entire dependence upon God,
and his security in that dependence. He that clothes the lilies will much more cloth
us. He that gives the trees and the vines their beauty and their fruits, making each
what He meant it to be, will much more certainly make us what He would have us to
be. The only difference is what God works in the trees is by a power of which they
are not conscious. He wants to work in us with our consent. This is the nobility
of man, that he has a will that can cooperate with God in understanding and approving
and accepting what He offers to do. If ye abide--Here is the difference between the
branch of the natural and the branch of the spiritual Vine. The former abides by
force of nature: the latter abides, not by force of will, but by a divine power given
to the consent of the will. Such is the wonderful provision God has made that, what
the power of nature does in the one case, the power of grace will do in the other.
The branch can abide in the Vine. If ye abide in me...ask whatsoever ye will--If
we are to live a true prayer life, with the love and the power and the experience
of prayer marking it, there must be no question about the abiding. And if we abide,
there need be no question about the liberty of asking what we will, and the certainty
of its being done. There is the one condition: "If ye abide in me." There
must be no hesitation about the possibility or the certainty of it. We must gaze
on that little branch and its wonderful power of bearing such beautiful fruit until
we truly learn to abide. And what is its secret? Be wholly occupied with Jesus. Sink
the roots of your being in faith and love and obedience deep down into Him. Come
away out of every other place to abide here. Give up everything for the inconceivable
privilege of being a branch on earth of the glorified Son of God in Heaven. Let Christ
be first. Let Christ be all. Do not be occupied with the abiding--be occupied with
Christ! He will hold you, He will keep you abiding in Him. He will abide in you.
If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you--This He gives as the equivalent of
the other expression: "I in you. If my words abide in you"--that is, not
only in meditation, in memory, in love, in faith--all these words enter into your
will, your being, and constitute your life--if they transform your character into
their own likeness, and you become and are what they speak and mean--ask what ye
will; it shall be done unto you. Your words to God in prayer will be the fruit of
Christ and His words living in you.
Ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you--Believe in the truth of this promise.
Set yourself to be an intercessor for men; a fruit-bearing intercessor, ever calling
down more blessing. Such faith and prayer will help you wonderfully to abide wholly
and unceasingly. If ye abide. Yes, Lord, the power to pray and the power to prevail
must depend on this abiding in Thee. As Thou art the Vine, Thou art the divine Intercessor,
who breathest Thy spirit in us. Oh, for grace to abide simply and wholly in Thee,
and ask great things!
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THE FATHER GLORIFIED
"Herein is My Father Glorified, that Ye Bear Much Fruit" --John 15:8
How can we glorify God? Not by adding to His glory or bringing Him any new glory
that He has not. But simply by allowing His glory to shine out through us, by yielding
ourselves to Him, that His glory may manifest itself in us and through us to the
world. In a vineyard or a vine bearing much fruit, the owner is glorified, as it
tells of his skill and care. In the disciple who bears much fruit, the Father is
glorified. Before men and angels, proof is given of the glory of God's grace and
power; God's glory shines out through him.
This is what Peter means when he writes: "He that ministers, let him minister
as of the ability that God giveth, that God in all things may be glorified through
Jesus Christ." As a man works and serves in a power which comes from God alone,
God gets all the glory. When we confess that the ability came from God alone, he
that does the work, and they who see it, equally glorify God. It was God who did
it. Men judge by the fruit of a garden of what the gardener is. Men judge of God
by the fruit that the branches of the Vine of His planting bears. Little fruit brings
little glory to God. It brings no honor to either the Vine or the Husbandman. "That
ye bear much fruit, herein is my Father glorified." We have sometimes mourned
our lack of fruit, as a loss to ourselves and our fellow men, with complaints of
our feebleness as the cause. Let us rather think of the sin and shame of little fruit
as robbing God of the glory He ought to get from us. Let us learn the secret of bringing
glory to God, serving of the ability which God giveth. The full acceptance of Christ's
Word, "You can do nothing"; the simple faith in God, who worketh all in
all; the abiding in Christ through whom the divine Husbandman does His work and gets
much fruit--this is the life that will bring glory to God. Much fruit--God asks it;
see that you give it. God can be content with nothing less; be you content with nothing
less. Let these words of Christ--fruit, more fruit, much fruit--abide in you, until
you think as He does, and you be prepared to take from Him, the heavenly Vine, what
He has for you. Much fruit: herein is my Father glorified. Let the very height of
the demand be your encouragement. It is so entirely beyond your power, that it throws
you more entirely upon Christ, your true Vine. He can, He will, make it true in you.
Much fruit--God asks because he needs. He does not ask fruit from the branches of
His Vine for show, to prove what He can do. No; He needs it for the salvation of
men: it is in that He is to be glorified. Throw yourself in much prayer on your Vine
and your Husbandman. Cry to God and your Father to give you fruit to bring to men.
Take the burden of the hungry and the perishing on you, as Jesus did when He was
moved with compassion, and your power in prayer, and your abiding, and your bearing
much fruit to the glory of the Father will have a reality and a certainty you never
knew before. The Father glorified. Blessed prospect--God glorifying Himself in me,
showing forth the glory of His goodness and power in what He works in me, and through
me. What a motive to bear much fruit, just as much as He works in me! Father, glorify
Thyself in me.
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TRUE DISCIPLES
"Herein is My Father Glorified, that Ye Bear Much Fruit:
So Shall Ye Be My Disciples" --John 15:8
And are those who do not bear much fruit not disciples? They may be, but in a
backward and immature stage. Of those who bear much fruit, Christ says: "These
are My disciples, such as I would have them be--these are true disciples." Just
as we say of someone in whom the idea of manliness is realized: That is a man! So
our Lord tells who are disciples after His heart, worthy of the name: Those who bear
much fruit. We find this double sense of the word disciple in the Gospel. Sometimes
it is applied to all who accepted Christ's teaching. At other times it includes only
the inner circle of those who followed Christ wholly, and gave themselves to His
training for service. The difference has existed throughout all ages. There have
always been a smaller number of God's people who have sought to serve Him with their
whole heart, while the majority have been content with a very small measure of the
knowledge of His grace and will. And what is the difference between this smaller
inner circle and the many who do not seek admission to it? We find it in the words:
much fruit. With many Christians the thought of personal safety, which at their first
awakening was a legitimate one, remains to the end the one aim of their religion.
