|
There was once a vineyard on a very
fertile hill. The owner went out and carefully, painstakingly, prepared the soil,
planted the finest vines, and looked for it to produce fine fruit. But it yielded
stink fruit.
Isaiah tells us that this was a picture of the house of Israel.
God had carefully planted Judah on his holy hill, but they had
not produced good fruit, instead they had rebelled against him,
entered foreign alliances, worshiped other gods, and had oppressed
the poor and the helpless. Therefore God declares that he will
trample down his vineyard, and make it a waste. Briers and thorns
will overrun the vineyard.
But as you go further into Isaiah's prophecy you hear of a branch
growing out of the stump of Jesse. In Isaiah 27, Isaiah speaks
of "a pleasant vineyard" where Jacob will take root,
and Israel "shall fill the whole world with fruit."
With all this in view, Jesus says "I am the true vine, and
my Father is the vinedresser." There is no clearer way for
Jesus to say, "I am the true Israel." Jesus is the one
who produces good fruit, and fills the whole world with that fruit.
He explains this by saying, "I am the vine; you are the branches." Isaiah
had spoken of the people of God as the vine, but the people of
God had failed miserably. So Jesus takes this familiar image, and
redefines it. All that the prophets had said about Israel as the
vineyard is about me. But this does not mean that you and I have
no place in God's vineyard. It simply means that we are not the
vine. We are but the branches.
Jesus encourages us to think about the image of the vine in more
detail. If you take a vine without any branches, how much fruit
do you get? None. Jesus has just said, "whoever believes in
me will also do the works that I do; and greater works than these
will he do, because I am going to the Father." Jesus will
do his greatest works through his church. Without the church, Jesus
is like a vine without branches. His fruit is borne in us and through
us. That may sound radical at first, but if you think about other
biblical images, it makes sense. He is the head-we are the body.
A head without a body won't get very far! He is the bridegroom-we
are the bride. A husband without a wife won't have very many children!
But of course, without Jesus, the church is like branches without
a vine. What is a branch without a vine? Dead. The life of the
branch flows through the vine. Indeed, the life of the branch is
nothing more or less than the life of the vine. He is our life.
It is not simply that we have life because of him, but rather that
we have life in him. Branches do not live independently of the
vine. Branches live only because of their vital union to the vine.
So it is Christ's life in you that gives you life. I am the vine;
you are the branches.
This is why Jesus speaks of the Father as the vinedresser. If
a branch connected to the vine does not bear fruit, then the vinedresser
takes it away-hacks off the whole thing. In other words, if the
life of the vine is not manifest in the branch, then the branch
is cut off, thrown away and burned. In our baptism, we are united
to Christ and his church. But if that union is not a vital union.
In other words, if that union is only an external joining of the
branch to the vine, then the branch will not bear fruit, but will
be cut off, and destroyed. Because if you are vitally united to
Christ, then you will bear fruit! "Abide in me, and I in you.
As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in
the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me." Whoever
abides in Jesus will bear much fruit.
What is the fruit of which Jesus speaks? Remember Isaiah 5? God
looked for justice and righteousness, but found only bloodshed
and an outcry. What has Jesus been talking about in chapter 14? "If
you love me, you will keep my commandments." (14:15) "If
anyone loves me, he will keep my word." (14:23) Abiding in
Christ means to find the source of life, your power for living,
in Jesus. And bearing fruit means doing what he says. The problem
in Isaiah 5 is that Israel has an insufficient power supply. Israel
cannot be the vine. They do not have life in themselves. But Jesus
tells us in John 5:26-the Father has given the Son to have life
in himself. And because he has life in himself, he has the power
to give life to his people. This is why it is so necessary for
you to despair of your own power! Your life is but a feeble flicker
in the corridors of time. You do not have the power to bear fruit
in the service of Christ. Therefore you must abide in Christ. He
is the light of the world who came to give life to his people.
