John 15.1-8
  I AM the Vine…
 Verse 1 –  Jesus begins with a bold statement – read verse 1.  ‘I am the Vine…’ – this  saying would not be new to the disciples.  To the Jews the term ‘Vine’ was a  common description of them as the people of God.  The OT is replete with such  descriptions – Psalm 80, Isaiah 5, Ezekiel 17, Jeremiah 23 and 33 and  Zechariah 3 and 6.  On the majority of occasions it spoke of the  unfaithfulness of Israel to the covenant with God and of the imminent judgment  of God upon them.  On several occasions God speaks through his prophets to tell  the people of Israel that he is about to remove his protection from the vineyard  and to expose her to the dangers of other nations because she has played the  harlot with his love for her.  So the disciples would immediately see the  allusion to Israel and realise that Christ was replacing the nation of Israel as  the Vine with himself and those who followed Him.  In a few moments we will see  and I hope understand the significance of that first statement.  Christ goes on  then to add that his Father is the gardener, literally ‘farmer.’   
 Verse 2  - In the junior high school which I attended on the biology labs had a  greenhouse attached to the side of it.  All sorts of things were grown there but  the one which fascinated us all was the vine.  We waited every year to see the  grapes appear – truth is we wanted to have the opportunity to taste them.  we  never did get the chance – the teacher always kept the door locked – he knew  more about the nature of schoolboys than we realised.  You know there were times  when that vine looked like it would never bear fruit. There were times when the  teacher seemed to be utterly ruthless in cutting back branches, pruning them. As  a young schoolboy I did not understand why he cut off what seemed to be healthy  branches.  He knew though that without that pruning no fruit would appear the  next year.  Christ tells his disciples that his Father as the gardener ‘cuts  off’ some branches and ‘prunes’ others so that fruit might be produced.  Just as  with a physical plant the dead wood needed to be cut out so that disease does  not have a chance to take hold so the same is true of the ‘spiritual plant.’  In  a vine the gardener would ‘trim’ or ‘prune’ branches so that the energy and the  life of the vine was not going to grow wood but to produce fruit – the same is  true of the ‘spiritual plant.’  There is a play on words in verse 2 that is not  easily conveyed in the English translation.  Jesus says to his disciples that  the Father ‘cuts off’ (airei) some branches whilst he  ‘trims’ (katharei) other branches and it is further played upon in verse  3 when he says that the disciples are ‘clean’ (katharoi).  Jesus  is saying to his disciples that fruitfulness is the mark of the true believer,  the true follower of Christ and the Father will do whatever is necessary for the  branches to bear fruit.
 Cut off.  There are some branches and they look like every other branch on the vine but  the reality is that although the outward appearance is the same the inside is  dead and if left they will bring death to other branches also. Such branches the  Father cuts off and they are fit only for the fire.  This is good husbandry  because the purpose of the branches is to bear fruit.  They are not there for  decorative purposes.  This is the teaching behind the parable of the fig tree in  Luke 13.6ff.  The purpose of cutting off some branches and pruning others is the  same – that the plant might be healthy and bear fruit in due season. I don’t  want to dwell this morning on the branches that are ‘cut off’ because that is  the task of the gardener (God the Father) and it is not my task to say who will  be ‘cut off’ and burned in the fire.
 Pruning  – I am sure many of you have pruned some plants in the past.  Maybe roses or  some other plant that needs to be cut back in order for new growth to be  stimulated.  The untrained and unskilled person usually does not prune  vigorously enough and the new growth is a bit feeble.  In the hands of the  expert though it appears drastic given time the new growth is strong and  vigorous and a healthy plant is the result.  Read Hebrews 12 verses 5-6, 10 – read.  Do you understand the connection with verse 2  of John 15?  The reason the Father prunes the branches is that they might bear  fruit and part of that fruit is to share in his holiness. The pruning is  painful.  The pruning may even appear harsh and drastic but the purpose is to  bring new life, new growth and in due season to bear much fruit in the branch.
