John 15:1-17 · The Vine and the Branches
Branching Out
John 15:1-17
Sermon
by Michael Milton
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"As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Abide in my love. If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commandments and abide in his love.  These things I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full.” (John 15.9-11)

Healthy, growing, and branching out. That is what roses are supposed to be doing, but mine, the ones that Mr. Ted Jones [1] planted for me as a gift, were not doing that. Ted asked me a series of diagnostic questions about my rose bed. My answers led him to conclude that the plants were diseased, suffered from lack of care, lack of knowledge, lack of obedience, and thus a lack of life! And they all were replaced. I am happy to say that Ted planted some new roses that require less care, and they are still doing very well today.

Diseased, lack of care, lack of knowledge, lack of obedience, lack of life! That sounds like a lot of relationships I have experienced in my life, including a relationship with God.

I wonder how many hearing my voice today think that being saved is about saying some words or going through the proper religious ceremony, walking an aisle, and then, “Hey, you know, once saved always saved!” But the problem with that is that you are fooling yourself. The problem is that you end up like my old rose bed. And when the wintry seasons of life come upon you, you will lack the spiritual life inside of you to bear up under the storm. The greatest storm you will ever face is death. You see, you want for your life what the Gardener, God, has revealed in His will for your life: joy to the fullest.  That is what Jesus is saying,  “These things I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full.” (John 15.11)

But how do we get there?  A lot of times we take a wrong turn, we don’t care for the gifts that God has given us, and we end up diseased in our spiritual lives. Maybe someone needs a replacement this morning. Maybe someone needs to know the steps to the pathway full of joy. Those steps are given to us in verses 9 – 11 because Jesus wanted His disciples to understand this.

Again I say to you that the Gardener’s goal is that the disciples would have joy; that these branches that were part of the vine would have a fullness and completeness, such a flow of the sap of Jesus and His grace and love flowing from the vine, that you could only describe it in terms of “complete joy.”

If you could examine your life today and ask some hard questions of your life, I wonder if you would say that you have joy to the fullest.  Now, the joy that God wants for you is not just a circumstantial happiness. In early March, we had a few days of sunshine and we all thought it was spring! But a cold snap came and did some damage. It was a temporary spring. God is not talking about a temporary, circumstantial feeling you can have. You can have good days and bad days as a true disciple. You can be up or down. Jesus wept and so will you. Some of the most joyful Christians have had unhappiness in their lives.  No, the Gardener’s goal for your life is a joy that is supernatural and can never go away.

We must surely, also, say that this joy is not a narcissistic emotion. Narcissus, you will remember, was a Greek mythological character who saw his face in a reflecting pool and fell in love with himself. And so the self-worshipping society around us that constantly promotes your base desires to satisfy self is not what Jesus is speaking of. In fact, He says that this joy is “my joy” - that is, Jesus’ joy, “in you.” This is a joy out of this world. Jesus wanted His joy at work in the disciples and then they would have true joy. And the same is true for you. Nothing else can satisfy your greatest human needs but the Person of Jesus.  If you have it, it is such a pearl of great price.   

Well, what is this full joy that Jesus wants for our lives? It can be described in four words:

Union

That is a word to describe what we read:  “As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Abide in my love.” (John 15.9)

If you have been with us throughout all previous five weeks of this series in John 15, you have certainly seen the word “abide” before. If you have been studying in your small groups about abiding, then by now you have had a lot of talk about it. To abide is to remain, to make your home with Jesus and His home in you. That process has a theological name: Union. It means that you are organically connected to the Lord of Life, Jesus Christ. The way to joy is through union with Christ. That union is brought about supernaturally as He engrafts you into His one true vine.

This week a young man, a ministerial candidate in another community, asked me if I thought that I was saved when I was on my prodigal journey. I said, “Well, I didn’t pray, I didn’t go to church, I wasn’t obedient, I didn’t follow Jesus, I was more concerned about the world and my own ambitions than God, and I did not read my Bible. But if you had asked me, I would have called myself a Christian.  What do you think?”  He said, “Well, it sounds like you weren’t.”  There was a disconnect.  There was no union.

Listen to the late and great Professor John Murray of Westminster Seminary speak on “union with Christ”: 

Union with Christ is a very inclusive subject. It embraces the wide span of salvation from its ultimate source in the eternal election of God to its final fruition in the glorification of the elect. It is not simply a phase of the application of redemption; it underlies every aspect of redemption…Union with Christ binds all together and insures that to all for whom Christ has purchased redemption He effectively applies…Union with Christ is the central truth of the whole doctrine of salvation...There is no truth, therefore, more suited to impart confidence and strength, comfort and joy in the Lord than this one of union with Christ. (John Murray, Redemption: Accomplished and Applied. pp. 165, 170, 171)

I remember being on a mission trip some time back and I was on a team that had members from Britain. Except for some superficial differences like accents, we had all in common. We had a common language, common culture, we listened to the same songs, read the same literature, and shared common space. Though it seemed that we had perfect union with each other, when we were at the immigration line at the airport, in fact, we separated. They all went through the British line at Heathrow and I had to go through another line for Americans. That immigration line showed that we lacked true union.

