IF YE ABIDE
If Ye Abide in Me, and My Words, Abide in You, Ask
Whatsoever Ye Will, and it Shall be Done Unto You—John 15:7
THE REASON
the Vine and its branches are such a true parable of the Christian life is that
all nature has one source and breathes one spirit. The plant world was created
to be to man an object lesson teaching him his entire dependence upon God, and
his security in that dependence. He that clothes the lilies will much more cloth
us. He that gives the trees and the vines their beauty and their fruits, making
each what He meant it to be, will much more certainly make us what He would
have us to be. The only difference is what God works in the trees is by a power
of which they are not conscious. He wants to work in us with our consent. This
is the nobility of man, that he has a will that can cooperate with God in
understanding and approving and accepting what He offers to do.
If ye abide. Here is the difference between the branch of the natural and
the branch of the spiritual Vine. The former abides by force of nature: the
latter abides, not by force of will, but by a divine power given to the consent
of the will. Such is the wonderful provision God has made that, what the power of
nature does in the one case, the power of grace will do in the other. The
branch can abide in the Vine.
If ye abide in me...ask whatsoever
ye will. If we are to live a true prayer
life, with the love and the power and the experience of prayer marking it,
there must be no question about the abiding. And if we abide, there need be no
question about the liberty of asking what we will, and the certainty of its
being done. There is the one condition: "If ye abide in me." There
must be no hesitation about the possibility or the certainty of it. We must
gaze on that little branch and its wonderful power of bearing such beautiful
fruit until we truly learn to abide.
And what is its secret? Be wholly
occupied with Jesus. Sink the roots of your being in faith and love and
obedience deep down into Him. Come away out of every other place to abide here.
Give up everything for the inconceivable privilege of being a branch on earth
of the glorified Son of God in Heaven. Let Christ be first. Let Christ be all.
Do not be occupied with the abiding—be occupied with Christ! He will hold you,
He will keep you abiding in Him. He will abide in you.
If ye abide in me, and my words
abide in you. This He gives as the equivalent of
the other expression: "I in you. If my words abide in you"—that is,
not only in meditation, in memory, in love, in faith—all these words enter into
your will, your being, and constitute your life—if they transform your
character into their own likeness, and you become and are what they speak and
mean—ask what ye will; it shall be done unto you. Your words to God in prayer
will be the fruit of Christ and His words living in you.
Ask what ye will, and it shall be
done unto you. Believe in the truth of this
promise. Set yourself to be an intercessor for men; a fruit-bearing
intercessor, ever calling down more blessing. Such faith and prayer will help
you wonderfully to abide wholly and unceasingly.
If ye abide. Yes, Lord, the power to pray and the power to prevail must
depend on this abiding in Thee. As Thou art the Vine, Thou art the divine
Intercessor, who breathest Thy spirit in us. Oh, for grace to abide simply and
wholly in Thee, and ask great things!
The True
Vine. Andrew Murray
Dear Annie, I liked the paragrah starting, "What is its secret?" I especially liked, "Do not be occupied with the abiding—be occupied with Christ! He will hold you, He will keep you abiding in Him. He will abide in you." It is especially comforting. Debbie Seiling
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