 Verse 3  Jesus then speaks a word of reassurance to his disciples.  He tells them they  are already clean because of the ‘word’ he had spoken to them.  This verse is  very much connected to the incident of his washing of the disciples’ feet a few  hours earlier – 13.1-17.  You remember, Simon wanted Christ to  wash him all over and Christ had said that Simon was clean, but that not all of  them were clean – knowing that Judas would betray him.  Now, however, Christ can  say that they are all clean because Judas has gone.  How are they clean – by his  word.  Do you remember the incident when the four friends climbed on to the roof  of the house in which Christ was teaching and lowered their friend down before  Christ?  Christ told him his sins were forgiven.  On what basis were they  forgiven?  The word of Christ.  He spoke and it came to be.  From creation what  God spoke came to be.  So Christ tells his disciples that because he has spoken  their forgiveness they are clean.  Remember this follows his teaching that he  was going via the cross to prepare a place for them – via atonement for their  sins.
 Verse 4  You know sometimes things are so simply stated in Scripture that we miss the  depth of their meaning.  I think this is a verse which on the surface sounds so  simple and straight forward, and it is, but the outworking of it in our lives is  demanding but the results are such a blessing.  Read verse 4.  The  first part of the verse is necessary for the second part to be a reality in the  life of a Christian believer.  The continued fruitfulness of a believer depends  on constant union with the source of life and fruitfulness –namely Christ  Jesus.  Just as in a physical plant the branch needs the life of the vine, the  nourishment which the roots draw up, to live and bear fruit so the Christian  needs to remain connected to Christ to live and bear fruit.  I want to point out  to you at this point that the branches cannot be different from the Vine, they  cannot live separately from the vine.  They cannot bear fruit without the Vine  and they can only bear the fruit of the Vine.  I also think it is crucial to  point out that the branches are connected to other branches by being part of the  same Vine.  There is no independence here.  The disciples are connected to one  another as they are connected to Christ – hence his teaching in chapter 13  to love one another – another one of the fruits they will produce as they remain  connected to the Vine.  Did you catch that?   Love for one another is one of the  fruits that the branches produce when they are connected to the true Vine.  As  Christ said ‘you cannot claim to love God if you hate your brother.’   There is a second thing I want each of us to notice from this  verse.  Christ tells each of the disciples they will bear fruit if they remain  in him. Bearing fruit is the sign of remaining in Christ – it was not an option  for the disciples but a sign of the life of Christ in them. The same is true for  you and I today.  Bearing fruit in the Christian life is not an option but is in  fact a sign of true Christian life.  Bearing fruit in my life shows that I am in  Christ and that he is in me.  Also note that nowhere does Christ say that the  fruit will be uniform in quality or quantity. What is inevitable is that they  will bear much fruit if they remain in him and he in them.  but let me ask a  question – What is this fruit? I think Christ answers that question in the  remainder of the chapter – look at verses 10-11 = obedience  resulting in joy – so obedience to Christ (God’s Word) is part of this fruit  bearing. Look at verse 12 –love for one another.  Look at  verses 16 and 27 being witnesses to the world is part of this fruit  bearing. Turn for a moment to Galatians 5 verses 22-23 – the  fruit of the Spirit  - once again I want you to note that it is not a  pick and mix selection – where you choose what you like and reject what you  don’t.  These fruit (singular) of the Spirit  will (not are to be) seen  in those who remain in Christ and he in them.
 Verse 6  – now here comes the stark warning to the disciples, and to all believers.  If  they do not remain in Christ they are like the branches which are cut off from  the Vine and without the life of the Vine they wither and die and are useless  except for firewood.  Stop right there for a moment.  Think to whom Christ is  here speaking.  Think at what moment he is speaking to them.  Think what is  ahead of them the rest of this night and the next few days.  They are about to  face his betrayal, death and burial – and the challenge in those hours will be  to remain in Christ.  They are about to face the question which Judas has  already answered – will I remain in Christ?  Christ warns them that without him  there is no life (14 verse 6 again), in fact without him not only is there no  life there is only the prospect of death and destruction.  A branch cut off from  the Vine may for a while appear green and healthy but over time it dies and it  will never bear fruit.  Friends, listen to God’s Word , the danger  for all of us is that we are cut off because we are not remaining in Christ and  he in us.  Without him we wither and die and we are cut off because the Father  wants branches that bear fruit and not dead wood in his church.
