John 15:1-17 · The Vine and the Branches
The Right Connection
John 15:1-17
Sermon
by James Merritt
Loading...

It is amazing how valuable a vine can be. The vines, like the ones we saw here at Chateau Elan bring in $40 billion of business a year in the United States. Americans this past year bought 267 million cases and drank 800 million gallons of its fruit and that number increases every year.

Wineries and vineyards are the second most popular tourist attraction in California after Disneyland. The United States is the largest retail wine market in the world and this industry employs 35,000 people. As important as the economical value of this vine is, Jesus gave it a spiritual value above and beyond any other plant that God ever created, because it answers, maybe, the greatest question of life. Let me illustrate it with a story.

I used to pastor in Mississippi. When James and Jonathan were just toddlers my mom and dad would come two or three times a year and spend several days with us. One visit is burned into my mind forever. We had a couch that pulled out into a bed. Whenever Mom and Dad would come, James would sleep with my mom and Jonathan would sleep with my dad. It thrilled me to watch my mom and dad lie in bed with my kids and tell them stories and play with them and fall asleep with them. Some of the most precious pictures I have are pictures of the kids sleeping with their grandparents.

The day came for Mom and Dad to leave and they purposely got up very, very, early in the morning, because not only did they not want to wake the kids, but also they knew the kids would be very emotional when they left. They were getting in their car to leave and somehow Jonathan woke up. When he saw my dad wasn’t in the bed he ran outside to the garage just as they were about to pull away and he began to scream at the top of his lungs, “Don’t leave me Poppa! Please don’t leave me Poppa!” Mom and Dad got out of the car and hugged Jonathan and assured him that they would be back soon and got back in the car, but that didn’t satisfy him. As they drove away, that voice kept ringing out, “Don’t leave me Poppa! Don’t leave me Poppa!”

When my dad got home he called me and he said, “Son, you just need to be prepared for something. I will never let that happen again, because the next time you will have an empty nest early, because I am taking those boys back home with me.” Jonathan, particularly, had a hard time understanding why his grandparents would leave him behind.

Our Heavenly Father loves us far more than my mom and dad loved my kids, so why does He leave us behind? Why does He leave us here? If He loves us so much you would think the moment that you trust Christ and become a part of His family He would just take you right into heaven, but He doesn’t. So the question, “Why does He leave us here?” To put it more generally, “What is our purpose for being here?”

Scripture makes it plain that God never does anything haphazardly. Behind everything is the purpose of God. Everything has a purpose and there is a purpose in everything. Whether you are a Christ-follower or not, you have been left here for one primary purpose. If you don’t achieve this purpose your life will be completely wasted.

What is it? I will give you a clue. It all has to do with a vine. Vines are planted. Vines are cultivated and vines are managed to do one thing and one thing only. It is the only thing that makes the branches of a vine valuable and that is fruit.

We are spending our entire tenth year anniversary with Jesus. We are in the middle of series called “Seven” in which Jesus, himself, answers this question, “Who do you think that I am?” Seven times in the Gospel of John with what biblical scholars call the “I am” sayings of Jesus, He self-identifies Himself, not by using titles or names, but by using metaphors. So far we have learned He has called Himself: The Bread of Life, The Light of the World, The Door and The Good Shepherd.” In this next statement, He compares Himself to a vine. [Turn to John 15]

“I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener. He cuts off every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful.” (John 15:1-2, NIV)

Most likely, Jesus had just left the Upper Room where He had had the Last Supper with His disciples. He was walking to the Garden of Gethsemane which was a garden full of vines. In fact, throughout all of Israel, vines grew abundantly. When those vines were properly cultivated and kept they produced grapes, which in turn, were used to make wine.

It was very important for the gardener to keep the vines trimmed so they could bear a lot of fruit, because the purpose of a branch is to bear the fruit that the vine produces.

In this passage, there is a phrase that is repeated over and over and over that you can’t miss.

“Every branch in me that does not bear fruit he takes away, and every branch that does bear fruit he prunes, that it may bear more fruit.” (John 15:2, ESV)

“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, ESV)

“I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever 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, ESV)

“By this my Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit and so prove to be my disciples.” (John 15:8, ESV)

“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.” (John 15:16, ESV)

There are two words that are repeated in those verses time and time again – “bear fruit.”

