John 15:1-17 · The Vine and the Branches
Christ's Chosen People: Privilege
John 15:1-17
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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Back in 1981, the attention of the world was focused on the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana. My wife, an almost hopeless romantic, (I really praise God for that) became tremendously involved in that event. We were traveling when the wedding took place, and I remember she stayed up almost all night in a hotel room where we were, watching the live television presentation. She also read all the newspaper accounts, and she even gave our two daughters beautiful color picture albums that recaptured this wedding of the decade. Because she read all the newspaper accounts, she was constantly feeding me with different aspects of what was taking place, and I remember vividly one newspaper report she shared with me. The reporter was describing the arrival of the entourage to the Cathedral where the wedding was to take place. He described how all the royal family were carried in special royal coaches to the Cathedral while Lady Diana arrived in the coach of a commoner. Then there was this rather telling sentence in the newspaper account. “Lady Diana came to the church as a commoner; she departed as royalty.”

Being the preacher that I am, that little sentence stuck in my mind for an appropriate time to use it. This is a vivid description of what grace is all about. We come as sinners, but grace turns us into heirs and joint heirs with Christ of all that God wants to give us. It also is a vivid description of the possibility that comes to each one of us – the possibility of a deeper walk with Christ.

Jesus said to his disciples, “You have not chosen me, but I have chosen you.” Ponder that awesome truth. We have not chosen God; God has chosen us. In His extravagant grace, He has given us His love, and confronted us with His call. We arrive in his presence as common we leave as royalty.

The major theme of our scripture is the life of Christ’s Chosen People. I’m going to deal with that theme in two parts. First, we are chosen for privilege. Second we are chosen for partnership.

I

First, we’re chosen for joy. See it there in verse 11: “These things I have spoken to you that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full.”

The Greek word for joy is Chara — c—h—a—r—a. It is related to the word charis, c-h-a-r-i-s which is the Greek word for Grace. It has about it a sense of surprise and excitement. It isn’t earned; it is gift — thus the connection with grace.

G. K. Chesterton says that joy is “the gigantic secret of the Christian” (Orthodoxy, p. 160).

What can that mean — joy is “the gigantic secret of the Christian”? Isn’t this what the world offers on every hand?? We’ve even named a detergent “Joy”. But note the context of Jesus’ promise of joy. Listen to verses 9 and 10 of chapter 15 which were not included in our Scripture lesson: “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.”

Jesus is teaching us that joy is the result, the by-product of our obedience to Him. You know, of course, that this scripture builds on Jesus’ allegory of the vine and the branches. The Christian, by faith and obedience, abides in Jesus Christ, knows, experiences, and enjoys Jesus’ love and joy is the fruit of that branch which abides in the vine.

Chesterton then is right: ‘Joy is the gigantic secret of the Christian.” We have learned the source of joy – abiding in and obeying Christ. Listen friends – Don’t miss this.

The world will not soon forget Jeff Blatnick, the fellow who won the gold medal in Greco Roman Heavy Weight Wrestling in the Olympics. He was a victor over Hodgkin’s Disease. Did you see it on television? This big man – kneeling, crossing himself in prayer – tears flowing unashamedly down his face. And the joy was there. It was pronounced. His whole being resonated the joy as he danced about unable to contain his emotion. His joy was a by-product of his obedience to the rules of the game and his preparation thorough arduous discipline.

So with Christian joy. Joy is a by-product of our obedience and discipline – our abiding in Christ. So lodge this truth in your mind: You will enjoy your discipleship in proportion to your obedience. Get that – this was not Jesus only promise of joy. Chapter 16 of John’s Gospel focuses almost entirely on joy. Listen to some of Jesus’ words. He’s talking about his coming death, and he says in verse 20: “Truly, truly I say to you, you will weep and lament, but the world will rejoice; you will be sorrowful, but your sorrow will turn into joy.” (RSV) Then he uses the image of a woman in the travail and labor of childbirth. When she delivers her child, she forgets the pain and anguish because of the joy that is hers in her baby. Jesus closes that chapter with the promise: “In this world you have tribulations; but be of good cheer – be joyful – I have overcome the world.”

I have some dear friends, a clergy couple, who have gone through a very, very painful divorce. Clergy are human and do crazy things just like other people. Somebody has said “everybody has his or her tacky little corner.” In my mind this man had his tacky little corner, and I believe honestly, he lost his way. But that’s not the point I want to share. I was visiting with his wife. They had a thirty-year marriage and they had given their lives to Christ and His Gospel.

My friend and I, the wife, were talking long-distance. You could feel a kind of alternating sort of way, tears in her voice, as well as feel the joy of her spirit. They’d had a thirty-year marriage, and something like that doesn’t end without taking its toll on the life of a person and without bringing its almost unbearable trauma. She kept saying over and over again, “going to make it.” At one point in our conversation, she talked about the fact that people would sometimes say to her, “His Grace is sufficient for you.” She would smile and nod, but beneath her breath she would say, “Barely, just barely.” But she added to me, “that’s all it takes — barely enough grace to be sufficient.”

Then she said something like this, “It would be a shame if I had heard and believed the Gospel for this long and then gave it up or didn’t trust it. I’ve embraced this event as tragedy, I’ve suffered in it, and am suffering through it, but I’m learning. And His Grace is sufficient - though at times only barely. Deep inside I have the joy of knowing who I am in relation to my Lord.”

There it is, the joy of the Christian is that of the abiding presence of Christ; we enjoy our discipleship in proportion to our obedience. Our joy will never be taken away, and it will be complete. Joy is the privilege of Christ’s chosen people.