 Verses 7-8  – Christ then assures them of the assistance of the Father in answer to their  prayers.  Please do not take verse 7 out of context and use it as a carte  blanche promise that God says ‘yes’ to everything you ask for – you know that is  not true and not what is meant by the text.  Verse 8 helps you understand  verse 7 – it is the for the glory of the Father by the bearing of much  fruit in their lives that they are to ask in prayer.  Christ wants them to ask  the Father for every assistance that they might remain in Christ and in so doing  bear much fruit to the glory of the Father.  What is the Father’s will for their  lives?  That they, the disciples, might remain in Christ bearing fruit to his  eternal glory.  What are they to ask for in prayer?  Whatever they need to bear  fruit and bring glory to the Father.  Friends we would do well to learn that  simple prayer lesson.  When I ask in prayer is it so that I might remain in  Christ bearing much fruit to the glory of God the Father?  That would straighten  some prayer lives and some prayer requests.
 Application
 You know the one thing which struck my heart  deeply when I read this passage – its context.  That at the moment Christ was  moving towards betrayal and death was the moment he chose to teach this to his  disciples – Why?  Why this moment?  I can only say to you that at this moment in  their journey with Christ, knowing what they are going to witness over the next  24-72hours – they needed to know that remaining in Christ was the answer to it  all.  Being grafted into the true Vine was the only means of life in this  situation.  They would face many perils and dangers, many storms and struggles  and in the face of such they needed to know that it was out of love and to bear  much fruit that the Father did such ‘pruning’ in their lives.  You see the  reality for the disciples, and for us, that without the pain of pruning they  would never grow spiritually and never bear fruit to the glory of God the  Father.  Think for a moment of Peter – without the experience of denying Christ,  the pruning of his self-reliance, self-confidence and strength – he would never  have become reliant upon Christ they way we witness post-resurrection and in his  epistles.  Without the pruning of Thomas’ doubt he would never have learnt to  walk by faith.  He would have always remained stagnant in his spirit wanting  physical proof before believing and trusting Christ.
 What about your life?  Are you  connected to the true and living Vine – Christ Jesus?  Are you remaining in him  and he in you?  Is his word still the nourishment of you soul so that you might  bear fruit to the glory of the Father?   Are you now experiencing the pruning of  the Father?  Yes, it is painful, but  do you know and understand it  is that later in your life a rich harvest of fruit might be produced to the  glory of the Father?  The turth is you in danger of God the Father cutting  you off because you are dead wood?  You give the appearance of being connected  to the Vine, the outward signs are the same as the living branches, but the  inside is dead, spiritually dead?  You know Christ once described such people as  ‘whitewashed tombs’ – all the signs of cleanliness on the outside but the inside  contained only death.  Heed the warning  and become grafted on to  the living Vine so that you might know the nourishment of your soul.
 Finally can I share with you the significance of  this for you and those you fellowship with.  We are all connected via the Vine, (Christ) to one  another.  Each branch is part of the Vine and draws nourishment and strength  form the same vine.  Each branch is to bear fruit, it is not an option.  Each  branch is bear fruit in love for one another, in displaying to one another the  fruit of the Spirit, in obeying the Word of God and in witnessing to the world.   Each branch is to bear the same fruit – yes it will be in different amounts and  quality – but each must bear fruit.  There is the greatest challenge to us all  – because when it comes to bearing the fruit of service and  witnessing to the world there are too few fruit bearing branches at our churches.  I believe that is the challenge from God to everyone reading this.

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