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John 15 – Harvesting fruit

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Somewhere between the upper room and Gethsemane, Jesus taught John 15-16 and prayed John 17. He began John 15 by saying: “I am the true vine,” just as the group likely passed through the temple gates. It was Passover, and the gates were open all night. These were beautiful, bronze gates with a golden vine metalwork woven throughout, representing the nation of Israel (see Psalm 80:8, 9 and Isaiah 5:1, 7).

Seeing this, Jesus says, “I am the true vine, the genuine vine.” Jesus’ words were revolutionary. He’s telling men whose roots run deep in the Old Testament that religion or nationality is not important anymore—you must be joined to Him. 

In this glorious passage, notice three important words. The first is the little word “in” (used seven times). “Every branch in me.” To be saved means to be “in Christ.” Notice also the word “fruit” (used six times) and “abide” (nine times). Abiding in Christ is how we bear fruit. 

Fruit, of course, is God’s characteristics showing up in a believer. The fruit of God’s Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering (see Galatians 5:22-23). Other fruit is effective prayer, continuous fruit, and a joy that’s out of this world—if a person has this fruit in their life, they will invite people into God’s presence by their very lives, if not also by their spoken word. 

When a branch in Christ does not bear fruit, the Father trims it off either by setting it aside or by death. This doesn’t mean we lose our salvation, since we’re talking about fruit-bearing here, not eternal life. Even if a branch bears fruit, the Father may prune it so it bears even more. Sometimes it hurts when He takes out of our lives what hinders us, but in the end it means more fruit. 

Jesus laid down His life for us and asks us to obey Him. When we do, we’ll be His friends. Jesus said all these things to comfort and strengthen his friends, the disciples on their way to the Garden of Gethsemane and the greatest test of their lives.

Next, we’ll look into finding peace

 


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