Jesus identifies the players in this passage. God is the gardener, Jesus is the vine, and we are the branches. The Gardner only has one concern for the branch. He wants the branch to bear the fruit that the vine produces and the vine wants to produce as much fruit as it can. The answer to the question is, “Why has God left all of us on this planet and what is our number one purpose?” It is to bear fruit. That fruit, simply put, is the character of Christ. One sure sign that you are a genuine follower of Christ is your life is bearing fruit that others can see and others can taste.

A Christ-follower is a branch attached to Jesus the vine. A branch only has one purpose – to bear fruit. A branch by itself has no value. I love grapes, but a grape branch is not very tasty. Apart from bearing fruit, a branch has no purpose. In other words, a branch finds its purpose and its significance in bearing fruit from the vine.

What the gardener desires for the branch is what God desires for you and me. What gives the branch purpose and meaning and impact is the fruit that it bears. Just as a branch can only bear fruit if it is connected to the vine you will only find purpose and meaning in life when you have that same organic connection to Jesus Christ. Key Take Away: When you are connected to the root you will bear fruit. Life is all about finding the right connection. Jesus tells us in this beautiful story the way your life can have meaning and purpose and make an impact every single day by taking these steps.

I. Connect To Christ Personally

We begin in verse 5. “I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever 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, ESV)

Even though Jesus spoke these words to His disciples what He said was for the benefit of those who are not His disciples as well. He gives, perhaps, the best definition of a Christian you will ever read in scripture. I don’t use the word “Christian” very much, because it has become one of the most misunderstood terms in our culture. Jesus makes something very plain here. A Christian is a person connected to Christ and bears the fruit of His character. In other words, what makes a person a Christian is all about having the right connection.

How many times have you ever heard people say that the way to get ahead or to get accepted or to get promoted or to get hired is in knowing the right person? Having the right connections? Nothing could be more accurate than finding your purpose in life, because our purpose is to bear fruit and that only comes by being properly connected.

Do you realize how this makes Christianity the most unique faith in the world? No other faith or religious system offers its followers a personal union in connection with its founder. The Buddhist does not claim to be joined with Buddha. The Confuciusnist does not claim to be joined to Confucius. The Muslim does not claim to be joined to Mohammed, but a follower of Christ is connected to, joined to, and a branch of Jesus Christ.

This is why so many people are so confused about what is real Christianity. They confuse religion with relationship. There is a difference between an organizational connection with Christ and an organic connection with Christ. I know in my ministry I have pastored a lot of people who were connected to the church, but they were not connected to Christ. That is why going to church does not make you a Christian any more than going into a garage makes you a Mercedes.

I went to college down in Florida and all over the campus you would see Spanish moss hanging on oak trees. You could walk up to a low hanging branch and reach up and pluck that Spanish moss right off of that tree. Spanish moss is hanging on the tree, but it is not organically connected to the tree.

Jesus had Spanish moss hanging on Him. His name was Judas. Of the twelve disciples Jesus had eleven were genuine branches that were connected to Him, but Judas was just Spanish moss. He “hung around” Jesus, but he never had a personal relationship with Jesus.

If you claim to be a follower of Jesus this is a good question to ask yourself periodically, “When people look at me, do they see a religion or do they see a relationship?” You can attend a church, you can join a church and be baptized into a church, but you will not become a fruit-bearing branch until you are connected to Jesus Christ.

That is why Jesus says in verse 5, “For apart from me you can do nothing.” (John 15:5, ESV)

There are a lot of things you can do without Christ such as earn a living, raise a family, do good deeds, attend church, win awards, or become famous. There is one thing you cannot do without Jesus. You cannot live the life you ought to live and be the person that you ought to be apart from being connected to Christ.