In a similar way, disciples can be called Christians and have common language, common culture, sing the same hymns, read the same Bible, share membership in the same church, and yet not have union with Christ. What did Jesus say? Jesus talked about His coming as a time when there will be a sort of immigration line. In Matthew 25.31-46, He described a time when people will line up before Him, on His right and on His left. He spoke of sheep on His right hand and goats on His left hand. And Jesus says that He will tell both that He so identified with the hungry and the naked and the prisoners, people who suffered for His Gospel, that failure to be obedient to feeding, clothing and visiting them would be, in essence, a personal affront to Him. Jesus, in that story, speaks of His unity with His people.

Union with Christ is not superficial. It is a deep, everlasting connection that is brought about through a sacred covenant of God that runs through the whole Bible and is the scarlet thread that runs through history. It is the promise of God for a Savior of human beings that will unite them to Himself.

Which line are you in? 

The second word is: Love

The word Love is central to the teaching:  “As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Abide in my love. If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commandments and abide in his love.” (John 15.9-11)

Going to school, girls would write in their diaries and they would keep those diaries private, but now people keep their diaries online in “blogs” for everyone to read. This week, I read one blog because the headline caught my attention: “High School Reunion Love Story.” In this tell-all blog, the writer posted her story:

“I had finally done it. I finally broke free of the life of a housewife and stepped out on complete faith. I left my children’s father behind and moved to where my parents lived 2000 miles away…”[2]

Through a series of thoughts too complicated to follow, this woman decided that she did not have enough love in her life. She moved 2,000 miles away to live again with her parents. She took the children with her. She wanted to begin a journey to look for and find what she felt was missing in her life. She had this fantasy of re-connecting with an old boyfriend, “Ray.” She went to his mother’s house to see her, for she was once close to her. While there, an unkempt, old man – a man who looked sort of like a street person – came to this house. Her old high school flame’s mother greeted the street person on the front porch. She even brought him into the house, which made our blogging friend feel creepy. And then it happened – the old boyfriend’s mother turned and said, “You remember Ray, don’t you?”  And her dreams were dashed.

My beloved, the feelings that are called “love” these days are far removed from the love of the Bible.

Love, “agape” in the Greek as it is used here, is the universal power that is revealed in Scripture to wondrously hold together the very Triunity of God as one. And this love, a love that is “out of this world” – a love between God the Father and God the Son – is the love that holds you to Jesus and Jesus to you. The love of God overflowed from heaven and is now poured out onto the world in the Person of Jesus Christ. This is what was meant when Jesus spoke those most famous words:  “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.” (John 3.16)

Here, the blessed Savior personalizes the truth of this verse to beleaguered disciples. Today He personalizes it for you. The love of Jesus will never let you go. It is a love worth seeking. It is a love you cannot refuse and live.

The third word is: Obedience

That is another key word in how we get the joy.  “If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commandments and abide in his love.” (John 15.10) 

Obedience here is to be obedience modeled, shaped by the obedience of the Son to the Father. Someone might, rightly, ask, “If Jesus is God, why should He speak of Obedience to the Father?” And the answer is that while there is essential unity and oneness between Father and Son and they are equal in nature and attributes, there is yet a role relationship between Father and Son and Holy Spirit. The Son has revealed to us only what the Father told Him to reveal. He did what the Father told Him to do, and as a result, the energy, the very love, the agape love, which seems to be almost like an ever-present reality within the Triunity of God, is not only kept, it’s stoked and it’s nourished. In the same way, we who have been saved by grace respond in obedience to the commands of Jesus Christ.  It not only proves our relationship, but it stokes the love between ourselves and Jesus. 

You might ask, “If we are saved by grace, why stress obedience? I was confirmed,” or, “I walked the aisle,” and, “once saved, always saved; right? Isn’t that what you preach?”  Peter says, “…make your calling and your election sure.” We do not presume upon the doctrine of election. We do not presume upon these, but we demonstrate our love through obedience. 

Paul was dealing with this in Romans:  “What then? Are we to sin because we are not under law but under grace? By no means! Do you not know that if you present yourselves to anyone as obedient slaves, you are slaves of the one whom you obey, either of sin, which leads to death, or of obedience, which leads to righteousness? But thanks be to God, that you who were once slaves of sin have become obedient from the heart to the standard of teaching to which you were committed, and, having been set free from sin, have become slaves of righteousness.” (Romans 6.15-18)

There is no conflict between the love of God and the law of God as long as love comes first. Love produces a new kind of law, a law of willing, devoted obedience. And that obedience, modeled after Jesus’ devoted obedience to His Father, not only proves our love, but nurtures our love.

