Six Reasons Why We Must Be Fruitful

August 31, 2010

“You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you to go and bear fruit—fruit that will last. Then the Father will give you whatever you ask in my name.” (John 15: 16)

In another hard saying of Jesus (as quoted above), Jesus told the apostles when they understood that He chose them to be fruitful God would answer their prayers!  Jesus told them they did not choose Him to be part of their plans.  He chose them to be part of His plans and when they got that God would answer their prayers.

The three years Jesus had been with them were like a seminary.  These four chapters (13-16), of the Gospel of John record His commencement address to them.  In Chapter 15 He gave them at least six reasons why they must be fruitful. Those reasons were:

They must be fruitful because there is no such thing as a disciple of His who is not fruitful.  This is how they show they are His disciples.  They must be fruitful because this is how they glorify God.  They must be fruitful that their joy might be full.  They must be fruitful because He chose them to be fruitful.  Finally, they must be fruitful because He is the Vine and they are the branches.  That is, He has no other way to accomplish His work in this world.

In His metaphor about the Vine and the branches the fruit does not grow on the Vine.  This means the risen Christ has limited Himself to faithful branches.  Although we may not have done it that way it is the plan of the risen Christ to use His power in His disciples to accomplish His work and speak His word in this world.    


What Is A Fruitful Disciple?

August 27, 2010

“I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit..”     .. (John 15:16)

When we study the hard demand of Jesus that all those who claim to be His disciples must be fruitful, we must understand what it means to be fruitful. My favorite definition is found somewhat buried in the longest recorded discourse of Jesus (John 13-16).  It is known as the Upper Room Discourse because it began in an upper room where Jesus spent the last hours with His apostles before His arrest and crucifixion.

They had been fascinated with the words they heard Him speak and the works they saw Him do.  He told them that the dynamic source of His words and works was His relationship with His Father.  He and His Father were one and the result of that oneness was that the words of His Father and the works of His Father were spoken and done on earth through Him.

He shared the exciting truth with them that He was about to leave but He was sending them the Holy Spirit.  If they would be at one with the Holy Spirit, as modeled by His oneness with the Father, the words and works of Jesus would be spoken and done on earth through them.  To be at one with the Holy Spirit of the risen living Christ, doing His works and speaking His words is what it means to be fruitful.

The ignition that makes this possible is being related to the Holy Spirit of Christ as a branch is joined to a vine.  Christ is a Vine looking for branches today.  Are you willing to be one of His branches and be a fruitful disciple?


An Unfruitful Disciple

August 24, 2010

“Cut it down; why does it use up the ground?” (Luke 13: 7)

Many disciples of Jesus are not aware of the hard sayings of Jesus that fill the four Gospels.  The Scripture excerpt quoted above is an example.  In this short parable Jesus was emphasizing His demand that His disciples must be fruitful.

Jesus was the master of teaching by parable.  At one point in His ministry He taught exclusively by parables.  In the Greek language this word “parable” is a combination of two words: the word “para” which means “alongside of” and the word “ballo” which means “to throw.” (That’s why the pigskin the quarterback throws during football season is called a “ball.”) As Jesus used parables He would take the truth He was teaching and throw a story alongside that teaching so people could understand what He was teaching them.  No one ever did that as perfectly as Jesus.  When you study the parables of Jesus, try to determine the truth His story was illustrating.

Hours before Jesus was crucified He held a retreat with His apostles.  Among other things He gave them six reasons why they must be fruitful.  That is the truth He is teaching in this hard teaching of this short parable.  According to Jesus, the tree that was not producing fruit had no right to be using up the ground.

By application, that means we have no right to be taking up space in His church if we’re not being fruitful.  There are times when I am teaching the teachings of Jesus I feel compelled to say “I didn’t say that.  He said that.” This is one of those occasions.

The hard challenge is  –  are you, and am I, a fruitful disciple of Jesus Christ?


A great Storm, A Great Question and A Great Calm

August 20, 2010

“And a great windstorm arose…but He said to them, ‘How is it that you have no faith?’…and there was a great calm.” (Mark 4: 35-40)

If you read the story recorded in the verses referenced above you will see that Jesus directed the apostles to get into their boat and cross over to the other side of the Sea of Galilee.  On this sea crossing a great storm fell upon them.  They woke Him with the question, “Don’t you even care that we (including Him) are all going to drown?” After turning the great storm into a great calm He asked them the great question “How is it that you have no faith?”

Jesus had been teaching them that He was the King of the Kingdom of God and they were subjects in that Kingdom.  Did they really think all of this was going to come to an end at the bottom of the Sea of Galilee?  One translation renders His great question “Do you not even yet believe in me?” Another puts it “When are you going to get some faith?”

Before we are too hard on the apostles, let’s apply the essential truth of this story personally.  Jesus has promised us that He will take us to the other side of this life to the next dimension called heaven.  While we are on that journey, if a great storm falls upon us do we believe that storm declares all His promises to be null and void?  Or do we have a quality of faith that can turn that great storm into a great calm?

This story teaches us that storms in our life are a classroom in which God wants to strengthen, grow and authenticate our faith.


A Principle of Guidance

August 17, 2010

“Give us this day our daily bread.” (Matthew 6:11)

When Jesus taught His disciples how to pray He gave them a principle that has many applications.  At the end of this chapter, which records the central part of His great Sermon on the Mount, Jesus stated that we should not worry about tomorrow.  Many have made that obvious application to this prayer petition.  People with tragic challenges like addictions or overwhelming suffering are only able to get their heads and hearts around the concept of a solution one day at a time.

