John 15:1-17 · The Vine and the Branches
The Vine That Lives Forever
John 15:1-17
Sermon
by George Bass
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In his Report to Greco, Nikos Kazantzakis describes Easter Sunday, shortly before daybreak, in the mountains of Crete. A priest, Father Kaphatos, "races from village to village resurrecting Christ with mercurial speed because there are so many villages having only this one priest, and he must perform the resurrection in all of them before daybreak. Sleeves rolled up, weighted with his vestments and the heavy silver-bound Bible, he clambers over the rocky furze-covered mountains, runs through the holy night gasping for breath, reaches one village, shouts the Christos anesti - ‘Christ is risen!’ - and then dashes to the next village, his tongue hanging out of his mouth." It is almost dawn when he reaches the final village in the parish, "a little hamlet wedged between two crags (where) the people are assembled in a diminutive church. They have lighted the cressets and adorned the icons and portal with laurels and myrtles they carried from the ravine. Their candles remain unlit in their hands; they are waiting for the Great Word to come so that they can light them."

When this little congregation hears "a crunching of pebbles in the silence, as though a horse were hastily climbing the mountainside and the stones cascading down," they know that the priest is on his way and will soon arrive. "He’s coming! He’s coming!" And then, says Kazantzakis, "They all fly outside. The east is already tinted rose; the skies are laughing. Heavy breaths are heard, the sheep dogs bark with joy, and then all at once from behind a frizzled oak - shirt unbuttoned, drenched with sweat, flushed from running, engrossed in the many Christs he has resurrected - out springs old, black, dwarfish Father Kaphatos, his unbraided hair flowing ... The sun is at that very instant emerging from behind the mountin’s crest. Taking a leap, the priest lands in front of the villagers and spreads his arms:

"Christos anestakas, lads!" he shouts, because the "familiar, trite word anesti had suddenly seemed small, cheap, wretched to him; it was incapable of containing the Great News. The word had broadened and proliferated on the priest’s lip. Linguistic laws had given way and cracked in the wake of the soul’s great impetus, new laws were created, and lo! In creating the new word, this morning, the old Cretan felt for the first time that he was truly resurrecting Christ - all of him, in every inch of his great stature."46

Perhaps that is why this gospel is appointed for this latter section of the Great Fifty Days of Easter. The Great Word, "He is risen!" may be difficult to discern a month after Christ’s resurrection was first announced this year. Another word needs to be added, if not invented, so that our celebration of his resurrection - "all of him, in every inch of his great stature" - might not only continue, but find fulfillment in our lives. And the word that John offers us is that very familiar, "I am the vine, my Father is the vinedresser ... you are the branches ... He who abides in me, and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit." This word is meant to connect us in another way to the Resurrection of our Lord. It has something of the quality of Father Kaphatos’ new word, "Christos anestakas," for you and me.

Discipleship is the expression of the Christian faith, and Jesus’ resurrection, in our daily lives. He expects us to be his servants in the world, if the Great Word, Christ is risen, is real and meaningful for us. We are to live out his resurrection in our relationships with other people with whom we live and work wherever we may be. Christ has given us a word of life and hope to pass on to people in distress, fear, or spiritual desolation, and that word is simply, Jesus lives - and he is with us right now! Antoine de St. Exupery writes about the time when he once stood with "three peasants in the presence of their dead mother. Sorrow filled the room. For a second time, the umbilical cord had been cut. For a second time the knot had been loosed, the knot that bound one generation to another. Suddenly the three sons had felt themselves alone on earth with everything still to be learned. The magnetic pole round which they had lived was gone; their mother’s table, where they had collected on feast days with their families, was no more. But I could see in this rupture that it was possible for life to be granted a second time. Each of these sons was now to be the head of a family, was to be a rallying point and a patriarch, until that day each would pass the staff of office to the brood of children now murmuring in the courtyard." That sounds a bit like the mission Christ has given to the church: our Lord’s physical presence is gone from the earth, but he expects us to carry on with his work.

But we don’t have to live and work by ourselves. Christ’s promise is that we can "abide in him and he in us." We are not alone; the Lord is with us, and his resurrection promise to be with us until the end of time is real and powerful when we cling to him. Antoine tells about hearing the "tocsin tolled to announce to the countryside the death of this old woman, [but] it seemed to me not a song of despair but a discreet and tender chant of joy. In that same voice the church-bell celebrated birth and death, christening and burial, the passage of one generation to the next. I was suffused with a gentle peace of soul at this sound which announced the betrothal of a poor old woman and the earth." That village church bell spoke boldly and continually, "Christ is risen!" and "Lo, I am with you," and the writer got the message loudly and clearly in the face of death and the future of that particular family. It would go on - life, that is - in those sons and their children, supported and directed by the risen Lord. Antoine says that this continuation of life was "the slow progress of a tree’s growth, but it was also fulfillment.... This peasant mother had done more than transmit life, she had taught her sons a language, had handed on to them the lot so slowly garnered through the centuries, the spiritual patrimony of traditions, concepts, and myths that make up the whole difference between Newton or Shakespeare and the caveman."47 Jesus does something like that - in his continuing presence and powerful spirit - for his people, the church. And that’s why we may dare to accept and wear the mantle of discipleship.

