John 15:1-17 · The Vine and the Branches
He Abides In Us
John 15:1-17
Sermon
by Harry N. Huxhold
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John Updike once more revealed his remarkably brilliant powers of description in the novel Brazil. Updike shares his uncanny ability to portray the setting and landscape that surround his characters in order to highlight their nature and their roles. However, Updike's greatest gift is the manner in which he is able to crawl inside the characters to reveal their restless and frantic struggles to discover themselves. The principal characters in Brazil are Tristao and Isabel. Their love for each other survives a tormented parade of trials forced on them by family, nature, society, and the economy. Yet the end for them is as tragic as for Tristan and Isolde, whose names and whose roles are so similar. Purposefully, the reader is left to wonder a great deal about the significance of such relationships and, above all, the meaning of such lives.

Today the Holy Gospel suggests to us that life lived apart from our Lord Jesus Christ is meaningless and without purpose. Jesus himself talks about the need to be attached to him. We can readily appreciate the importance of relationship in a day when human relations are extremely difficult. What Jesus suggests, however, is that all human relations are dependent upon him.

The Cutoffs

It is not difficult to document how difficult human relations are today. The homeless, unattached, and lonely people of the world are in the news everyday. Whenever the latest statistics are revealed about the high incidence of divorce or the number of people living alone, most of us probably think to ourselves, "We knew it was bad, but we did not know it was that bad." Yet the epidemic of divorces and the large number of people living alone are only symptomatic of the breakdown of human relations in so many areas of life.

People feel cut off. They live lonely lives surrounded by people. It is true that people very often are cut off from their hometowns and their families geographically. In addition, the opportunities to create relationships are not all that easy in a highly technocratic society. We have become more dependent upon things than we are dependent upon people. Even the crude attempts we make at developing occasions for making relationships are all too superficial. Artificial attempts soon fail for their inability to create lasting relationships of commitment and lasting value. It is no wonder then that all of the popular talk shows put on exhibition the most bizarre cases of failed human relationships. We have learned not to be shocked at how utterly human relations can not only fail but also mess up people's lives. Oprah Winfrey and company daily parade for us how bankrupt humanity is of good wholesome relationships.

The Vinedresser

What Jesus says in the Holy Gospel about vines and the failure of vines offers insight into the poor human relations of our time. Yet what Jesus has to say has deeper significance. Obviously, we are to understand our dependence upon him for life, for the sustenance and for the redemption of life. Our total life is dependent upon him in every way. However, the point of this saying of Jesus is that the vine exists under the care and scrutiny of the Vinedresser. The Vinedresser, Jesus explains, is the Father. The Vinedresser has planted the vine for a purpose, and he expects the vine to produce fruit. The Vinedresser will do the nurturing of the vine to make fruit possible, but when the vine fails after all that he has done for it, it must be removed to wither on some trash pile.

Our Creator God has the right to make a judgment on our lives. God expects us to produce. God looks for us to give evidence of what God has invested in us. Our lives are under constant judgment. There is no way we can escape the responsibility for which we have been created. In the very same way we look for foliage on the vine, God scrutinizes our lives for some signs of productivity. All of creation exists under that searching examination by God. That searching comes into our lives in a variety of ways. God works through many means. God gets at us through nature, parents, superiors, government and what have you.

God's Standard

What we should appreciate about God's judgment is that it is more than likely quite different from what most of us expect. We have our own standards of judgment. They are not necessarily like God's. For example, we may know of two quadriplegics. One remains completely helpless, sits in the chair, or lies in bed. The other is a talented and gifted painter, who does beautiful landscapes by taking the paint brush into the mouth to achieve his work. We may compare only the two, and we miss the fact that the painter also puts to shame a whole bevy of people who produce nothing worthwhile even though they have use of all of their faculties.

It is not difficult for us to erect or choose standards that are really means for us to be able to rationalize some support for our own viewpoints. More often than not, we elect standards for satisfying our own egos. It is not difficult at all to create a whole range of contrasts in individuals. Yet we would not be able to judge them adequately, because we have no proper basis for judgment. However, that should give us the hint that the fruit which God looks for on the vine may be a surprise. God expects to see something on the vine that reflects what God has been doing for us. The fruit that God is looking for is the direct result of what God has been doing for us right along.