There is a second privilege for Christ’s Chosen People. Stand on tiptoe now in your mind. Get ready. This is one of the most heartening, exhilarating words of Jesus. First – privilege – what is the privilege that is ours is a deeper walk with Christ. First – it is the privilege of friendship. Listen to it in verses 15 and 16: “No longer do I call you servants for the servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all that I have heard from my Father I have made known to you. You did not choose me, but I chose you.”

I

WE ARE CHOSEN FOR FRIENDSHIP.

Now if that doesn’t touch you as deeply as it should, rehearse the setting and know how tenderly piercing this word would have been for those who heard it first.

The more precise translation here is “No longer do I call you slaves.” The Greek word is doulos.

Barclay reminds us that “the title doulos the slave, the servant of God was no title of shame; it was indeed a title of the highest honor. Moses was the doulos, the servant, the slave of God. (Deut. 34:5); so was Joshua (Joshua 24:29); so was David (Psalm 89:20). It is a title which Paul counted it an honor to use (Titus 1:1). (Over and over again, he was proud to address himself, “Paul, a slave of Jesus Christ”)...The greatest men and women the past I had been proud to be called the douloi of God. And Jesus says: “I have something greater for you yet; you are no longer slaves, you are my friends.” The offer of Christ is of blessedness which not even the greatest person of the world knew before Jesus came into the world; he offers an intimacy with God which was impossible before His coming.” (William Barclay, The Gospel of John, Vol. 2, The Daily Study Bible, pp. 207-208).

Ah, my friends if we could remember that, one of our greatest problems as Christians is that we forget. We can’t sustain the awareness of our identify. We allow the experience of God’s love to become a vague hint of memory no aliveness at all. The question is, how do we keep the experience alive? Do we keep the vision of who we are, friends of Christ glowing and growing in our lives? I suggest three helps.

One, we need to immerse ourselves in the witness of Scripture. The overwhelming message of Scripture is that God really loves His people — that we are friends of Christ. Scripture affirms it over and over again that God loves us — and that His love reaches out to us, not as we might be if we were better, but that He loves us as we are and where we are. Isaiah uses an emotion-laden image to picture God’s love: Partners in witness – but more.

II

PARTNERS IN PRAYER

Listen again to Jesus in verse 16, “You did not choose Me but I chose you – and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit should abide; so that whatever you ask the Father in my name, He may give it to you.”

This is our second direction as to what it means to be partners with Christ, to have a deeper walk with Him. We are to be partners in prayer.

Beautiful life changing things are happening in our church because of prayer. There are people who will witness to you about healing in their life, about reconciliations in relationships, about marriages being rebuilt, about lives being transformed. Talk to Billy Joe Jackson, our evangelist missionary in the Inner-City. I wish you could talk to him about the place of prayer in his ministry and hear his thrilling witness about miraculous jobs, releases from jail, food for people.

A few weeks ago a man in the church was feeling a crisis in his work...The pressure had built up, the demands being made on him were almost unbearable. The burdens of a lot of demanding people were upon him because of what he did, how he functioned, the decisions he made could mean the life or death of their jobs. I was asked to pray for him on a particular day when everything was going to come to a head – when crucial decisions were going to be made and future directions were going to be set.

The next day the word came about how he had literally been carried through his zero day with a freedom of spirit and mind. He knew and confessed the power of prayer. I knew that others must have prayed because my prayers had been so limited and feeble. It hit me with convicting power. It shamed me that I had prayed so little. What an awesome responsibility to be a partner with Christ in prayer.

There is a woman in this church who expresses her partner ship with Christ in prayer in a beautiful way. I discovered it quite by accident. Almost every Sunday morning she comes to this church before anyone arrives. She moves very, very slowly up the center aisle of this church and she imagines people who will in be sitting in these pews and she prays for them. She literally bathes this sanctuary with a spirit of love and intercession on behalf of others.

What an awesome privilege be partners with Christ in prayer.

Now we need to see something very important in our Scripture lesson. Jesus does not separate our praying from our witnessing and bearing fruit. And he says that we are to pray in Jesus’ name; that is, we are to pray as “partners with Christ,” read y to witness and serve and bear fruit as we are called.

Let me illustrate. A few months ago a woman in this congregation lost a gold bracelet at a football game. She filed an insurance claim for the bracelet and forgot about it. A while latter a need came to her attention – the need of Billy Joe Jackson’s family for a washing machine. The Jackson’s had moved into a new place, they had a new baby, and they didn’t have a washing machine. That need became paramount in my friend’s thinking and she began to pray about it. She and her husband had been called upon to give a lot of money to different causes and she didn’t feel free to go out and buy a washing machine. It just didn’t seem to come clear, but she still couldn’t get that off her mind. Off and on for in her prayer time, that need would emerge as she began to think about people in need for whom she wanted to pray. One morning after her time of prayer, a time when again that need of the Jackson’s for a washing machine emerged, in the mail came a check from the insurance company, paying her for the gold bracelet she had lost. She had completely forgotten about it.

She knew without hesitation that her prayer had been answered. Not only did she pay for that washing machine, she took the balance of the money that she received from the loss of the gold bracelet and put it in a special account that she will use in the future as an answer to other prayers.

Do you see what I am saying? Jesus does not separate our praying from out witnessing and bearing fruit. Nor can we. We are partners with him in prayer and our witness and bearing fruit is integral to our prayer.

III

PARTNERS IN LOVE

Listen again to Scripture, in order to get our third direction as what it means to be a partner with Christ. Verse 17: “This command you, to love one another.” We are to be partners in love. This word of Jesus is set in the context of His earlier word in verse 13 when He talked to us about being His friends – “Great love hath no man than this that a man lay down his life for his friend.”

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Maxie Dunnam