The idea of service and fruit is always a secondary and very subordinate one. The
honest longing for much fruit does not trouble them. Souls that have heard the call
to live wholly for their Lord, to give their life for Him as He gave His for them,
can never be satisfied with this. Their cry is to bear as much fruit as they possibly
can, as much as their Lord ever can desire or give in them.
Bear much fruit: so shall ye be My disciples--Let me beg every reader to consider
these words most seriously. Be not content with the thought of gradually doing a
little more or better work. In this way it may never come. Take the words, much fruit,
as the revelation of your heavenly Vine of what you must be, of what you can be.
Accept fully the impossibility, the utter folly of attempting it in your strength.
Let the words call you to look anew upon the Vine, an undertaking to live out its
heavenly fullness in you. Let them waken in you once again the faith and the confession:
"I am a branch of the true Vine; I can bear much fruit to His glory, and the
glory of the Father."
We see in God's Word everywhere two classes of disciples. Let there be no hesitation
as to where we take our place. Let us ask Him to reveal to us how He ask and claims
a life wholly given up to Him, to be as full of His Spirit as He can make us. Let
our desire be nothing less than perfect cleansing, unbroken abiding, closest communion,
abundant fuitfulness--true branches of the true Vine. The world is perishing, the
church is failing, Christ's cause is suffering, Christ is grieving on account of
the lack of wholehearted Christians, bearing much fruit. Though you scarce see what
it implies or how it is to come, say to Him that you are His branch to bear much
fruit; that you are ready to be His disciple in His own meaning of the word. My disciples.
Blessed Lord, much fruit is the proof that Thou the true Vine hast in me a true branch,
a disciple wholly at Thy disposal. Give me, I pray Thee, the childlike consciousness
that my fruit is pleasing to Thee, what Thou countest much fruit.
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THE WONDERFUL LOVE
"Even as the Father Hath Loved Me, I Also Have Loved you" --John 15:9
Here Christ leaves the language of parable, and speaks plainly out of the Father.
Much as the parable could teach, it could not teach the lesson of love. All that
the vine does for the branch, it does under the compulsion of a law of nature: there
is no personal living love to the branch. We are in danger of looking to Christ as
a Saviour and a supplier of every need, appointed by God, accepted and trusted by
us, without any sense of the intensity of personal affection in which Christ embraces
us, and our life alone can find its true happiness. Christ seeks to point us to this.
And how does He do so? He leads us once again to Himself, to show us how identical
His own life is with ours. Even as the Father loved Him, He loves us. His life as
vine dependent on the Father was a life in the Father's love; that love was His strength
and His joy; in the power of that divine love resting on Him He lived and died. If
we are to live like Him, as branches to be truly like our Vine, we must share in
this too. Our life must have its breath and being in a heavenly love as much as His.
What the Father's love was to Him, His love will be to us. If that love made Him
the true Vine, His love can make us true branches. "Even as the Father hath
loved me, so have I loved you."
Even as the Father hath loved Me--And how did the Father love Him? The infinite desire
and delight of God to communicate to the Son all He had Himself, to take the Son
into the most complete equality with Himself, to live in the Son and have the Son
live in Him--this was the love of God to Christ. It is a mystery of glory of which
we can form no conception, we can only bow and worship as we try to think of it.
And with such a love, with this very same love, Christ longs in an infinite desire
and delight to communicate to us all He is and has, to make us partakers of His own
nature and blessedness, to live in us and have us live in Himself. And now, if Christ
loves us with such an intense, such an infinite divine love, what is it that hinders
it triumphing over every obstacle and getting full possession of us? The answer is
simple. Even as the love of the Father to Christ, so His love to us is a divine mystery,
too high for us to comprehend or attain to by any effort of our own. It is only the
Holy Spirit who can shed abroad and reveal in its all-conquering power without intermission
this wonderful love of God in Christ. It is the vine itself that must give the branch
its growth and fruit by sending up its sap. It is Christ Himself must by His Holy
Spirit dwell in the heart; then shall we know and have in us the love that passeth
knowledge. As the Father loved Me, so have I loved you--Shall we not draw near to
the personal living Christ, and trust Him, and yield all to Him, that He may love
this love into us? Just as he knew and rejoiced every hour--the Father loveth Me--we
too may live in the unceasing consciousness--as the Father loved Him, so He loves
me.
As the Father loved Me, so have I loved you. Dear Lord, I am only beginning to apprehend
how exactly the life of the Vine is to be that of the branch too. Thou art the Vine,
because the Father loved Thee, and poured His love through Thee. And so Thou lovest
me, and my life as branch is to be like Thine, a receiving and a giving out of heavenly
love.
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ABIDE IN MY LOVE
"Even as the Father Hath Loved Me, I Also Have Loved You:
Abide Ye in My Love" --John 15:9
Abide in My love--We speak of a man's home as his abode. Our abode, the home of
our soul, is to be the love of Christ. We are to live our life there, to be at home
there all the day: this is what Christ means our life to be, and really can make
it. Our continuous abiding in the Vine is to be an abiding in His love.
You have probably heard or read of what is called the higher, or the deeper life,
of the richer or the fuller life, of the life abundant. And you possibly know that
some have told of a wonderful change, by which their life of continual failure and
stumbling had been changed into a very blessed experience of being kept and strengthened
and made exceeding glad. If you asked them how it was this great blessing came to
them, many would tell you it was simply this, that they were led to believe that
this abiding in Christ's love was meant to be a reality, and that they were made
willing to give up everything for it, and then enabled to trust Christ to make it
true to them.
The love of the Father to the Son is not a sentiment--it is a divine life, an infinite
energy, an irresistible power. It carried Christ through life and death and the grave.