Fundamental to our lives and mission for Christ is the business of abiding in him. Just how are we to "abide in him, and he in us"? Many of us - too many, perhaps - reduce this to a matter of obedience, which may be an attempt to attain some measure of goodness in our lives. This becomes a matter of sanctification by keeping the commandments and/or doing good to others. It reduces the Christian life to certain types of piety, which by themselves fall short of "abiding in Christ." These efforts may be external and irrelevant, if Christ is not at the very center of our beings.

As a child, Nikos Kazantzakis had two great desires: One was freedom, and the second, "which remains hidden within me to this day, tormenting me, was the desire for sanctity." He wanted to be both a hero and a saint, but he discovered that, no matter how hard he tried, sainthood was very elusive. A legend, the Holy Epistle, greatly affected him; it told the story of a stone that fell out of heaven, broke, and a written message was found inside: "Woe to him who uses oil or drinks wine on Wednesdays and Fridays!" So moved was Nikos by this legend, that he made a nuisance of himself by carrying the Holy Epistle into the neighbors’ homes on Wednesdays and Fridays, "made a beeline for the kitchen, smelled what was being cooked, and [if] I caught the scent of meat or fish ... I waved the Holy Epistle menacingly and shouted, ‘Woe to you, woe to you!’ "48 His efforts brought him little satisfaction and the sanctity he sought in Christ continued to elude him almost altogether.

But we can remain in the risen Christ, and that happens by our faithfulness to his Word, by worship and prayer, and by receiving the sacrament of Holy Communion, which renews the gift we received in Holy Baptism. For it is in baptism that we are first joined to him, and he to us. Through the Word and the Eucharist we remain in him, and he remains in us. It is he who renews and maintains this vital relationship between himself and us, not anything that we do to establish or sustain it. It is a matter of hearing the Great Word and responding to it, to the "he is risen" - and clinging to the fundamental meaning of that word. Death was only able to remove him and his powerful presence from the world for three days; after that he was back - alive again! Nothing can take him away from us now, or ever again. Jesus is risen. He is alive and all is well!

William G. Storey suggests that "Daily Prayer in Eastertide" is essential to the faith and the relationship of all believers to Jesus Christ. In the article bearing the above title, he points out that, in the developing worship of the church, Baptism has long been at the heart of the Easter celebration, and that the daily prayers of Eastertide maintained the connection of Baptism and the Resurrection. But this "baptismal connection" to the risen Christ has been lost in most Eastertide worship, and, with it, the very importance of daily prayer during Eastertide - both public and private - has been diminished. Restoration of that kind of daily prayer calls for: (1) reincorporating the Easter Vigil, with its "baptismal connection," into the services of Easter morn; (2) reestablishing daily prayer, so that people recognize that it is as important, during Eastertide as worship during Lent; and, (3) reintroducing a kind of home vespers in Eastertide that finds its rationale and shape in the "baptismal connection" of the Easter Vigil. This latter suggestion is vital to our continuing celebration of the resurrection of Jesus Christ and our growth in his grace - "abide in me, and I in you" - through his Word and the sacraments.

Father Storey suggests a pattern for such home vespers during Eastertide that finds the family gathered around the dining room table. A large candle stands in the middle of it. Either parent lights it, saying: "Christ our light." The rest of the family answers: "Thanks be to God." Then, one of the parents says this table blessing:

O God, sanctifier of all we eat or drink, bless this food and our table fellowship that all who partake of it may rejoice in the resurrection of Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen

A Commemoration of the Cross occurs after the meal:

All: Christ has died, Christ is risen, Christ will come again!

Leader: Say among the nations, alleluia.

All: That the Lord reigns from the tree, alleluia.

Leader: Lord our God, we have been baptized into the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ your son; help us to put away the old life of sin and live the new life of grace and holiness; through the same Christ our Lord.

All: Amen

Storey suggests that this blessing might follow: "The mother or father then sprinkles each person with Easter water or, dipping a thumb in the water, seals each one on the forehead with water; or each person takes water and seals their own forehead." A hymn, or this "Marian anthem," might conclude the worship:

Joy fill your heart, O Queen most high, alleluia!
Your son who in the tomb did lie, alleluia!
Has risen as he did prophesy, alleluia!
(and a last line suitable to Roman Catholic worship)
Pray for us, Mother, when we die, alleluia!49

Non-Roman Catholic Christians might want to substitute one of the prayers found in the baptismal service or one of the Easter prayers for this prayer, but the same kind of home vespers would be spiritually profitable for all varieties of Christians.

This much we know about Easter and Eastertide: The Great Word - Christ is risen! - first sounded on Easter morn still echoes and reechos through these Great Fifty Days of Easter. And every Sunday of Eastertide we are like the villagers in that little mountain village in Crete, waiting to hear the Word that gives us life. The Word will sound more clearly on Sundays, and our daily discipleship will be more profitable to Christ and his church, if the "baptismal-Easter connection" in Christ the living Vine - "abide in me, and I in you" - is kept every one of the fifty days. Then our lips and lives may respond to the "Christ is risen!" with "He is risen indeed." And we, like that priest, will help to tell the Good News to people who wait in the darkness before dawn all over the earth.


46. Nikos Kazantzakis, Report to Greco, (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1965).

47. Antoine de St. Exupery, Wind, Sand and Stars. (New York: Time, Inc., 1965).

48. Kazantzakis, Report to Green.

49. William G. Storey, Liturgy: Easter’s Fifty Days, Volume 3, Number 1 (Washington, D.C.:The Liturgical Conference).

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Tree, The Tomb, And The Trumpet, The, by George Bass