In
the gospel reading for the weekend of May 2/3, we hear one of Jesus’
many “I am” statements. John’s gospel records Jesus using this
powerful phrase on many different occasions: “I am the bread of
life,” “I am the good shepherd,” “I am the Resurrection and
the life,” “I am the way, the truth, and the life.”
The
words “I am” were no ordinary words to the people who heard Jesus
speak. Back when Moses encountered God at the burning bush, God
identified Himself when He told Moses, “Thus
you shall say to the Israelites, ‘I AM has sent me to you.’”
So
in the minds of anyone familiar with the Hebrew Scriptures, the
phrase “I am” clearly referred to the divine Lord. No wonder
Jesus’ opponents wanted to kill Him. By using the phrase “I am,”
Jesus was equating Himself with God. Coming from a mere mortal, like
you or me, this is either blasphemy or insanity.
This
week’s gospel reading is one of the many discourses Jesus gave on
the night before He was crucified. Jesus told His disciples, “I am
the vine, you are the branches.”
Jesus
offered some very encouraging words during this discourse. He said,
“Whoever remains in me, and I in him, will bear much fruit,” and,
“If you remain in me and my word remains in you, ask for whatever
you want and it will be done for you.”
How
wonderful. If we just remain—or abide—in Jesus, we will be able
to bear much fruit and be able to go boldly before God and make our
desires and requests known, confident that God loves us so much that
He’ll answer our prayers.
Oftentimes
people will focus only on the uplifting, encouraging words of Jesus
in this passage. But Jesus also offered some words of warning here.
He pointed out that God the Father “takes away every branch in me
that does not bear fruit,” and that “anyone who does not remain
in me will be thrown out like a branch and wither; people will gather
them and throw them into a fire and they will be burned.”
Whoa!
That’s a little disconcerting. Anytime Jesus mentions the
possibility of being thrown into a fire, we ought to pay close
attention. If we don’t attach ourselves to Jesus, or if we are
attached to Him but it doesn’t affect our lives, then we are in
danger of being thrown into a fire and burned. (Is that a figure of
speech, or poetic imagery, or a specific reference to the fires of
Hell? I’m not sure, but why take the chance?)
Jesus
made another interesting statement here: “Every [branch] that does
(bear fruit) [the Father] prunes so that it bears more fruit.”
When
Jesus said that God the Father prunes those who abide in Jesus, He
meant that all of the ungodly things, the activities on which we
waste so much of our time and energy, are cut away and removed from
our lives. Each person has his own unique list of junk that needs to
be pruned away. I suspect if we each made a list of ungodly
activities that dominate our lives, there would be some common
themes, especially with the often soul-rotting “entertainment”
offered these days on TV and the Internet.
God’s
pruning is no doubt a little painful, but it’s just what we need.
Getting rid of our self-centered view of life and changing to a
Christ-centered view is the only way we’ll ever produce abundant,
good fruit. Also, if we abide in Him and let His power work through
us, it’s the only way we’ll ever experience true joy and peace.
There’s no doubt that this is true, because I AM said so.
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