The Father loved Him and dwelt in Him, and did all for Him. So the love of Christ
to us too is an infinite living power that will work in us all He delights to give
us. The feebleness of our Christian life is that we do not take time to believe that
this divine love does really delight in us, and will possess and work all in us.
We do not take time to look at the Vine bearing the branch so entirely, working all
in it so completely. We strive to do for ourselves what Christ alone can, what Christ,
oh, so lovingly, longs to do for us. And this now is the secret of the change we
spoke of, and the beginning of a new life, when the soul sees this infinite love
willing to do all, and gives itself up to it. "Abide ye in my love." To
believe that, it is possible so to live moment by moment; to believe that everything
that makes it difficult or impossible will be overcome by Christ Himself; to believe
that Love really means an infinite longing to give itself wholly to us and never
leave us; and in this faith to cast ourselves on Christ to work it in us; this is
the secret of the true Christian life. And how to come to this faith? Turn away from
the visible if you would see and possess the invisible. Take more time with Jesus,
gazing on Him as the heavenly Vine, living in the love of the Father, wanting you
to live in His love. Turn away from yourself and your efforts and your faith, if
you would have the heart filled with Him and the certainty of His love. Abiding means
going out from everything else, to occupy one place and stay there. Come away from
all else, and set your heart on Jesus, and His love, that love will waken your faith
and strengthen it. Occupy yourself with that love, worship it, wait for it. You may
be sure it will reach out to you, and by its power take you up into itself as your
abode and your home. Abide in My love. Lord Jesus, I see it, it was Thy abiding in
Thy Father's love that made Thee the true Vine, with Thy divine fullness of love
and blessing for us. Oh, that I may even so, as a branch, abide in Thy love, for
its fullness to fill me and overflow on all around.
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OBEY AND ABIDE
"If Ye Keep My Commandments, Ye Shall Abide In My Love" --John 15:10
In our former meditation reference was made to the entrance into a life of rest
and strength which has often come through a true insight into the personal love of
Christ, and the assurance that that love indeed meant that He would keep the soul.
In connection with that transition, and the faith that sees and accepts it, the word
surrender or consecration is frequently used. The soul sees that it cannot claim
the keeping of this wonderful love unless it yields itself to a life of entire obedience.
It sees too that the faith that can trust Christ for keeping from sinning must prove
its sincerity by venturing at once to trust Him for strength to obey. In that faith
it dares to give up and cut off everything that has hitherto hindered it, and to
promise and expect to live a life that is well pleasing to God. This is the thought
we have here now in our Saviour's teaching. After having in the words, "Abide
in my love," spoken of a life in His love as a necessity, because it is at once
a possibility and an obligation, He states what its one condition is: "If ye
keep my commandments, ye shall abide in my love." This is surely not meant to
close the door to the abode of His love which he had just opened up. Not in the most
distant way does it suggest the thought which some are too ready to entertain, that
as we cannot keep His commandments, we cannot abide in His love. No; the precept
is a promise: "Abide in my love," could not be a precept if it were not
a promise. And so the instruction as to the way through this open door points to
no unattainable ideal; the love that invites to her blessed abode reaches out the
hand, and enables us to keep the commandments. Let us not fear, in the strength of
our ascended Lord, to take the vow of obedience, and give ourselves to the keeping
of His commandments. Through His will, loved and done, lies the path to His love.
Only let us understand well what it means. It refers to our performance of all that
we know to be God's will. There may be things doubtful, of which we are not sure.
A sin of ignorance has still the nature of sin in it. There may be involuntary sins,
which rise up in the flesh, which we cannot control or overcome. With regard to these
God will deal in due tome in the way of searching and humbling, and if we be simple
and faithful, give us larger deliverance than we dare expect. But all this may be
found in a truly obedient soul. Obedience has reference to the positive keeping of
the commandments of our Lord, and the performance of His will in everything in which
we know it. This is a possible degree of grace, and it is the acceptance in Christ's
strength of such obedience as the purpose of our heart, of which our Saviour speaks
here. Faith in Christ as our Vine, in His enabling and sanctifying power, fits us
for this obedience of faith, and secures a life of abiding in His love.
If ye keep My commandments, ye shall abide in My love--It is the heavenly Vine unfolding
the mystery of the life He gives. It is to those abiding in Him to whom He opens
up the secret of the full abiding in His love. It is the wholehearted surrender in
everything to do His will, that gives access to a life in the abiding enjoyment of
His love. Obey and abide. Gracious Lord, teach me this lesson, that it is only through
knowing Thy will one can know Thy heart, and only through doing that will one can
abide in Thy love. Lord, teach me that as worthless as is the doing in my own strength,
so essential and absolutely indispensable is the doing of faith in Thy strength,
if I would abide in Thy love.
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YE, EVEN AS I
"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" --John 15:10
We have had occasion more than once to speak of the perfect similarity of the
vine and the branch in nature, and therefore in aim. Here Christ speaks no longer
in a parable, but tells us plainly out of how His own life is the exact model of
ours. He had said that it is alone by obedience we can abide in His love. He now
tells that this was the way in which He abode in the Father's love. As the Vine,
so the branch. His life and strength and joy had been in the love of the Father:
it was only by obedience He abode in it. We may find our life and strength and joy
in His love all the day, but it is only by an obedience like His we can abide in
it. Perfect conformity to the Vine is one of the most precious of the lessons of
the branch. It was by obedience Christ as Vine honored the Father as Husbandman;
it is by obedience the believer as branch honors Christ as Vine. Obey and abide--That
was the law of Christ's life as much as it is to be that of ours. He was made like
us in all things, that we might be like Him in all things. He opened up a path in
which we may walk even as He walked. He took our human nature to teach us how to
wear it, and show us how obedience, as it is the first duty of the creature, is the
only way to abide in the favor of God and enter into His glory. And now He comes
to instruct and encourage us, and asks us to keep His commandments, even as He kept
His Father's commandments and abides in His love. The divine fitness of this connection
between obeying and abiding, between God's commandments and His love, is easily seen.
