I AM THE VINE
IN THE
PREVIOUS verse Christ had just said: "Abide in me." He had then
announced the great unalterable law of all branch-life, on earth or in Heaven:
"not of itself"; "except it abide." In the opening words of
the parable He had already spoken: "I am the vine." He now repeats
the words. He would have us understand—note well the lesson, simple as it
appears, it is the key of the abiding life—that the only way to obey the
command, "Abide in me," is to have eye and heart fixed upon Himself. "Abide
in me...I am the true vine." Yea, study this holy mystery until you see
Christ as the true Vine, bearing, strengthening, supplying, inspiring all His
branches, being and doing in each branch all it needs, and the abiding
will come of itself. Yes, gaze upon Him as the true Vine, until you feel what a
heavenly Mystery it is, and are compelled to ask the Father to reveal it to you
by His Holy Spirit. He to whom God reveals the glory of the true Vine, he who
sees what Jesus is and waits to do every moment, he cannot but abide. The
vision of Christ is an irresistible attraction; it draws and holds us like a
magnet. Listen ever to the living Christ still speaking to you, and waiting to
show you the meaning and power of His Word: "I am the vine."
How much weary labor there has been
in striving to understand what abiding is, how much fruitless effort in trying
to attain it! Why was this? Because the attention was turned to the abiding as
a work we have to do, instead of the living Christ, in whom we were to be kept
abiding, who Himself was to hold and keep us. we thought of abiding as a
continual strain and effort—we forget that it means rest from effort to one who
has found the place of his abode. Do notice how Christ said, "Abide in Me;
I am the Vine that brings forth, and holds, and strengthens, and makes fruitful
the branches. Abide in Me, rest in Me, and let Me do My work. I am the true
Vine, all I am, and speak, and do is divine truth, giving the actual reality of
what is said. I am the Vine, only consent and yield thy all to Me, I will do
all in thee."
And so it sometimes comes that souls
who have never been specially occupied with the thought of abiding, are abiding
all the time, because they are occupied with Christ. Not that the word abide
is not needful; Christ used it so often, because it is the very key to the
Christian life. But He would have us understand it in its true sense—"Come
out of every other place, and every other trust and occupation, come out of
self with its reasonings and efforts, come and rest in what I shall do. Live
out of thyself; abide in Me. Know that thou art in Me; thou needest no more;
remain there in Me."
"I am the Vine." Christ
did not keep this mystery hidden from His disciples. He revealed it, first in
words here, then in power when the Holy Spirit came down. He will reveal it to
us too, first in the thoughts and confessions and desires these words awaken,
then in power by the Spirit. Do let us wait on Him to show us all the heavenly
meaning of the mystery. Let each day, in our quiet time, in the inner chamber
with Him and His Word, our chief thought and aim be to get the heart fixed on
Him, in the assurance: all that a vine ever can do for its branches, my Lord
Jesus will do, is doing, for me. Give Him time, give Him your ear, that He may
whisper and explain the divine secret: "I am the vine."
Above all, remember, Christ is the
Vine of God's planting, and you are a branch of God's grafting. Ever stand
before God, in Christ; ever wait for all grace from God, in Christ; ever yield
yourself to bear the more fruit the Husbandman asks, in Christ. And pray much
for the revelation of the mystery that all the love and power of God that
rested on Christ is working in you too. "I am God's Vine," Jesus
says; "all I am I have from Him; all I am is for you; God will work it in
you."
I am the Vine. Blessed Lord, speak Thou that word into my soul. Then shall
I know that all Thy fullness is for me. And that I can count upon Thee to
stream it into me, and that my abiding is so easy and so sure when I forget and
lose myself in the adoring faith that the Vine holds the branch and supplies
its every need.
Dear Annie,
ReplyDeleteI was thinking about how the vine supplies all the nourishment for the branch. If the branch breaks off, it withers, because it no longer has any nourishment, as Christians are dependent on our noursihment from God. I want to make sure that I don't let worldly things interfere in my relationship with Christ. Debbie Seiling http://bible-passages.blogspot.com and http://christian-overeaters.blogspot.com