(Verse 7) If you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask whatever
you wish, and it will be done for you. The one who abides in Jesus,
whose life flows from the exalted Savior, may indeed ask for whatever
he wishes! Psalm 37:4 speaks of this: "Delight yourself in
the LORD, and he will give you the desires of your heart." Later
in verse 31, the Psalmist adds, "the law of God is in his
heart, His steps do not slip." The one who abides in Christ
has the words of God engraven on his heart, which means that your
desires are conformed to his. And so of course, whatever you ask
is yours- because you will only ask for that which is good and
right!
I know that this has been the cause of much soul-searching for
many people. How do I know what to ask for? How do I know when
I am in the "will of God"? But those are the wrong questions.
It's putting the cart before the horse. The focus of Jesus' remarks
is on the abiding-not the asking. If you are abiding in Christ,
then ask for whatever you wish! So rather than figure out what
we can ask for, we should seek with all of our heart, soul, mind
and strength, to love the Lord our God. We must bear fruit. This
may bring discouragement to some of you. You may look at your life
and say "but I'm not bearing much fruit." I'm not loving
the Lord my God very well, and I'm not doing a good job of loving
my neighbor either! But remember Jesus's words: "By this my
Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit and so prove to be
my disciples." How do we bear "much fruit"? Go back
to verse 2. The vinedresser, after all, not only cuts off the branches
that bear no fruit, but also prunes the fruitful branches so that
they might become more fruitful. The Father wants you to bear much
fruit. So he will prune you. Anything that gets in the way of bearing
fruit will be pruned! But who does this? Does the branch prune
itself? No! Pruning is an artificial method of increasing natural
production. The vinedresser prunes the branch, so that the branch
might naturally produce more fruit. The life of the vine is your
life. The life of Christ course through your veins through the
grace of the Holy Spirit. And the Father prunes away all that belongs
to your old man, so that the new life in you might come to fuller
expression each day. In other words, Jesus is saying the same thing
that Paul will later say: "Work out your salvation with fear
and trembling, because it is God who is at work in you both to
will and to do for his good pleasure!" (Phil 2) God is the
one who will prune away all that gets in the way of your bearing
fruit. You are called simply to abide in Christ, to live your life
as one who has been grafted into the true vine, who draws life
and nourishment from him.
Jesus then turns to the source of this life: (verses 9-11) We
are called to imitate Christ. He abides in his Father's love, and
kept his Father's commands. Now we are to imitate him, by abiding
in his love and keeping his commands. Of course, imitating Christ
is impossible-in one sense. We have already seen that we lack the
power and strength to obey God. But, if it is Christ himself who
is in us-if we are abiding in him- then imitation of Christ is
rooted in participation in Christ. We imitate him by abiding in
him.
Jesus then tells us how far we are to go in imitating him. This
is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you.
They don't understand yet how radical that is, but Jesus explains
it. Greater love has no one than this, that someone lays down his
life for his friends. Do you want to know how to abide in Christ?
Do you want to know how to love him? Then lay down your life for
one another.
Jesus has not yet revealed that his disciples will be children
of God. And here he simply calls them friends. "You are my
friends if you do what I command you. No longer do I call you servants,
for the servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have
called you friends, for all that I have heard from my Father I
have made known to you." You are the friends of God, because
God has told you what he is doing! You did not choose me, but I
chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and
that your fruit should abide, so that whatever you ask the Father
in my name, he may give it to you. These things I command you,
so that you will love one another.
Israel failed to live as the elect people of God. Israel had produced
stink fruit. Injustice, oppression, and all sorts of wickedness.
They did not abide in God's ways, and they did not love one another.
But now Jesus has come as the true vine-the elect one. He has done
all that he heard from his Father. And now he has chosen us to
bear fruit for his glory. The goal of election is good works. As
Paul put it in Ephesians 2: "For by grace you have been saved
through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of
God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast. For we are
his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which
God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them."
Copyright © 2004 Peter J. Wallace
|