God's will is the very center of His divine perfection. As revealed in His commandments,
it opens up the way for the creature to grow into the likeness of the Creator. In
accepting and doing His will, I rise into fellowship with Him. Therefore it was that
the Son, when coming into the world, spoke: "I come to do thy will, O God"!
This was the place and this would be the blessedness of the creature. This was what
he had lost in the Fall. This was what Christ came to restore. This is what, as the
heavenly Vine, He asks of us and imparts to us, that even as He by keeping His Father's
commandments abode in His love, we should keep His commandments and abide in His
love. Ye, even as I--The branch cannot bear fruit except as it has exactly the same
life as the Vine. Our life is to be the exact counterpart of Christ's life. It can
be, just in such measure as we believe in Him as the Vine, imparting Himself and
His life to His branches. "Ye, even as I," the Vine says: one law, one
nature, one fruit. Do let us take from our Lord the lesson of obedience as the secret
of abiding. Let us confess that simple, implicit, universal obedience has taken too
little the place it should have. Christ died for us as enemies, when we were disobedient.
He took us up into His love; now that we are in Him, His Word is: "Obey and
abide; ye, even as I." Let us give ourselves to a willing and loving obedience.
He will keep us abiding in His love.
Ye, even as I. O my blessed Vine, who makest the branch in everything partake of
Thy life and likeness, in this too I am to be like Thee: as Thy life in the Father's
love through obedience, so mine in Thy love! Saviour, help me, that obedience may
indeed be the link between Thee and me.
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JOY
"These Things Have I Spoken Unto You, That My Joy May
Be in You, and That Your Joy May Be Fulfilled" --John
15:11
If any one asks the question, "How can I be a happy Christian?" our
Lord's answer is very simple: "These things," about the Vine and the branches,
"I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be fulfilled."
"You cannot have My joy without My life. Abide in Me, and let Me abide in you,
and My joy will be in you." All healthy life is a thing of joy and beauty; live
undividedly the branch life; you will have His joy in full measure.
To many Christians the thought of a life wholly abiding in Christ is one of strain
and painful effort. They cannot see that the strain and effort only come, as long
as we do not yield ourselves unreservedly to the life of Christ in us. The very first
words of the parable are not yet opened up to them: "I am the true Vine; I undertake
all and provide for all; I ask nothing of the branch but that it yields wholly to
Me, and allows Me to do all. I engage to make and keep the branch all that it ought
to be." Ought it not to be an infinite and unceasing joy to have the Vine thus
work all, and to know that it is none less than the blessed Son of God in His love
who is each moment bearing us and maintaining our life? That My joy may be in you--We
are to have Christ's own joy in us. And what is Christ's own joy? There is no joy
like love. There is no joy but love. Christ had just spoken of the Father's love
and His own abiding in it, and of His having loved us with that same love. His joy
is nothing but the joy of love, of being loved and of loving. It was the joy of receiving
His Father's love and abiding in it, and then the joy of passing on that love and
pouring it out on sinners. It is this joy He wants us to share: the joy of being
loved of the Father and of Him; the joy of in our turn loving and living for those
around us. This is just the joy of being truly branches: abiding in His love, and
then giving up ourselves in love to bear fruit for others. Let us accept His life,
as He gives it in us as the Vine, His joy will be ours: the joy of abiding in His
love, the joy of loving like Him, of loving with His love.
And that your joy may be fulfilled--That it may be complete, that you may be filled
with it. How sad that we should so need to be reminded that as God alone is the fountain
of all joy, "God our exceeding joy," the only way to be perfectly happy
is to have as much of God, as much of His will and fellowship, as possible! Religion
is meant to be in everyday life a thing of unspeakable joy. And why do so many complain
that it is not so? Because they do not believe that there is no joy like the joy
of abiding in Christ and in His love, and being branches through whom He can pour
out His love on a dying world.
Oh, that Christ's voice might reach the heart of every young Christian, and persuade
him to believe that His joy is the only true joy, that His joy can become ours and
truly fill us, and that the sure and simple way of living in it is--only this--to
abide as branches in Him our heavenly Vine. Let the truth enter deep into us--as
long as our joy is not full, it is a sign that we do not yet know our heavenly Vine
aright; every desire for a fuller joy must only urge us to abide more simply and
more fully in His love.
My joy--your joy. In this too it is: as the Vine, so the branch; all the Vine in
the branch. Thy joy is our joy--Thy joy in us, and our joy fulfilled. Blessed Lord,
fill me with Thy joy--the joy of being loved and blessed with a divine love; the
joy of loving and blessing others.
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LOVE ONE ANOTHER
"This is My Commandment, That Ye Love One Another" --John 15:12
God is love. His whole nature and perfection is love, living not for Himself,
but to dispense life and blessing. In His love He begat the Son, that He might give
all to Him. In His love He brought forth creatures that He might make them partakers
of His blessedness. Christ is the Son of God's love, the bearer, the revealer, the
communicator of that love. His life and death were all love. Love is His life, and
the life He gives. He only lives to love, to live out His life of love in us, to
give Himself in all who will receive Him. The very first thought of the true Vine
is love--living only to impart His life to the branches.
The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of love. He cannot impart Christ's life without imparting
His love. Salvation is nothing but love conquering and entering into us; we have
just as much of salvation as we have of love. Full salvation is perfect love.
No wonder that Christ said: "A new commandment I give unto you"; "This
is my commandment"--the one all-inclusive commandment--"that ye love one
another." The branch is not only one with the vine, but with all its other branches;
they drink one spirit, they form one body, they bear one fruit. Nothing can be more
unnatural than that Christians should not love one another, even as Christ loved
them. The life they received from their heavenly Vine is nothing but love. This is
the one thing He asks above all others. "Hereby shall all men know that ye are
my disciples...love one another." As the special sort of vine is known by the
fruit it bears, the nature of the heavenly Vine is to be judged of by the love His
disciples have to one another.
