“I am the Vine;
you are the branches.
Whoever abides [lives] in me and I in him, he it is that bears much [abundant]
fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing” (John 15:5,
ESV).
When John wrote the
fourth gospel, he was not writing for the saints at the headquarters church in
Jerusalem or for the executives of this new movement called The Way. John was
writing to help new believers get grounded in their faith. He lived in Ephesus
in what then was known as Asia Minor (Turkey) and was the pastor of the growing
church there. The focus of his writing was to assist the newly saved grow in
faith while living in a community that was overtly hostile to Christianity.
I am convinced that
it is extremely important for a believer to prioritize his devotional life.
Everything else in the believer’s spiritual life is secondary; other things may
be important but not as much as being tightly connected to the Author and Finisher
of our faith. The devotional life makes or breaks the success of our walk with
God. It is also of great importance to understand that John was telling his
friends that in order to handle the pain of persecution, they had to be
connected to the Vine; otherwise, they had nothing that would sustain them.
John begins this
verse with a clear declaration of identity: “I am the Vine; you are the branches.” The question and struggle
over identity goes right back to the Garden (Genesis 3:5) and the age-old
struggle of man wanting to be like God. John highlights Jesus’ statement
because he understands that until the identity issue is settled, there can be
no forward progress. There can only be one Vine but lots of branches. So this
has to be settled: “He is the Vine and I am the branch! He is God and I am not!”
One reason I stress
so strongly in my writing and teaching the importance of the devotional life is
clearly spelled out in this verse. Fruitfulness comes from the relationship of
the individual with Jesus. The branch draws life from the vine and from that
life comes fruit. Before a branch can be fruitful, it must be in continual
contact with the vine. We draw life from Him and then we give out to others and
it cannot be otherwise. The vine feeds and nourishes the branch. “If a man remains in me and I in him, he will bear much fruit” (NIV)
.
I am concerned for
the sloppy Christians who think that going to church once a week carrying a
Bible, singing loudly, putting a few dollars in the offering, smiling, and
shaking hands is all that is needed to fill up their spiritual batteries. There
is nothing wrong with a lively teaching and worship service but that does not,
I repeat, does not, replace the importance of your regular personal time with
Him. And then there are the millennials who come to church most Sundays in
jeans and T-shirts, carrying a big cup of coffee and smiling as they listen to the
rock-and-roll worship band and the 25-minute teaching. For many of them, that
is the totality of their spiritual life. To them, Jesus is worth sixty minutes
on Sunday morning as long as the pastor is cool, the worship band really rocks,
and they can have a cup of coffee and see friends at the same time. For many of
these millennials, personal prayer and Bible study has no place in their lives.
Pretty sad commentary on the state of spiritual vitality flowing into them.
Try this experiment!
Get a knife or a pair of scissors and go into your yard. Pick out a hedge or
plant and cut off one of the smaller branches. Put that little cutting on a
piece of paper in a safe place and see what happens over the next couple of
days. Some of you are shaking your heads, saying, “This is silly. I know
exactly what will happen. Once the branch is disconnected from the plant, it
will begin to die,” and you are exactly right. The point is very clear—Jesus is
the Vine and we are the branches and disconnected from Him we are helpless. We
cannot survive, we will wither and die, because “apart from me you can do nothing” (NIV).
The little cutting
that we set aside is now dead. Within hours dryness began to set in and within
a few days the cutting dried up and withered. The possibility of its ever being
fruitful is over and gone. So it is with the man (or woman) who habitually
neglects his personal communication with the Savior. Jesus said, “Apart
from me you can do nothing.” The Greek for nothing is there is no prospect of success, none!
Apart from the Vine there is no fruitfulness that counts.
Dryness in us does
not begin as quickly as it does in that little plant, but don’t fool yourself,
it will start and continue unless we get back to being connected to Him.
“Abide in Me,
and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, unless it abides in
the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in Me” (John 15:4,
NKJV).
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