WITHERED BRANCHES
If a Man Abide Not in Me, He is Cast Forth as a Branch, and
is Withered; and They Gather Them, and Cast Them into the Fire, and They are
Burned—John 15:6
THE
LESSONS these words teach are very simple and very solemn. A man can come to
such a connection with Christ, that he counts himself to be in Him, and yet he
can be cast forth. There is such a thing as not abiding in Christ, which leads
to withering up and burning. There is such a thing as a withered branch, one in
whom the initial union with Christ appears to have taken place, and in whom yet
it is seen that his faith was but for a time. What a solemn call to look around
and see if there be not withered branches in our churches, to look within and
see whether we are indeed abiding and bearing fruit!
And what may be the cause of this
"not abiding." With some it is that they never understood how the
Christian calling leads to holy obedience and to loving service. They were content
with the thought that they had believed, and were safe from Hell; there was
neither motive nor power to abide in Christ—they knew not the need of it. With
others it was that the cares of the world, or its prosperity, choked the Word:
they had never forsaken all to follow Christ. With still others it was that
their religion and their faith was in the wisdom of men, and not in the power
of God. They trusted in the means of grace, or in their own sincerity, or in
the soundness of their faith in justifying grace; they had never come even to
seek an entire abiding in Christ as their only safety. No wonder that, when the
hot winds of temptation or persecution blew, they withered away: they were not
truly rooted in Christ.
Let us open our eyes and see if there
be not withered branches all around us in the churches. Young men, whose
confessions were once bright, but who are growing cold. Or old men, who have
retained their profession, but out of whom the measure of life there once
appeared to be has died out. Let ministers and believers take Christ's words to
heart, and see, and ask the Lord whether there is nothing to be done for
branches that are beginning to wither. And let the word Abide ring
through the Church until every believer has caught it—no safety but in a true
abiding in Christ.
Let each of us turn within. Is our
life fresh, and green, and vigorous, bringing forth its fruit in its season?
(See Ps. 1:3;
92:13, 14;
Jer. 17:7,
8.)
Let us accept every warning with a willing mind, and let Christ's "if a
man abide not" give new urgency to His "abide in me." To the
upright soul the secret of abiding will become ever simpler, just the
consciousness of the place in which He has put me; just the childlike resting
in my union with Him, and the trustful assurance that He will keep me. Oh, do
let us believe there is a life that knows of no withering, that is ever green;
and that brings forth fruit abundantly!
Withered! O my Father, watch over me, and keep me, and let nothing
ever for a moment hinder the freshness that comes from a full abiding in the
Vine. Let the very thought of a withered branch fill me with holy fear and
watchfulness.
The True
Vine. Andrew Murray
Dear Annie,
ReplyDeleteThis makes me think, "Let us open our eyes and see if there be not withered branches all around us in the churches." I was thinking that since God works through us on His behalf in so many different ways, do we approach our job, volunteering, parenting, etc. with the enthusiasm that allows us to be a positive influence on others for God?
Debbie Seiling http://bible-passages.blogspot.com and http://christian-overeaters.blogspot.com