The Pruning

What Jesus is talking about as fruit is faith. We can be certain he is talking about faith, because he himself gives the clue. He says that those who are not bringing forth fruit will have to be pruned and thrown away. This is because they obviously are not drawing their life from Christ who is the Vine. They are cut off from Christ. Consequently, they are cut off from life. Their lives are fruitless and dead. They must be pruned and taken away and ultimately thrown into the fire. On the other hand, Jesus says to his disciples, "You have already been cleansed by the word that I have spoken to you." This is to say that Jesus has already cleansed, pruned, and trimmed his disciples that they might be able to yield the proper fruit. They did not cleanse themselves. They did not make themselves fit branches for bearing fruit. Jesus himself furnished them with the righteousness to make their fruit acceptable to the Divine Vinedresser.

The substance of the Fourth Gospel intimates that cleansing comes through the washing of Holy Baptism. For John, the expression "the word" is none other than our Lord Jesus Christ himself. The word which Jesus had shared with the disciples was what he had taught them, to be sure. Yet it was much more. Jesus had shared with the disciples the revelation of himself as the very Word of God. The disciples were given the life of the Vine through the sacrament and through the word. They were sustained by the Vine who is the Word. It is in furnishing life to his disciples that our Lord also furnishes righteousness to all their works. Our Lord not only redeems us but also redeems our works that when the Vinedresser comes to judge us or look for fruit, God does not find us wanting.

The Good Fruit

The Holy Gospel appointed for today was a favorite text of Martin Luther. Luther lectured on and on to illuminate this passage. For him this was one more convincing piece of the scriptures that helps us to understand that we are saved by faith and not by our works. Without Christ, the true Vine, who himself suffered painful pruning at the hands of God through suffering, crucifixion, and death, no one can produce anything acceptable to God. Yet when we are cleansed by our Lord through baptism and the word we do produce works imbued with the righteousness that flows to us through the Vine.

In like manner Jesus taught that a bad tree cannot bring forth good fruit. First, the bad tree must be made whole through proper pruning and fertilizing. Luther was very explicit in describing the pruning and fertilizing in barnyard terms. Yet he rhapsodized on the encouragement and comfort this passage has for every Christian. When the Vinedresser comes looking for fruit, those branches which are in Christ offer the evidence that their lives are in Christ, because their works are furnished with his righteousness. Christians do not have to worry whether they are acceptable to God. Christ has made them and their works acceptable.

More Produce

There is another comforting feature of this saying of Jesus. This discourse was spoken, according to John, after Jesus had celebrated the Passover meal and instituted the holy supper. That he should speak shortly after the holy meal of himself as the Vine has special significance. The relationships of the saying to the Lord's Supper should not be lost on us. Not only have we been cleansed and purified through holy baptism and by Christ as the Word, but our Lord Jesus Christ also sustains that life for us in the Lord's Supper. As we receive in the sacrament the fruit of the vine, we receive him who is the Vine. As surely as the fruit of the vine becomes a part of us through the partaking of the supper, the Lord Jesus Christ abides in us. The Lord Jesus wanted to make that as vivid for us as he possibly could. Each time we come to the holy sacrament we receive life from the Vine.

Each time we take the Vine to ourselves by faith in the words, "given and shed for you for the remission of sins," we are cleansed and purified once more that we might produce righteousness, the fruits of holiness, to the Vinedresser. In addition to that, our Lord says, because we abide in the Savior this way, "Ask for whatever you wish, and it will be done for you." Some good-meaning folk take this to mean we get anything we want in some magical way. It means rather, that in conformity with the suffering of our Lord, with holy baptism, with faith, and with the sacrament we can ask God for whatever we are lacking that we might be able to do what God requires of us.

The Best Fruit

Jesus concludes this portion of his discourse on a high note. Not only do those who thrive as branches on the Vine pass the judgment of the Vinedresser but they also glorify God. Jesus says, "My Father is glorified by this, that you bear much fruit and become my disciples." Does our Lord hereby contradict everything he said in the foregoing to suggest that we are saved by good works? Hardly. However, what this does suggest to us is that those works which are the product of God's love and grace do have an enduring quality.

In his book, The Kennedy Imprisonment: A Meditation on Power, Gary Wills contrasts the contributions of John Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr., through their conception of power. The Camelot that JFK created at the White House vanished. On the other hand, King, the pacifist who believed in non-violence and achievements through suffering and patience, made lasting impressions on our society. In like manner, the contrast in styles and understanding of power in ordinary people makes for differences in their lives. People who in their quiet ways draw life from the One who is the Vine discover that they not only live in him by love and grace and he in them, but also they are able to live in one another through love and grace. The restless lives of the likes of Updike's Tristao and Isabel do not have to be filled with question marks and end in dry rot. We can and do live in him who is the Vine and glorifies the Father in us.

CSS Publishing Company, WHICH WAY TO JESUS?, by Harry N. Huxhold