Easter
5 – 3 May 2015 – Year B
Grace
to you and peace from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
The
text for our meditation is the Gospel text – John 15: 1 – 8
Let
us pray: Father, guide the words of my mouth and the meditation of our hearts, that
your word of truth may graft us eternally to Jesus and lead us to bear fruit
that your will be done through us: In Jesus name. Amen
Some
may remember a TV series called "Tales from the Crypt": It contained eerie,
scary stories. You would expect that based on the title. Crypts are creepy
places; vineyards aren't; yet I know two ‘tales
from the vineyard’ that should raise the hair on the back of your neck.
The
first tale of shock is this: "You
don't have to bear fruit as a Christian." That is you can live like your neighbour
who doesn't know Christ. You can remain in the vineyard devoid of grapes. Your
light doesn't have to shine and you can be salt that doesn't season.
That’s
a tale because Christ says otherwise. Isaiah 5 is where the Lord introduces
this figure of His people as a vineyard saying, "He planted a vineyard on a very fertile hill…, and He looked for it to
yield grapes." In Luke 13 the Lord pictures Himself as the owner of a
vineyard with a fig tree planted in it. "He came seeking fruit on it," says the parable. In Matthew 25
when Jesus pictures the last judgment, without a parable, without figures, He
highlights the works of the saved and the lack of works by the damned. Again,
without figures, plain as day, Paul says in 2 Corinthians 5:10, "We must all appear before the
judgment seat of Christ, so that each one may receive what is due for what he
has done in the body, whether good or evil."
It's
a horrible, wretched tale from the vineyard to say, "Christians don't have
to bear fruit." - A cursed tale. Don't you remember a curse is exactly
what Jesus pronounced on the real fig tree that had no fruit? The Lord
pronounces judgment on unfruitful Christians. In Isaiah 5 he says, "I will tell you what I will do to my
vineyard…it shall be devoured…and it shall be trampled down….I will make it a
waste." In Luke 13 what is the Lord's judgment on that unfruitful fig?
"Cut it down. Why should it use up
the ground?" And in the last judgment what happens to the unfruitful? "Depart from Me into the eternal fire."
Unfruitful Christians are pulled up by the hair and tossed into the fire and
burned.
This
should not be a shock to anyone, since this is what we all do with unfruitful
plants in our gardens. We do the same with branches of a larger plant when they
cease to bear fruit or leaves. Why? Because unfruitful branches are dead ones.
They're not really branches at all, are they? They don't function as branches.
They don't carry moisture, nutrients, or life. Unfruitful branches have more in
common with table legs then trees. We saw them off for the good of the tree.
Unfruitful Christians are dead Christians and there is no such thing as a dead
Christian.
Before
we leave this ghastly tale that surely leads many to hell, let's deal with an
equally grisly subplot: a plant, a branch, a person can bear enough fruit. Do
your share; take your turn; serve for awhile - this is flawed Christianity. In
fact, it's not Christian at all. My turn, my share, my part is the talk of
clubs, voluntary groups, civic duty, not the talk of vineyards. Fruitful Plants
don't get a year or two off; no they're cut off once they become unfruitful.
Besides, how can anyone stand before the crucified Christ who gave His soul,
His life, His all, to save them and say, "I've done enough; I've taken my
turn; I've done my part?" What a horrible, unthinkable scenario! - And yet
how many times we ourselves have applied that logic!
Well,
the first tale from the vineyard is: You don't have to bear fruit as a
Christian. The second is just as gruesome, fearsome, and troublesome. It is: Bearing fruit makes you a Christian. That is
doing good works can deliver you from a guilty conscience, rescue you from the
fear of death, give you a peaceful heart, and assure you you're going to
heaven.
This
is not only a ghastly tale, it's a lie. No matter how many good things we do, there'll
never come a time that our guilty conscience can say, "I've done enough to
make up for my sins." No matter how much we do for others, for church, for
Christ, we'll never do enough to say, "I don't have to be afraid of
death." The peace we crave, the certainty of going to heaven is not found
in our doing, sweating, bleeding, or pleading. Bearing fruit no matter how much
or how lush, does not, cannot make us a Christian.
Fruit
marks Christians. That's what
Jesus says; bearing much fruit clearly shows who are His disciple. Have you
ever noticed this about vines? Generally, they all look alike in the winter
months. A wild grape vine looks no different than poison ivy. A vine is a vine
until it produces the fruit of leaves and berries. Then there's no doubt what
it is.
Only
a fool looks for grapes on a poison ivy vine. Likewise, only a fool thinks you
can make a branch of poison ivy into a grapevine branch by hanging grapes on
it. So, the good works of taking care of family, helping neighbours, supporting
government, living a sexually pure and decent life as practiced by your Muslim
friend, your unchristian co-worker, or your atheist boss, don't make him or her
a branch of the vine Christ. You only get fruit that counts before God from
branches attached to the vine Christ. There are vines in the bush that produce
berries in grape-like clusters, but they aren't grapes. Real grapes can only
come from real branches of a real grape vine.
