John 15:1-17 · The Vine and the Branches
Abide In Me
John 15:1-17
Sermon
by Richard A. Jensen
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Once upon a time there lived a man whose nickname was Mr. Will Power. As you might expect, Mr. Will Power had an iron will. He could do anything he set his mind to. He was the champion of mind over matter. People loved to challenge his powers of will. One of the ways he first caught people’s attention was his ability to withstand hot and cold. They dared him to walk through a bed of fiery coals. They dared him to expose himself to the bitter cold for a full day. They dared him and he did it. "Just a case of simple willpower," he would say. "You can do anything you want if you just put your mind to it."

On another occasion they tested his ability to stay awake. They challenged him to sit upright in a chair staring straight ahead for 48 hours without sleeping. They dared him and he did it. "Just a case of simple willpower," he would say. "You can do anything you want if you just put your mind to it."

The people loved to see what Mr. Will Power could eat. They would come up with the craziest concoctions of food. I won’t tell you what they were. I don’t want to ruin your appetite. You will just have to use your imagination. They brought their horrible assortments of edibles and dared him to eat them and eat them he did. They dared him and he did it. "Just a case of simple willpower," he would say. "You can do anything you want if you just put your mind to it."

And then they got him. They got him with a simple dare. "We dare you to stay alive through your willpower alone. No food. No nourishment of any kind. Just some water to keep your mouth moist." Well, a dare is a dare and Mr. Will Power could not resist. He would do it, by golly! He would stay alive by the sheer force of his will. He took up the challenge. I suppose you can guess the outcome. There was, of course, no way he could will life itself. But try telling him that. He tried. Oh, how he tried. He willed life with every fiber of his being. That was the last dare Mr. Will Power ever accepted. This one did him in. The moral of the story is clear: there are things that our willpower cannot do.

Mr. Will Power could not will life itself. Just so, followers of Jesus cannot will life with God or the fruit of a life with God. That is one way to look at these sayings of Jesus in John’s Gospel. Listen how Jesus puts it. "I am the vine," he tells us. "You are the branches. He who abides in me, and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing" (John 15:5). I think that sometimes we get the mistaken notion that being a follower of Jesus, being Jesus’ disciple, is something that we do, that it is a matter of our willpower. If someone would just be so kind as to tell us what a Christian should do, then we will set about doing it. "It is just a case of simple willpower," we might say. "We can do anything we want if we just put our minds to it."

I have not heard it for a while, but AVIS Rent-A-Car used to advertise by saying: "We try harder." That was their way of saying why we should rent from them rather than from the No. 1 company. "We try harder." I sometimes hear people talk about Christianity as if it were the "AVIS" of world religions. What does it mean to be a Christian? These people basically tell us that being a Christian is a matter of trying harder at the good life than anyone else. That is the difference between Christianity and other religions they suggest. "We try harder."

Nothing could be farther from the truth than this "AVIS" approach to Christianity. The Christian faith is not primarily concerned with our willpower, our willpower to be good. We are not called upon by Jesus Christ to be Mr. or Mrs. Will Power in our obedience to him. Not at all. There are things that our willpower cannot do. That was the moral of our story.

Mr. Will Power could not will life itself. Followers of Jesus cannot will life with God or the fruit of life with God. Mr. Will Power had to receive the nourishment of food into his body in order to stay alive. We need to receive the nourishment that comes from Christ in order to stay alive as Christian people. We are like branches on a vine. That is how Jesus puts it. Branches have no life in themselves! Branches are only alive as they receive nourishment from the vine. "I am the vine," Jesus tells us. "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" (John 15:4). Being a Christian is a matter of abiding in Jesus Christ. We are to abide in Jesus because, as he puts it, "apart from me you can do nothing."

