(Note: This blog entry is based on the text for “From The Ground Up” originally shared on April 23, 2024. It was the 308th video for our YouTube Channel, Streams of Living Water (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7KnYS1bpHKaL2OseQWCnw), co-produced with my wife, Rev. Sally Welch.)
When Sally and I go
to an American supermarket and I look at the produce section, I often think, “This
is what brought down the Soviet Union.” Today, we’re going to see how our
bearing much fruit is the expression of lives that have been transformed
forever.
It’s Spring-ish in Southern California.
Armstrong Nursery
stopped selling pansies here because the hot weather is coming.
Yet, we’re supposed
to be getting high temperatures in only the mid-60’s and a heavy mist-like morning
rain for the next three or four days.
“April showers
bring May flowers”, but we’re not quite in May.
Summer is coming,
and we can see things growing and flowering and making allergy sufferers suffer,
but in a way that tells us that we’re not quite there yet.
Summer is being
built, like vines, from the ground up.
We have grape
vines, and their branches, in our back yard that have been there at least since
1986, and probably since well before. They just sort of twine among our trees
and bushes. But they all originate from a massive base. If they’re cut off from
the base, they die.
They need a
foundation.
Vines, like all
healthy plants, need several things in order to live and to bear fruit: food,
light, water, and air. And
they need a process to make those things beneficial to the plant:
photosynthesis. And they need care to make the process produce the desired
outcome.
We are much like
plants in that way. We need several things to live and to bear fruit, not just
for today, but for forever. And we need a process to make them beneficial. And
we need care to make it happen.
Jesus describes
what these things are, and how God makes them work together, in the Gospel text
that will be read in churches all over the world this coming Sunday, John
15:1-8.
He starts in verses
1-4,
“I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinegrower.
2 He removes every branch in me that bears no fruit. Every branch that
bears fruit he prunes to make it bear more fruit. 3 You have already been
cleansed by the word that I have spoken to you. 4 Abide in me as I abide
in you. Just as the branch cannot bear fruit by itself unless it abides in the
vine, neither can you unless you abide in me.
Jesus is alive and
our lives are totally dependent upon our relationship with Him. Jesus is the
means by which we receive life that really is life, new life, eternal life now
and forever. God the Father, the first person of the one-God-in-three-Persons
Trinity, removes that which is not connected to Jesus in order to keep the dead
parts of the vine from attracting the spiritual equivalent of insects and
disease that would harm the living vine.
This life is
maintained through Jesus; food: the bread and wine that is the body and
blood of Jesus Christ in Holy Communion, light: Jesus the Light of the
world, water: the Baptism that cleanses us from sin, death, and the
power of the devil, and grants eternal salvation to all who believe it, and air:
the power of the Holy Spirit, the third person of the Trinity.
Vines also need the
right space, the right temperature, and the right amount of
time to bear fruit.
Just like us. In
our lives, we pray and trust God’s guidance to know God’s calling for us to
serve in the right place, in situations where we can be of best
service, and for the right amount of time.
For example, I’ve
heard it said that clergy don’t retire, they just get put out to pastor. 😊
When I retired, I
just knew it was the right time, and that the space and the environment for Sally
and my future service was going to be different, but that we would still be
“pastoring”.
This is true of
every Christian life. The live of we, the branches, comes from and is sustained
by the life of the vine: Jesus.
And Jesus gives our
lives everything we need in order to accomplish everything that God gives us to
do.
Jesus continues in verses
5-6,
5 I am the vine, you are the branches. Those who abide
in me and I in them bear much fruit, because apart from me you can do nothing.
6 Whoever does not abide in me is thrown away like a branch and withers;
such branches are gathered, thrown into the fire, and burned.
What is the fruit
of Christian lives? It’s the new life, the transformed life, the born again
life, the result of the living relationship with the one, true, living God that
is the purpose for our creation from the beginning of time, the life that is
given to all who repent and receive it.
Paul describes that
fruit, in Galatians 5:22-23,
22 By contrast, the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience,
kindness, generosity, faithfulness, 23 gentleness, and
self-control. There is no law against such things.
The consequence of that
“fruit” is that we “branches” who abide in “the vine” Jesus in
turn bear much fruit. We become the means through which God draws others to a
living relationship with him, new life in Jesus!
Natural Church
Development is a church development program that is based on the belief that
all healthy living things grow and reproduce. If they are not reproducing,
there is something wrong that must be corrected. Bearing the fruit of the
Spirit is living the Christian life ourselves and leading others to
receive the gift of faith from God.
What is the purpose
of a branch of a vine? It’s to bear fruit, but not primarily to provide food.
That’s a secondary benefit. The primary purpose of a branch of a vine is to
produce more grapes, whose seeds produce more branches from the vine.
Programs don’t grow
churches, though. People do. People guided by the Holy Spirit, whose lives have
been transformed, whose lives demonstrate the fruit that comes as the result of
being connected to the vine, Jesus.
Sin separates us
from God, and we can’t save ourselves. Jesus is our Savior. Jesus is life. Hell
is separation from Jesus and, as the bumper sticker says, “If you feel far from
God, guess who moved?” 😊
What is the result?
Jesus concludes Sunday’s text in verses 7-8,
7 If you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask
for whatever you wish, and it will be done for you. 8 My Father is
glorified by this, that you bear much fruit and become my disciples.
Let’s look at that
verse 7 again. In the middle of that verse, Jesus says, “ask for whatever you
wish, and it will be done for you.” That’s the part some people like to hang onto.
But it begins with
a great big “If”. “If you abide in me, and my words abide in you,”
To “abide” means “to
live.”
Whatever we do is
the outcome of abiding in Jesus. If we are living as a new creation, if we are
abiding in Jesus, our desire will be only to do His will. What we “desire” and what we “ask” will only
be God’s will, and God’s will will be done.
God’s will, Jesus
says, is that we bear much fruit and become his disciples.
And what does that
produce? God will be glorified.
That’s what becomes
the outcome of everything that we do, of our worship, of the ministry of our
churches, of our service to others.
The outcome of our
lives is not that people glorify us. In fact, if everyone speaks well of us,
that is cause for concern.
The outcome of
lives in which we abide in Jesus and Jesus abides in us is an outcome that
comes only by the grace of God. When we bear spiritual fruit and become the
disciples of Christ, it is God who is glorified.
There are many
vineyards in Southern California. We don’t have to go far to see one in action:
Joseph Filippi Winery & Vineyards and Pierre Biane Winery in Rancho
Cucamonga and Galleano Winery in Jurupa Valley, and San Antonio Vineyard in
Ontario, to name a few.
But we need travel
no distance at all to see “The” Vine, Jesus. He lives within us, and we are his
branches.
In the Old
Testament, that is, the Law and the Prophets, the vine is a metaphor for Israel.
When Jesus says that He is the vine, he is telling us that he is the
fulfillment of the history of salvation among his people, he is the fulfillment
of the Law and the Prophets for all people. We live now in the living
relationship with God for which God created us. It was accomplished for us on
the cross.
Jesus gave his
life, was buried, and then took his life back again. He rose, from the
ground, up.
We have been made
and are nourished from the ground up. Like the branches from a vine.
Salvation has come
through the gift of faith, the restoration of that relationship in Jesus Christ.
We have already died with Christ in our baptism and so we will rise with him to
eternal life now and in the life to come.
As Jesus says, in John
12:24,
24 Very truly, I tell you, unless a grain of wheat
falls into the earth and dies, it remains just a single grain; but if it dies,
it bears much fruit.
It’s Spring-ish in
Southern California.
But among God’s
faithful people, it’s time to bear fruit.