See that you obey this commandment. Let your "obey and abide" be seen in
this. Love your brethren as the way to abide in the love of your Lord. Let your vow
of obedience begin here. Love one another. Let your intercourse with the Christians
in your own family be holy, tender, Christlike love. Let your thoughts of the Christians
round you be, before everything, in the spirit of Christ's love. Let your life and
conduct be the sacrifice of love--give your self up to think of their sins or their
needs, to intercede for them, to help and to serve them. Be in your church or circle
the embodiment of Christ's love. The life Christ lives in you is love; let the life
in which you live it out be all love. But, man, you write as if all this was so natural
and simple and easy. Is it at all possible thus to live and thus to love? My answer
is: Christ commands it: you must obey. Christ means it: you must obey, or you cannot
abide in His love.
But I have tried and failed. I see no prospect of living like Christ. Ah! that is
because you have failed to take in the first word of the parable--"I am the
true Vine: I give all you need as a branch, I give all I myself have." I pray
you, let the sense of past failure and present feebleness drive you to the Vine.
He is all love. He loves to give. He gives love. He will teach you to love, even
as He loved. Love one another. Dear Lord Jesus, Thou art all love; the life Thou
gavest us is love; Thy new commandment, and Thy badge of discipleship is, "Love
one another." I accept the charge: with the love with which Thou lovest me,
and I love Thee, I will love my brethren.
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EVEN AS I HAVE LOVED YOU
"This is My Commandment, That Ye Love One Another, Even
as I Have Loved You" --John 15:12
This is the second time our Lord uses the expression--Even as I. The first time
it was of His relation to the Father, keeping His commandments, and abiding in His
love. Even so we are to keep Christ's commandments, and abide in His love. The second
time He speaks of His relation to us as the rule of our love to our brethren: "Love
one another, as I have loved you." In each case His disposition and conduct
is to be the law for ours. It is again the truth we have more than once insisted
on--perfect likeness between the Vine and the branch.
Even as I--But is it not a vain thing to imagine that we can keep His commandments,
and love the brethren, even as He kept His Father's, and as He loved us? And must
not the attempt end in failure and discouragement? Undoubtedly, if we seek to carry
out the injunction in our strength, or without a full apprehension of the truth of
the Vine and its branches. But if we understand that the "even as I" is
just the one great lesson of the parable, the one continual language of the Vine
to the branch, we shall see that it is not the question of what we feel able to accomplish,
but of what Christ is able to work in us. These high and holy commands--"Obey,
even as I! Love, even as I"--are just meant to bring us to the consciousness
of our impotence, and through that to waken us to the need and the beauty and the
sufficiency of what is provided for us in the Vine. We shall begin to hear the Vine
speaking every moment to the branch: "Even as I. Even as I: My life is your
life; and have a share in all My fullness; the Spirit in you, and the fruit that
comes from you, is all just the same as in Me. Be not afraid, but let your faith
grasp each "Even as I" as the divine assurance that because I live in you,
you may and can live like Me." But why, if this really be the meaning of the
parable, if this really be the life a branch may live,who do so few realize it? Because
they do not know the heavenly mystery of the Vine. They know much of the parable
and its beautiful lessons. But the hidden spiritual mystery of the Vine in His divine
omnipotence and nearness, bearing and supplying them all the day--this they do not
know, because they have not waited on God's Spirit to reveal it to them.
Love one another, even as I have loved you--"Ye, even as I." How are we
to begin if we are really to learn the mystery? With the confession that we need
to be brought to an entirely new mode of life, because we have never yet known Christ
as the Vine in the completeness of His quickening and transforming power. With the
surrender to be cleansed from all that is of self, and detached from all that is
in the world, to live only and wholly as Christ lived for the glory of the Father.
And then with the faith that this "even as I" is in very deed what Christ
is ready to make true, the very life the Vine will maintain in the branch wholly
dependent upon Him. Even as I. Ever again it is, my blessed Lord, as the Vine, so
the branch--one life, one spirit, one obedience, one joy, one love. Lord Jesus, in
the faith that Thou art my Vine, and that I am Thy branch, I accept Thy command as
a promise, and take Thy "even as I" as the simple revelation of what Thou
dost work in me. Yea, Lord, as Thou hast loved, I will love.
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CHRIST'S FRIENDSHIP: ITS ORIGIN
"Greater Love Hath No Man Than This, That a Man Lay Down
His Life for His Friends" --John 15:13
In the three following verses our Lord speaks of His relation to His disciples
under a new aspect--that of friendship. He point us to the love in which it on His
side has its origin (v.13): to the obedience on our part by which it is maintained
(v.14); and then to the holy intimacy to which it leads (v.15).
Our relation to Christ is one of love. In speaking of this previously, He showed
us what His love was in its heavenly glory; the same love with which the Father had
loved Him. Here we have it in its earthly manifestation--lay down His life for us.
"Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends."
Christ does indeed long to have us know that the secret root and strength of all
He is and does for us as the Vine is love. As we learn to believe this, we shall
feel that here is something which we not only need to think and know about, but a
living power, a divine life which we need to receive within us. Christ and His love
are inseparable; they are identical. God is love, and Christ is love. God and Christ
and the divine love can only be known by having them, by their life and power working
within us. "This is eternal life, that they know thee"; there is no knowing
God but by having the life; the life working in us alone gives the knowledge. And
even so the love; if we would know it, we must drink of its living stream, we must
have it shed forth by the Holy Spirit in us.
"Greater love hath no man than this, that a man give his life for his friends."
The life is the most precious thing a man has; the life is all he is; the life is
himself. This is the highest measure of love: when a man gives his life, he hold
nothing back, he gives all he has and is. It is this our Lord Jesus wants to make
clear to us concerning His mystery of the Vine; with all He has He has placed Himself
at our disposal. He wants us to count Him our very own; He wants to be wholly our
possession, that we may be wholly His possession. He gave His life for us in death
not merely as a passing act, that when accomplished was done with; no, but as a making
Himself ours for eternity. Life for life; He gave His life for us to possess that
we might give our life for Him to possess. This is what is taught by the parable
of the Vine and the branch, in their wonderful identification, in their perfect union.