Conclusion: Jesus

The fourth and final word that describes how we experience this joy that Jesus wants is this word: Jesus

The One who spoke to the disciples in their time of trial was the One who desired to remain with the disciples in a new way. In one sense, Jesus is saying, “Nothing is going to be different.  I’ve been with you teaching – you’ve been asking of me and I’ve been giving to you.  And I want that relationship to continue, though it is going to be difficult because I’m going to be physically removed.  I will send my Holy Spirit and He will be with you and teach you all things.  He will give you the words that you need when you need words to say. The relationship will continue as long as you abide in me and I will abide in you and you keep my commandments.”  It’s all about Jesus. 

Joy equates to having Jesus with you and in you.  “These things I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full.” (John 15.11) Now, the joy of Jesus Christ was realized when He gave His life away on Calvary. The joy of Jesus Christ was realized when He fulfilled His mission. When Jesus’ joy is in us, the joy of the believer is fulfilling and discharging the mission of Jesus on earth. This is not only to realize some new position with God spiritually, but now to be used of God, to be an instrument of His righteousness in this unrighteous world, to be a friend to someone, to visit someone, to speak a word of hope into someone’s life; maybe to sit and cry with someone or maybe to spend time laughing with someone.  But to give your life away to something that is bigger than yourself.

There is a little chorus I remember from my childhood:  “Jesus, Jesus, Jesus, sweetest name I know, fills my every longing, keeps me singing as I go.”

Jesus told them:  “These things I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full.” (John 15.11) 

I believe this passage is speaking to what Fanny Crosby called “Blessed Assurance.” Apparently, many believers sing this hymn, but not in their souls. Billy Graham once said that many of the people he knew, at their deathbeds, lacked assurance and thus lacked joy. 

You do not have to have assurance to be saved, but assurance to be joyful in your salvation. There will be many unhappy, insecure believers, no doubt, making their way to heaven, only to find that they wasted the years of their lives in a lack of assurance. And so John Calvin wrote of this passage:  “Let us therefore learn that we ought to seek in the doctrine of Christ the assurance of salvation.”

Assurance of eternal life comes from surrendering your entire life to the Good Shepherd who said:  “My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they will never perish, and no one will snatch them out of my hand. My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all, and no one is able to snatch them out of the Father’s hand. I and the Father are one.” (John 10.27-30) 

I cannot think of a better application of this passage than that. But is the song about the Person of Jesus just a quaint little song from the “good old days” or a present reality?

Conclusion

Four words that describe our pathway to joy in Jesus:  Union, Love, Obedience, and Jesus. 

As we were driving to school the other day, my son reflected on life and the things he has heard me say at home, as well as in the pulpit. One of those things was how I left a very poverty-stricken childhood. And when we speak of leaving “poverty,” we are not talking about just a lack of money. We are talking about the hardships and trials and dysfunctions of rural America that some of you cannot even imagine. I can tell you from firsthand experience, it is the equal of urban, inner city America. It has similar problems and similar outcomes. That is what I am talking about. 

My son said, “Dad, you got out. You are the first one in our family to leave.” We talked about that. I told him the key to my escape from the cycle of poverty and pain was not just education, though that was key. It was not just roll-up-your-sleeve determinism, though hard work in America pays off. No, the greatest power that allowed me to leave poverty was the love of Aunt Eva. She prayed for me. She even used to say to me, “Son, I am praying for you. I want you to leave here, and when you go, take me with you!” And we did. Her love and vision and prayers broke a generational cycle of poverty.

So I told my son that the challenge now is to see whether I take advantage of all that God has given me. It is also up to him, now, to see that, through love and commitment and obedience, our family does not fall back into that life, but, in fact, we seek to help other families who are in that situation. The life God has given us is a gift, not to leave others behind, but to take them with us.

This is what Jesus was doing with His disciples, and that is the greatest joy that you will ever have in your life. This whole study is not simply that we are built up as a strong branch, connected, but that we are branching out, that we are fulfilling the purposes of Jesus Christ in the world and in this day.  I love to study about the history of our church and the church; I love church history. But I am very concerned as a pastor and as a Christian about this history today that we are making.  I pray that we do branch out, that our branching out will be an overflow of the love we have received from Jesus Christ to others in this community, and maybe in your own home or across the ocean.

This is what Jesus was talking about. The disciples had been given a new life and an access into the very throne room of God. Jesus would be with them. They were to stay connected to Him. Why? Not only for their assurance and their joy, but that Jesus’ purposes might be fulfilled. All authority had been given to Jesus, and His disciples were to stay connected in order to bring others out with them. God’s goal for them, as His goal is for you, is to be strong in the Vine, Jesus Christ, so that you can “branch out!”

Will you take what God has given you and follow Him? Will you take the answered prayers of your parents and build a new life of faith for yourself and the next generation? Will you receive the gift of eternal life that is being offered today? Then, as you come to receive His love, abide in His love, and obey Him, you will not only escape from the snares of the devil and the cycle of pain that sin produces, you will flower, you will branch out in every direction, you will know joy to the fullest.

And that is the Gardener’s goal for your life.


1.  Name has been changed for confidentiality.

2.  I have decided not to cite the blog site. Her story is, frankly, embarrassing. I am praying for this person to come to Christ and this story will change.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., The Sermons of Michael A. Milton, by Michael Milton