Another legitimate application of this principle for living is to apply this concept to divine guidance.  In the third chapter of his letter to the Philippians, the Apostle Paul wrote that one way to discern the will of God for our life is to live up to the light we now have.  He promises that as we do, God will give us more light.  To illustrate that concept someone has said “If you want to see further ahead into the will of God for your life then move ahead into the will of God for your life just as far as you can see.”

When I was a college student I drove across the United States several times.  I drove at night because there was less traffic.  My headlights illuminated about 100 yards at a time.  I discovered that if I kept driving into the light the headlights gave me, I eventually traveled from Pittsburgh to Los Angeles.

It is easier for God to steer a moving vehicle than one that is stationary.  As we respond to the light God is giving us He adds more light to our path.  The application of that principle leads us into His will one day at a time.


A Spiritual Cardiogram

August 13, 2010

“The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked; Who can know it?

I, the LORD, search the heart, I test the mind…” (Jeremiah 17: 9, 10)

When many people come across this familiar passage in the book of Jeremiah they are so shocked with the startling pronouncement that our heart is desperately wicked they often miss his declaration that above all things our heart is deceitful.  He then follows that insight with the question “Who can know it?” Jeremiah answers his own question by writing that our heart is so deceitful only God can know it.

In my training for the ministry I studied theology and psychology.  I therefore thought I understood what was in the heart of the people who considered me their spiritual shepherd.  I got nowhere understanding people until I agreed with this spiritual cardiogram of Jeremiah.  I especially found it to be accurate as I attempted to understand my own heart.

All of this provides a backdrop against which we can appreciate the profound wisdom of a prayer of David.  To paraphrase and summarize, in the last verses of Psalm 139 David asked God to take the lid off his heart and show him the motives that should not be there.  He then asked God to take the lid off his head and show him the thoughts that should not be in his mind.  His motivation for these two wise prayer petitions was that he wanted to live his life in alignment with eternal values.

Have you come to the place in your faith journey where you realize you do not understand your own deceitful heart or the heart of those you would like to help?  Like David are you looking and directing others to the only One Who knows our heart?


A Spiritual Greeting

August 10, 2010
“Grace to you… from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ…….” (Romans 1:7)

As you study the inspired letters of the Apostle Paul you will find a common greeting and salutation in all of them.  At the beginning you will find these three words: “Grace to you.” At the conclusion you will find words like these: “The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you” (Romans 16: 20).

In nearly every generation of language and culture there are words people like to use when they first encounter someone.  After visiting with them there are words used as they part.  Some of these greetings and salutations are shallow and not intended to have meaning.  It was not so with the way Paul began and concluded his inspired letters.

One of his favorite concepts was “grace.” In many of his letters he emphasized the truth that we are saved by grace and not by works.  He also wrote that we have access, by faith, into grace that makes it possible for us to live a life that glorifies God (Romans 5:2).

Perhaps his greatest verse describing this empowering dimension of grace is 2 Corinthians 9:8.  He writes there that God is able to make all grace abound toward us so that each one of us may always find the spiritual dynamic we need to abound in every good work God is calling us to do for Him.  All grace – all the power we need – each and every one of us that we might find all the sufficiency we need to abound in every good work ALWAYS!

As you come to appreciate the meaning of “grace,” could it not be an appropriate heartfelt concept to include in your greetings and salutations with your brothers and sisters in Christ?


A New Commandment

August 6, 2010

“And this commandment we have from Him: that he who loves God must love his brother also.” (1 John 4:21)

In this love chapter of the Bible, John gives us 10 reasons we must love.  His last reason is that we have been given a commandment by Jesus that we are to love one another.  When Jesus was about to leave the apostles by way of His death on the cross, He left the apostles with this New Commandment.

He explained to them later on in that same setting that this would only be possible because He was sending them the Holy Spirit.  He used a word for the Holy Spirit that means “One who comes alongside of you and attaches Himself to you for the purpose of assisting you.”

In our culture the concept of a commandment is lost for many people because we are so democratic in our values.  The closest we come to understanding the meaning of this word is in our military training.  When my youngest brother was in training the order was given that the smoking lamp was out – which meant no smoking.  In defiance of the order he lighted a cigarette.  His Marine drill instructor ordered him to bury that cigarette in a grave six feet deep.

When he reported to the drill instructor all covered with mud and sweat, the instructor asked if he had buried the cigarette pointing north and south or east and west?  When he wasn’t sure he was told that he had to do it again the next day and make sure it pointed north and south.  The next time the no smoking order was given do you think he lighted another cigarette?

Do you get the full weight of these 10 reasons we must love?


A Reciprocated Love

August 3, 2010

“We love Him because He first loved us.” (1 John 4:9)

As John continues to give us reasons we must love, he writes that anyone who has been loved by God, or by the Holy Spirit of the risen Christ, should have a passion to reciprocate that love.

John was present when Jesus spent the last hours before His crucifixion with the men He had apprenticed 24/7 for three years.  The Gospel of John (chapters 13-16) begins this discourse of Jesus by telling us that “Having loved His own… He now showed them the full extent of His love.”

For three years Jesus had loved these men in ways they had never been loved before.  They were all present with Him because they desperately wanted to reciprocate His love.  Jesus challenged them to love one another as He had loved them.  Then He added these words: “By this the world will know that you are my disciples.”

I’m convinced these men were with Him at His hour of great danger when Rome was closing in on Him because Jesus loved them and they loved Jesus.  I also believe the thought of loving each other as Jesus had loved them had never occurred to them.  It was their passion to reciprocate the love of Jesus that placed them with Jesus at this time. Essentially, Jesus told them the best way to reciprocate His love was to love one another.

John makes this his ninth reason we must love.  The Apostle of Love has now given you nine exhortations to love.  Are you willing to step up and reciprocate the way Jesus has loved you by loving others as He has loved you?