It is as we know something of this, not by reason or imagination, but deep down in
the heart and life, that we shall begin to see what ought to be our life as branches
of the heavenly Vine. He gave Himself to death; He lost Himself, that we might find
life in Him. This is the true Vine, who only lives to live in us. This is the beginning
and the root of that holy friendship to which Christ invites us.
Great is the mystery of godliness! Let us confess our ignorance and unbelief. Let
us cease from our own understanding and our own efforts to master it. Let us wait
for the Holy Spirit who dwells within us to reveal it. Let us trust His infinite
love, which gave its life for us, to take possession and rejoice in making us wholly
its own. His life for His friends. How wonderful the lessons of the Vine, giving
its very life to its branches! And Jesus gave His life for His friends. And that
love gives itself to them and in them. My heavenly Vine, oh, teach me how wholly
Thou longest to live in me!
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CHRIST'S FRIENDSHIP: ITS EVIDENCE
"Ye Are My Friends, if Ye Do the Things Which I Command
You" --John 15:14
Our Lord has said what He gave as proof of His friendship: He gave His life for
us. He now tells us what our part is to be--to do the things which He commands. He
gave His life to secure a place for His love in our hearts to rule us; the response
His love calls us to, and empowers us for, is that we do what He commands us. As
we know the dying love, we shall joyfully obey its commands. As we obey the commands,
we shall know the love more fully. Christ had already said: "If ye keep my commandments,
ye shall abide in my love." He counts it needful to repeat the truth again:
the one proof of our faith in His love, the one way to abide in it, the one mark
of being true branches is--to do the things which He commands us. He began with absolute
surrender of His life for us. He can ask nothing less from us. This alone is a life
in His friendship.
This truth, of the imperative necessity of obedience, doing all that Christ commands
us, has not the place in our Christian teaching and living that Christ meant it to
have. We have given a far higher place to privilege than to duty. We have not considered
implicit obedience as a condition of true discipleship. The secret thought that it
is impossible to do the things He commands us, and that therefore it cannot be expected
of us, and a subtle and unconscious feeling that sinning is a necessity have frequently
robbed both precepts and promises of their power. The whole relation to Christ has
become clouded and lowered, the waiting on His teaching, the power to hear and obey
His voice, and through obedience to enjoy His love and friendship, have been enfeebled
by the terrible mistake. Do let us try to return to the true position, take Christ's
words as most literally true, and make nothing less the law of our life: "Ye
are my friends, if ye do the things that I command you." Surely our Lord asks
nothing less than that we heartily and truthfully say: "Yea, Lord, what Thou
dost command, that will I do." These commands are to be done as a proof of friendship.
The power to do them rests entirely in the personal relationship to Jesus. For a
friend I could do what I would not for another. The friendship of Jesus is so heavenly
and wonderful, it comes to us so as the power of a divine love entering in and taking
possession, the unbroken fellowship with Himself is so essential to it, that it implies
and imparts a joy and a love which make the obedience a delight. The liberty to claim
the friendship of Jesus, the power to enjoy it, the grace to prove it in all its
blessedness--all come as we do the things He commands us.
Is not the one thing needful for us that we ask our Lord to reveal Himself to us
in the dying love in which He proved Himself our friend, and then listen as He says
to us: "Ye are My friends." As we see what our Friend has done for us,
and what as unspeakable blessedness it is to have Him call us friends, the doing
His commands will become the natural fruit of our life in his love. We shall not
fear to say: "Yea, Lord, we are Thy friends, and do what Thou dost command us."
If ye do. Yes, it is in doing that we are blessed, that we abide in His love, that
we enjoy His friendship. "If ye do what I command you!" O my Lord, let
Thy holy friendship lead me into the love of all Thy commands, and let the doing
of Thy commands lead me ever deeper into Thy friendship.
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CHRIST'S FRIENDSHIP: ITS INTIMACY
"No Longer Do I Call You Servants; for the Servant Knoweth
Not What His Lord Doeth: But I Have Called You Friends; for All Things That I Heard
From My Father, I Have Made Known Unto You" --John 15:15
The highest proof of true friendship, and one great source of its blessedness,
is the intimacy that holds nothing back, and admits the friend to share our inmost
secrets. It is a blessed thing to be Christ's servant; His redeemed ones delight
to call themselves His slaves. Christ had often spoken of the disciples as His servants.
In His great love our Lord now says: "No longer do I call you servants";
with the coming of the Holy Spirit a new era was to be inaugurated. "The servant
knoweth not what his Lord doeth"--he has to obey without being consulted or
admitted into the secret of all his master's plans. "But, I have called you
friends, for all things I heard from my Father I have made known unto you."
Christ's friends share with Him in all the secrets the Father has entrusted to Him.
Let us think what this means. When Christ spoke of keeping His Father's commandments,
He did not mean merely what was written in Holy Scripture, but those special commandments
which were communicated to Him day by day, and from hour to hour. It was of these
He said: "The Father loveth the Son, and showeth him all things that he doeth,
and he will show him greater things." All that Christ did was God's working.
God showed it to Christ, so that He carried out the Father's will and purpose, not,
as man often does, blindly and unintelligently, but with full understanding and approval.
As one who stood in God's counsel, He knew God's plan. And this now is the blessedness
of being Christ's friends, that we do not, as servants, do His will without much
spiritual insight into its meaning and aim, but are admitted, as an inner circle,
into some knowledge of God's more secret thoughts. From the Day of Pentecost on,
by the Holy Spirit, Christ was to lead His disciples into the spiritual apprehension
of the mysteries of the kingdom, of which He had hitherto spoken only by parables.