What does it mean to "abide in Jesus?" If Christianity isn’t about our power of will, if Christianity is about abiding in Jesus, how do we do it? How do we abide in Jesus and how does Jesus abide in us? Let me give a general answer and a specific answer to that question. First of all, we abide in Jesus and he abides in us through hearing the story of Jesus - by hearing that story over and over again. When we spend time reading the Scripture, we hear the story of Jesus. When we listen to God’s Word preached, we hear the story of Jesus. When we gather with two or three persons in Jesus’ name, we hear the story of Jesus. When we remember the promises that God made to us in our baptism, we hear the story of Jesus. When we eat the bread and drink the cup of the Lord’s Supper, we hear the story of Jesus. Such hearing is abiding. To hear Christ’s story with the ears of faith is to abide in his love. To hear Christ’s story is to grant him inner access to our lives. Through the telling of his story Jesus Christ comes to abide in us.

That is my general answer to the question of how we abide in Jesus. Now let me look more specifically at just one of those means. Jesus abides in us when we eat the bread and drink the cup of the Lord’s Supper. It is hard to avoid the notion that Jesus’ words about the vine and the branches are related to this sacrament. "I am the vine," Jesus tells us. "I am the true vine." One of the elements of the Lord’s Supper, of course, is the wine - wine that is the fruit of the vine.

And he took a cup, and when he had given thanks he said, "Take this, and divide it among yourselves; for I tell you that from now on I shall not drink of the fruit of the vine until the Kingdom of God comes." (Luke 22:17-18)

"I am the vine and this cup is the fruit of the vine. When you drink of this cup you partake of the fruit of my vine. When you drink of this cup you receive my nourishment, you receive my life for your life. When you drink of this cup you abide in me and I abide in you." In such a way Jesus speaks to us.

The matter could hardly be more clear. There are things that our willpower cannot do. Willing life with God is one of them. Life is something we cannot will into existence. Life, God’s life, is something we can only receive from God’s hands. We drink God’s life into our bodies. That is how we have life with God. That is how Christ abides in us and we abide in him.

But the mattter does not end there. The Christian life begins, and begins over again each day in the hearing of Jesus’ story. The Christian life begins by drinking God’s life into our bodies. That is where the Christian life begins. That is not where it ends. Something happens to us when we drink Jesus Christ into our bodies. "The one who abides in me, and I in you, bears much fruit." What, after all, is the function of the vine. The vine gives nourishment to the branches. Jesus Christ, the true vine, gives nourishment to all the branches of his body and that nourishment produces fruit, good fruit, ripe fruit, fruit of God’s own making.

In Jesus’ analogy, God acts as the gardener or the vinedresser of the vine. "Every branch of mine that bears no fruit, God takes away, and every branch that does bear fruit God prunes, that it may bear more fruit" (John 15:2). The fruits of the Christian life are clearly not produced by our own powers of willful obedience to God’s commands. The fruits of the Christian life come through Jesus Christ abiding in us. The Christian life begins by drinking God’s life into our bodies. The Christian life blossoms as we live the life of healthy branches. The Christian life blossoms as we serve those who are starving for nourishment. The Christian life blossoms as we serve all those in any human need. The Christian life blossoms as we give the fruit of our life away to our needy neighbor.

And in so doing we give glory to God. "By this my Father is glorified," Jesus says, "that you bear much fruit, and so prove to be my disciples" (John 15:8). At the risk of sounding like a broken record, let me make it clear one more time. We do not give glory to God by choosing to be obedient children of God. Mr. Will Power is not the model for Christian living. We do not prove that we are disciples by producing fruit as the product of our own willpower. There are some things that our willpower cannot do. We cannot will to be God’s children. We cannot will to bear God’s fruit. Becoming God’s children and bearing God’s fruit, rather, come only through abiding in Christ. The vine must nourish the branches. We must drink God’s life into our bodies. Therein Christ abides in us and we abide in him.

Abide in me and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abide in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me. I am the vine, you are the branches. If you abide in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing. (John 15:4-5)

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Crucified Ruler, The, by Richard A. Jensen