It
is too horrible of a tale to even think about. It's a hideous mutilation of
Christianity to say bearing fruit makes a Christian. No, only the Lord Jesus
Christ can make a Christian, and therefore, only He can give you peace of
heart, certainty of salvation, freedom from guilt and rescue from the fear of
death. Only a grapevine can produce grape branches. Only the Christ can produce
Christians.
Read
the opening sentences of this text. Jesus doesn't tell the disciples to make
themselves branches. He doesn't even, as many think, tell them they need
pruning so they can bear more fruit. An important point can be lost in
translation. "Every branch that does bear fruit, the Father prunes so that
it will be even more fruitful. You are already clean because of the Word I have
spoken to you." The words prunes and clean are the verb and noun form of
the same word. So we translate, "The Father prunes every branch. You are
already pruned because of the Word I spoke to you." Jesus is not warning
them they're about to be pruned, He's assuring them that they have already been
pruned. All is ready for them to be fruitful.
Now
no one prunes a branch not attached to a vine. Having been pruned indicates
you're connected to the vine, and that's what counts because apart from it you
can do nothing. But joined to the Vine, you can do all things, but
there has to be a true Vine, a healthy Vine, before there can be branches. For
us the focus is not on being a Christian; our focus must be on there being a
Christ.
Adam
and Eve, though planted by God in the good soil of the Garden of Eden, quickly
became wild vines producing grapes of wrath. Rather than pull them up right
then and there, God the Son was sent as a vine into the soil that had now
become poor and weed infested. But He was fruitful. He kept all God's Laws
perfectly and He grew grapes of love, joy, peace, and hope in bunches. Yet,
perfect fruit wasn't enough to appease the wrath of God. Those rebellious vines
must be punished, so God took His Son, the holy vine, and crushed Him in the
winepress at Gethsemane and hung Him to wither and die under His hot wrath on
Calvary. The blood that flowed from the crushed Christ covered our sins
appeasing God's wrath.
There's
the answer to that guilty conscience that chases us around at night. There's
the answer to that heart of ours that can only find panic not peace. There's
what will melt that icy fear of death we know, and there's what will fill in
the hole of doubt about if we have been saved. You cannot do enough good to
make up for your sins let alone pay for them. You can't suffer enough, even in
all eternity, to pay for your sins. It takes a perfect Man to take your
payments on Himself, and it takes the Holy God to make those payments. It takes
the God who is Man, Jesus.
The
holy vine Jesus paid for our sins on Good Friday and was planted in the ground,
a dead, lifeless vine. But He burst forth on Easter alive and growing, and He
grew all the way to heaven. – We may well ask, how does one become joined to
that vine? We are branches of a wild vine; He is holy. St Paul in Romans
pictures a grafting process. We wild branches are grafted unto the holy Vine.
How? We've been baptised into Him. His Word of promise that our many sins are
forgiven has reached out and grabbed us; With His body and blood He has grafted
us to Himself in Holy Communion. This is grace we don’t always understand? The
actions of Christ, the Vine, not our actions have joined us to Him.
This
is important because in this second tale of terror there is a sub error too. ‘Just hold on to the vine and you'll be
alright.’ How can this be error? Doesn't Jesus say remain in the vine? Yes,
but does He say this is done by holding on as tight as you can? No! Because all
of us with any experience in Christ know that if salvation depends on me
holding on to Him, I am damned. I let go in fear; I let go in rebellion; I let
go in despair. But, says St. Paul, He never lets go. Even "if we are faithless, He remains faithful."
That's
powerful Gospel, but that's the truth of even the ordinary branch – vine
relationship. Vines hold on to branches not the other way around. So Christ the
Vine of vines keeps us living, active, fruitful, and pruned by the Word He
speaks to us. And this Word comes not just into our ears but on to our bodies
in Baptism and into our bodies through the Body and Blood of Christ in Holy Communion.
Now
let's send those fables of the vineyard back to the hellish crypt they crept
out of. The Word of God that courses through the Vine is living and active. He
makes Christians. He makes branches. He creates faith, new life, a quiet heart,
a guiltless conscience, and fruit. The Vine produces the fruit; the branch is
where the fruit bears. By the grace of God we have been pruned into fruitful
branches; we bear fruit in all seasons, in all weather, in sickness or in
health. Our fruit draws others to the vine; our fruit feeds the poor and
comforts the sick. Our fruit is the fruit of Jesus the faithful vine that will
keep us fruitful into eternity. Amen
Now
may the peace and love of our great triune god that is beyond all human
understanding keep your heart and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen
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