Friendship delights in fellowship. Friends hold council. Friends dare trust to each
other what they would not for anything have others know. What is it that gives a
Christian access to this holy intimacy with Jesus? That gives him the spiritual capacity
for receiving the communications Christ has to make of what the Father has shown
Him? "Ye are my friends if ye do what I command you." It is loving obedience
that purifies the soul. That refers not only to the commandments of the Word, but
to that blessed application of the Word to our daily life, which none but our Lord
Himself can give. But as these are waited for in dependence and humility, and faithfully
obeyed, the soul becomes fitted for ever closer fellowship, and the daily life may
become a continual experience: "I have called you friends; for all things I
have heard from my Father, I have made known unto you." I have called you friends.
What an unspeakable honor! What a heavenly privilege! O Saviour, speak the word with
power into my soul: "I have called you My friend, whom I love, whom I trust,
to whom I make known all that passes between my Father and Me."
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ELECTION
"Ye Did Not Choose Me, But I Chose You, and Appointed
You That Ye Should Go and Bear Fruit" --John 15:16
The branch does not choose the vine, or decide on which vine it will grow. The
vine brings forth the branch, as and where it will. Even so Christ says: "Ye
did not choose me, but I chose you." But some will say is not just this the
difference between the branch in the natural and in the spiritual world, that man
has a will and a power of choosing, and that it is in virtue of his having decided
to accept Christ, his having chosen Him as Lord, that he is now a branch? This is
undoubtedly true. And yet it is only half a truth. The lesson of the Vine, and the
teaching of our Lord, points to the other half, the deeper, the divine side of our
being in Christ. If He had not chosen us, we had never chosen Him. Our choosing Him
was the result of His choosing us, and taking hold of us. In the very nature of things,
it is His prerogative as Vine to choose and create His own branch. We owe all we
are to "the election of grace." If we want to know Christ as the true Vine,
the sole origin and strength of the branch life, and ourselves as branches in our
absolute, most blessed, and most secure dependence upon Him, let us drink deep of
this blessed truth: "Ye did not choose me, but I chose you." And with what
view does Christ say this? That they may know what the object is for which He chose
them, and find, in their faith in His election, the certainty of fulfilling their
destiny. Throughout Scripture this is the great object of the teaching of election.
"Predestinated to be conformed to the image of his son." (to be branches
in the image and likeness of the Vine). "Chosen that we should be holy."
"Chosen to salvation, through sanctification of the Spirit." "Elect
in sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience." Some have abused the doctrine
of election, and others, for fear of its abuse, have rejected it, because they have
overlooked this teaching. They have occupied themselves with its hidden origin in
eternity, with the inscrutable mysteries of the counsels of God instead of accepting
the revelation of its purpose in time, and the blessings it brings into our Christian
life.
Just think what these blessings are. In our verse Christ reveals His twofold purpose
in choosing us to be His branches: that we may bear fruit on earth, and have power
in prayer in Heaven. What confidence the thought that He has chosen us for this gives,
that He will not fail to fit us for carrying out His purpose! What assurance that
we can bear fruit that will abide, and can pray so as to obtain! What a continual
call to the deepest humility and praise, to the most entire dependence and expectancy!
He would not choose us for what we are not fit for, or what He could not fit us for.
He has chosen us; this is the pledge, He will do all in us. Let us listen in silence
of soul to our holy Vine speaking to each of us: "You did not choose Me!"
And let us say, "Yea, Lord, but I chose You! Amen, Lord!" Ask Him to show
what this means. In Him, the true Vine, your life as branch has its divine origin,
its eternal security, and the power to fulfill His purpose. From Him to whose will
of love you owe all, you may expect all. In Him, His purpose, and His power, and
His faithfulness, in His love let me abide.
I chose you. Lord, teach me what this means--that Thou hast set Thy heart on me,
and chosen me to bear fruit that will abide, and to pray prayer that will prevail.
In this Thine eternal purpose my soul would rest itself and say: "What He chose
me for I will be, I can be, I shall be."
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ABIDING FRUIT
"I Chose You, and Appointed You, That Ye Should Go and
Bear Fruit, and That Your Fruit Should Abide" --John 15:16
There are some fruits that will not keep. One sort of pears or apples must be
used at once; another sort can be kept over till next year. So there is in Christian
work some fruit that does not last. There may be much that pleases and edified, and
yet there is no permanent impression made on the power of the world or the state
of the Church. On the other hand, there is work that leaves its mark for generations
or for eternity. In it the power of God makes itself lastingly felt. It is the fruit
of which Paul speaks when he describes the two styles of ministry: "My preaching
was not in persuasive words of wisdom, but in demonstrations of the Spirit and of
power; that your faith should not stand in the wisdom of men, but in the power of
God." The more of man with his wisdom and power, the less of stability; the
more of God's Spirit, the more of a faith standing in God's power.
Fruit reveals the nature of the tree from which it comes. What is the secret of bearing
fruit that abides? The answer is simple. It is as our life abides in Christ, as we
abide in Him, that the fruit we bear will abide. The more we allow all that is of
human will and effort to be cut down short and cleansed away by the divine Husbandman,
the more intensely our being withdraws itself from the outward that God may work
in us by His Spirit; that is, the more wholly we abide in Christ, the more will our
fruit abide. What a blessed thought! He chose you, and appointed you to bear fruit,
and that your fruit should abide. He never meant one of His branches to bring forth
fruit that should not abide. The deeper I enter into the purpose of this His electing
grace, the surer my confidence will become that I can bring forth fruit to eternal
life, for myself and others. The deeper I enter into this purpose of His electing
love, the more I will realize what the link is between the purpose from eternity,
and the fruit to eternity: the abiding in Him. The purpose is His, He will carry
it out; the fruit is His, He will bring it forth; the abiding is His, He will maintain
it. Let everyone who professes to be a Christian worker, pause. Ask whether you are
leaving your mark for eternity on those around you. It is not your preaching or teaching,
your strength of will or power to influence, that will secure this. All depends on
having your life full of God and His power. And that again depends upon your living
the truly branchlike life of abiding--very close and unbroken fellowship with Christ.