Remember, even though the branch bears the fruit it doesn’t produce the fruit. The first step for you and me to be fruitful, to find our purpose and our meaning is to make sure that we have that personal connection with Jesus Christ. After you connect to Christ personally you take the next step which is –

II. Concentrate On Christ Exclusively

“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, ESV)

Jesus reiterates that Christianity is all about a you–me relationship. If the branch wants to be fruitful and achieve its purpose the only thing it has to do is concentrate exclusively on its relationship to the vine. Remember God’s #1 concern for us is the same concern a gardener has for his vine and its branches. He wants us to be fruitful. God the Father wants us to bear the fruit of the character of God the Son.

I know that for one simple reason. Fruit always reflects the character of the tree or the vine from which it is connected. Go to an apple tree and you will find apples. Go to a pear tree and you will find pears. Grape vines are designed to produce grapes and a follower of Jesus Christ is to produce the character of the Christ in which he is connected.

Keep in mind that the gardener’s number one concern for the branch is not just that it bears fruit, but that it bears the most fruit it possibly can. His job is to maximize production. You are going to notice that Jesus talks about a progression in this matter of bearing fruit. First, He talks about a branch that doesn’t bear any fruit.

“Every branch in me that does not bear fruit he takes away…” (John 15:2, ESV)

Then, He talks about a branch that bears some fruit.

“Every branch that does bear fruit he prunes.”(John 15:2, ESV)

Then, He talks about a branch that bears more fruit, “That it may bear more fruit.” (John 15:2, ESV)

Then, He talks about a branch that bears “much fruit.”

“I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever 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, ESV)

Then, finally He talks about a branch that bears the best fruit.

“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.” (John 15:16, ESV)

This is the fruit that lasts! This is fruit that won’t rot. It just continues to ripen.

What Jesus is saying is this, “The more faithful you are to Christ, the more fruitful you will be for Christ.”

If you are not a follower of Jesus Christ you are not bearing any fruit, because you are not even a branch. You are not even attached to the vine. Once you decide to become a follower of Jesus Christ and you decide to become that branch, from that moment on you enter into a life-long process where your Heavenly Father as a loving gardener is going to do everything He can to maximize the fruit in your life. He does it the same way a gardener does. A gardener does two things with a vine to maximize its production. First of all, he continually positions that vine in a way to receive the most sunlight so it can bear the most fruit. Listen to verse 2 again.

“Every branch in me that does not bear fruit he takes away.”(John 15:2, ESV)

The words “take away” can better be translated “to pick up” or “lift up.” Grapes are not like squash or pumpkins. They don’t develop while lying on the ground. They grow better when they are hanging free.

Sometimes branches get so heavily loaded up that they droop close to the ground and they get covered in dust. Then, they can’t get the sunlight they need and they begin to wither. The vinedresser will come along and lift these branches up off the ground, brush off that dust and repossession that vine so that those branches are hanging free so they can get the most sunlight. That is why if you go to a vineyard you will see vines stretched out from pole to pole. They are trying to keep the branches in a maximum position so they can bear the most fruit.

So many times things happen to us where God is simply trying to pick us up and lift us up and put us in the best place we can possibly be to bear the most fruit for Him, but we don’t even realize it.

He will send people to encourage us when we are down or He will answer a prayer that we thought was impossible or He will provide a way out of an inescapable situation or He will solve a problem that we thought was insurmountable. All He is trying to do is position us where we can bear the most fruit.

The second way the gardener maximizes the fruit of the branch is by pruning.

“And every branch that does bear fruit he prunes, that it may bear more fruit.” (John 15:2, ESV)

Sometimes branches have growing into them what are called “sucker-shoots.” These are tiny little shoots that appear exactly where the vine and the branch intersect and they begin to suck the sap from the vine that ought to be going to the branch away from the branch. If sucker-shoots are not pruned and cut away the branch becomes malnourished and it won’t bear fruit, so the gardener will take sheers or scissors and very gently, but firming cut away anything that will impede the ability of that branch to do what it was designed to do which is to bear fruit.

Sometimes God takes the sheers of circumstances, tough-times, heartache, difficulty, the loss of a job, or a physical aliment and though we don’t realize it He is trying to cut away those sucker-shoots from our lives that are sucking the sap out of the vine keeping us from bearing fruit. If you will listen you will hear those sheers clipping away when you are lying flat on a sick bed or you just got fired from a job or your spouse has walked out on you or a rebellious child has left home. Too often, we get bitter and angry, because we fail to realize that what God is doing is cutting away our arrogance and our pride and our tendency to depend on everything except Him and to be who we ought to be and do what we ought to do.

