Luke 6:43-45 · A Tree and Its Fruit
The Proof Is In The Fruit
Luke 6:39-49
Sermon
by James Garrett
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Oswald Chambers in the daily devotion book titled, My Utmost For His Highest, wrote: God expects my personal life to be a “Bethlehem.” Am I allowing my natural life to be slowly transfigured by the indwelling life of the Son of God? God’s ultimate purpose is that his Son might be manifested in my mortal flesh. A Christian is a person who is in Christ and in whom Christ dwells. This indwelling experience results in a new lifestyle.

In the sixth chapter of Luke, verses 39 through 49, Jesus underscores the inseparable union of what one is and what one does.

Here is an example of the humor of Jesus. If you have any doubts that God has a sense of humor, look in the mirror! It must have been with a smile that Jesus gave the parable of a person with a log in his eye trying to extract a speck of dust from someone else’s eye. We have no right to criticize unless we ourselves are free of faults. That means we have no right to criticize… “There is so much bad in the rest of us that it ill becomes any of us to find fault with the rest of us.”

This tragicomical scene of looking always to others, not self, becomes a veil protecting us from honest soul-searching. People defend nothing more violently than the pretenses they live by.

A quip published in the Arkansas Baptist says, “Some people think they are big shots just because they explode.”

Many wounds are inflicted because someone’s dissatisfaction with life must express itself. The one who happens to be near enough to be hurt is simply unlucky.

Psychologists tell us two factors account for criticism: one is the secret intent to hurt, the other the desire for superiority. The act of criticism gives us temporarily a superior position and feeds our confidence. It becomes a means of elevating oneself.

The 250th anniversary of John Wesley’s Aldersgate experience has revived our interest in his life. But even he was not without fault.

Wesley often rode on horseback to Methodist gatherings. One day on a narrow path he met an arrogant man, also on horseback, coming in the other direction. The man refused to budge, saying, “I shall not give the road to a fool.”

“But I will,” replied Wesley, calmly turning his horses off the road.

A historian, after a careful study of Wesley’s life, was convinced the Methodist Church would never have spread so fast had Wesley gotten along with his wife, a very difficult woman. He said Wesley was constantly taking to the road, preaching, as much to get away from his wife as to convert the wicked. She was, he said, Wesley’s “thorn in the flesh.”

In an imperfect world, criticism and moral superiority can come easily. The judgmental approach costs nothing and is worth as much. To hunt for ways to praise others can do far more good. It has been said, “A compliment is verbal sunshine.” Praise awakens hope and the desire to be. Mark Twain once remarked: “I can live for two months on one compliment.”

“Each tree is known by its own fruit,” said Jesus. Behavior is the natural expression of the basic self. A person’s life cannot be evaluated in any other way than by his behavior. It’s comical to expect figs from a thorn bush, or to pick grapes from a bramble bush.

We have an inside where we live and move and have our being as well as an outside of flesh and bone. Our actions and our words transmit something of the life we have inside us. What one is, one does.

Remember the story of the plainly dressed Mennonite who was stopped on the street by a young convert who asked, “Brother, are you saved?” the long-bearded Mennonite did not respond immediately, but pulled out a piece of paper and wrote on it. Then he handed the paper to the stranger and said, “Here are the names and addresses of my family, neighbors, and the people I do business with. Ask them if they think I’m saved. I could tell you anything.”

Writing about “righteousness,” Frederick Buechner tells of an exasperated piano teacher saying to a student: “You haven’t got it right!” He is holding his hands the way he’s been told. His fingering is exceptional. He has memorized the piece perfectly. He has hit all the proper notes with deadly accuracy. But his heart’s not in it, only his fingers. What he’s playing is a sort of music but nothing that will start voices singing or feet tapping. He has succeeded in boring everybody to death including himself.

Righteousness is getting it all right! If you play it the way it’s supposed to be played, there won’t be a still foot in the house or a voice not singing.

In the book, The Little Prince, the little Prince tells the Fox, “That which is essential is invisible.” Take that home with you: “That which is essential is invisible.” Essential and invisible… we can’t see it. We can’t handle it. We can’t measure it or put our arms around it.

But, in real life, we do see it. It is measured and handled, for Jesus said: “The good man out of the good treasure of his heart produces good,… for out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaks.”

Ah, even words, sooner or later, reveal character just as surely and naturally as the fruit announces the kind of tree bearing it.

A married couple was having problems. In a counseling session the wife blurted out, “I can’t remember the last time he said, ‘I love you.’ ” His retort was, “When I married you 28 years ago I told you that I loved you, and I said that if I ever changed my mind I’d let you know.”

Once Jesus told of a man who was liturgically correct. He stood in the proper place, said his prayers. His form was impeccable. But his heart wasn’t in it. The prayers were words to impress others. Another man that day did everything wrong. He stood far back, and just mumbled mercy, mercy, mercy. And his prayer was heard, and answered!

Jesus Christ makes the heart pump faster and louder than anyone else. Open your heart to him, invite him to come into your life. It’s a wonderful day when it dawns upon you that you are a child of God, adopted into his family by the love and grace of Jesus Christ. And you begin to live and speak as his child.

“Take my life, and let it be consecrated Lord, to Thee.”

C.S.S. Publishing Company, GOD’S GIFT, by James Garrett