It is the branch, that abides in Him, that brings forth much fruit, fruit that will
abide. Blessed Lord, reveal to my soul, I pray Thee, that Thou hast chosen me to
bear much fruit. Let this be my confidence, that Thy purpose can be realized--Thou
didst choose me. Let this be my power to forsake everything and give myself to Thee.
Thou wilt Thyself perfect what Thou hast begun. Draw me so to dwell in the love and
the certainty of that eternal purpose, that the power of eternity may posses me,
and the fruit I bear may abide. That ye may bear fruit. O my heavenly Vine, it is
beginning to dawn upon my soul that fruit, more fruit--much fruit--abiding fruit
is the one thing Thou hast to give me, and the one thing as branch I have to give
Thee! Here I am. Blessed Lord, work out Thy purpose in me; let me bear much fruit,
abiding fruit, to thy glory.
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PREVAILING PRAYER
"I Appointed You That Ye Should Go and Bear Fruit, and
That Your Fruit Should Abide: That Whatsoever Ye Shall Ask of the Father in My Name,
He May Give It You" --John 15:16
In the first verse of our parable, Christ revealed Himself as the true Vine, and
the Father as the Husbandman, and asked for Himself and the Father a place in the
heart. Here, in the closing verse, He sums up all His teaching concerning Himself
and the Father in the twofold purpose for which He had chosen them. With reference
to Himself, the Vine, the purpose was, that they should bear fruit. With reference
to the Father, it was, that whatsoever they should ask in His name, should be done
of the Father in Heaven. As fruit is the great proof of the true relation to Christ,
so prayer is of our relation to the Father. A fruitful abiding in the Son, and prevailing
prayer to the Father, are the two great factors in the true Christian life.
That whatsoever ye shall ask of the Father in my name, he may give it you.--These
are the closing words of the parable of the Vine. The whole mystery of the Vine and
its branches leads up to the other mystery--that whatsoever we ask in His name the
Father gives! See here the reason of the lack of prayer, and of the lack of power
in prayer. It is because we so little live the true branch life, because we so little
lose ourselves in the Vine, abiding in Him entirely, that we feel so little constrained
to much prayer, so little confident that we shall be heard, and so do not know how
to use His name as the key to God's storehouse. The Vine planted on earth has reached
up into Heaven; it is only the soul wholly and intensely abiding in it, can reach
into Heaven with power to prevail much. Our faith in the teaching and the truth of
the parable, in the truth and the life of the Vine, must prove itself by power in
prayer. The life of abiding and obedience, of love and joy, of cleansing and fruit-bearing,
will surely lead to the power of prevailing prayer.
Whatsoever ye shall ask--The promise was given to disciples who were ready to give
themselves, in the likeness of the true Vine, for their fellow men. This promise
was all their provision for their work; they took it literally, they believed it,
they used it, and they found it true. Let us give ourselves, as branches of the true
Vine, and in His likeness, to the work of saving men, of bringing forth fruit to
the glory of God, and we shall find a new urgency and power to pray and to claim
the "whatsoever ye ask." We shall waken to our wonderful responsibility
of having in such a promise the keys to the King's storehouses given us, and we shall
not rest till we have received bread and blessing for the perishing. "I chose
you, that ye may bring forth fruit, and that your fruit may abide; that whatsoever
ye shall ask of the Father in my name, he may give it to you." Beloved disciple,
seek above everything to be a man of prayer. Here is the highest exercise of your
privilege as a branch of the Vine; here is the full proof of your being renewed in
the image of God and His Son; here is your power to show how you, like Christ, live
not for yourself, but for others; here you enter Heaven to receive gifts for men;
here your abiding in Christ has led to His abiding in you, to use you as the channel
and instrument of His grace. The power to bear fruit for men has been crowned by
power to prevail with God.
"I am the vine, my Father is the Husbandman." Christ's work in you is to
bring you so to the Father that His Word may be fulfilled in you: "At that day
ye shall ask in my name; and I say not that I will pray the Father for you; for the
Father himself loveth you." The power of direct access to the Father for men,
the liberty of intercession claiming and receiving blessing for them in faith, is
the highest exercise of our union with Christ. Let all who would truly and fully
be branches give themselves to the work of intercession. It is the one great work
of Christ the Vine in Heaven, the source of power for all His work. Make it your
one great work as branch: it will be the power of all your work.
In My name. Yes, Lord, in Thy name, the new name Thou hast given Thyself here, the
true Vine. As a branch, abiding in Thee in entire devotion, in full dependence, in
perfect conformity, in abiding fruitfulness, I come to the Father, in Thee, and He
will give what I ask. Oh, let my life be one of unceasing and prevailing intercession!
Amen!
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Andrew Murray
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ONLY A BRANCH
"I am the vine, ye are the branches." --John 15:5
"Tis only a little Branch,
A thing so fragile and weak,
But that little Branch hath a message true
To give, could it only speak.
"I'm only a little Branch,
I live by a life not mine,
For the sap that flows through my tendrils small
Is the life-blood of the Vine.
"No power indeed have I
The fruit of myself to bear,
But since I'm part of the living Vine,
Its fruitfulness I share.
"Dost thou ask how I abide?
How this life I can maintain?--
I am bound to the Vine by life's strong band,
And I only need remain.
"Where first my life was given,
In the spot where I am set,
Upborne and upheld as the days go by,
By the stem which bears me yet.
"I fear not the days to come,
I dwell not upon the past,
As moment by moment I draw a life,
Which for evermore shall last.
"I bask in the sun's bright beams,
Which with sweetness fills my fruit,
Yet I own not the clusters hanging there,
For they all come from the root."
A life which is not my own,
But another's life in me:
This, this is the message the Branch would speak,
A message to thee and me.
Oh, struggle not to "abide,"
Nor labor to "bring forth fruit,"
But let Jesus unite thee to Himself,
As the Vine Branch to the root.
So simple, so deep, so strong
That union with Him shall be:
His life shall forever replace thine own,
And His love shall flow through thee.
For His Spirit's fruit is love,
And love shall thy life become,
And for evermore on His heart of love
Thy spirit shall have her home.
--Freda Hanbury
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