Sometimes He uses the scissors of scripture. Listen to verse 3.

“Already you are clean because of the word that I have spoken to you.” (John 15:3, ESV)

The word for “clean” in verse 3 is the same word for “prune” in verse 2. You read your Bible and you get convicted of something you have been doing that you need to stop or you get challenged with things that you haven’t been doing that you need to start. God is simply cutting away the bad so it doesn’t get in the way of the good and even goes deeper and cuts out the good so it doesn’t get in the way of the best.

I’ll tell you something that you already know. Pruning is painful. Pruning hurts. Pruning cuts. Remember this – whenever the gardener is pruning the branch it is because he considers the branch important and he wants to maximize the fruitfulness of that branch. We get the idea sometimes that troubles and trials and heartaches and difficulties are signs that God doesn’t care when in reality they are signs that God does care.

God is the Master Gardener. He loves you so much that He will never allow anything to come into your life that He hasn’t designed to be used as a means of making you the most fruitful you can be and giving you the opportunity to live the most impactful life that you can. Remember this – the hand of the gardener is never closer to the branch than when he is pruning the vine. Do you want to be everything you want to be? Do you want to do everything you want to do? Do you want to come to the end of your life minimizing your regrets and maximizing your rejoicing? Then, you concentrate on Christ exclusively and your connection to Him. You do that by taking the last step.

III. Continue In Christ Daily

There is only one command that is given in this entire passage of scripture. It is found repeatedly and the first time we encounter it is in verse 4.

“Abide in me.” (John 15:4, ESV)

The word “abide” simply means, “remain” or “continue.” All it simply means is this – every day we are to continuously make Jesus Christ the center of our thoughts, the focus of our life, and the passion of our hearts. The only time a branch will not bear fruit is if something is blocking its connection to the vine.

You cannot force a branch to produce fruit. You can’t command a branch to produce fruit. That is why nowhere do you find Jesus ever telling us to go out and produce fruit. Our job is not to produce the fruit; our job is to bear it. The way you bear fruit is by staying connected to the vine. So seven times Jesus tells us in verses 4, 5, 7, 9, and 10, “Abide. Abide. Abide.”

Do you get the picture? You can’t make fruit. You can’t manufacture fruit and you can manipulate fruit. All you can do is bear fruit. The way you do that is just staying connected to the vine. Just stay close to Jesus. Stay connected to Jesus.

One of the things I can do for Teresa is make her a cup of hot tea. I really enjoy doing it, because it is one of the few things I know how to do with my hands! If you have ever made tea you know what I am about to say. When you put a teabag in a cup of hot water the longer that tea bag remains or abides in that water the more that water will take on the color and the taste of that tea. If you want the tea to be stronger you just leave the bag in longer. That is what happens to us every day when we abide in Christ, just remain in Christ, we begin to take on the color of His character and the flavor of His life.

Here is your assignment beginning today. You abide in Christ by simply taking the tea bag of your life and soak it in the hot water of His Word. Let Him talk to you as you study the Bible. Spend time with Him talking with Him in prayer. You just stop, look and listen. Stop and take time out of your daily routine and look into His Word and then you listen to what He says to you. The more you maximize your connection to Christ the more He will multiply His fruit through you.

The branch does not produce fruit for the vine, but the branch bears the fruit produced by the vine. The mark of every true follower of Jesus Christ is fruit. There is no such thing in the teachings of Jesus as a non-fruit bearing believer. The Christian life is a fruit bearing life.

Do you know why this is so important to understand? If you are not a follower of Jesus Christ and the reason is you said to yourself, “I can’t live a Christian life. It is too hard.” You are half right. You can’t live a Christian life. Not because it is too hard, but because it is impossible. Only one person has ever lived the Christian life and that is Jesus.

Jesus gave His life for us so that He could live His life through us. When you are connected to the root you will bear fruit that will never rot, but will only ripen into a life worth living, because you have the right connection.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by James Merritt