Nexus Message from 5/6/12 – On Abiding in the Vine & Bearing Fruit (John 15)
Jesus , as his time with the
disciples drew short, started getting more and more direct and intense with
them in his teaching. We can feel his sense of urgency in the final few
chapters of each gospel, as Jesus prepared the disciples for that time when
they would have to be able to get along without Jesus’ physical presence.
John 15 is just such a time.
“I am the vine and you are the branches.” What a great image of dependence,
emphasizing how vital, life-giving, and sustaining Jesus is to all those who
would venture to live out his “way.” Jesus taught, in no uncertain terms, that
all of us need to stay tuned into, tied into our life source if we are to be
useful, effective, fruit-bearing followers. “Remain in me, as I also remain in
you…for apart from me you can do nothing.”
If we think of our connection
to God, to Jesus, as a relationship, then it stands to reason that to develop
and enhance that relationship we need to spend time with God, with Jesus. Now
that sounds very easy and straight- forward. But most of our other
relationships involve another human, a physical being whom we can see, talk to,
hear from, touch. Jesus, once he ascended after his resurrection, left all of
his human followers with a bit of a dilemma….he’s not here…least not
physically. So relating to him, connecting with him, staying tied to him is not
the same at all as connecting with or relating to our other friends, is it?
So the first thing I’d like
us to explore together this morning is what it means to remain in Christ, to
abide in the vine? How, exactly, are we to do that? What are some of the ways
you remain in Christ, stay connected to the vine? (Spend a minute or two on your own, writing your thoughts
about how to stay tied to the vine, and then we’ll discuss our individual ideas
with our tablemates for a while. Then we’ll share what we came up with.)
So we do the things we
mentioned a few moments ago, right? We come to a church or a spiritual
community. We read and study the scriptures. We pray. We serve those in need
through our time, energy, and offerings. All of these are good, and I would
encourage all of you to keep practicing any and all of those as best you can in
the interest of staying rooted in the vine of Christ.
But this morning I want to
encourage you to explore the one form of tying into the vine that contemporary
American Christians are least apt to try and have seemingly forgotten about.
The Spiritual Community that
I lead over in Petoskey, Living Vision, has dedicated itself to the forgotten
spiritual disciplines. We practice ancient contemplative disciplines, silent
and listening-based practices to keep us rooted in the vine. We practice silent
meditation, lectio divina, the Jesus Prayer, the Examen, and many other silent
disciplines. Ours is a very unoriginal way of staying connected to the vine of
Christ. In fact men and women have been performing these practices for
thousands of years. What they all share in common - AND what makes them
woefully unpopular among contemporary American Christians - is that they all
require us to keep quiet, to keep our mouths shut. They are listening-based
practices that require not only a silence around us, but a silence within us.
That is the tricky part. It’s one thing to find or create a silent external
space; it’s quite another to cultivate silence in your mind…Which is probably
why the vast majority of people who even attempt these kind of practices give
up in frustration within the first couple days. Contemporary American
Christians find these silent, listening-based disciplines too humbling, as they
almost immediately confront us with our own inner distraction and emptiness.
But those of us who persevere and soldier through these vine-abiding practices
find an amazing pipeline to the divine, a new depth of connection, one that
actually celebrates our humility and that utter dependence that Jesus spoke of
when he said, “apart from me you can do nothing.”
Let me tell you what it’s
been like for me, a fairly recent convert to the ancient and silent spiritual
practices. I’m smart, well-educated, and even have a degree in theology from
Princeton. I’m an effective speaker. Give me a microphone and an audience and
I’ll talk all day about Jesus. That’s comfortable for me. That’s easy for me.
But turn off the mic. Empty out the room. Take away my cel phone and my
computer and ask me to sit still and be quiet, and almost instantly I get
antsy, squirmy, restless. I’d be better if I had a Bible or something to
read…But with these particular disciplines, I don’t. So I have to adjust to the
quiet and stillness around me. And that’s when things get really noisy in my
head. My brain starts churning in high gear. I start making all of these mental
lists – to do lists and worry lists and, of course, the “reasons I don’t have
time to sit here quietly” list. My mind goes full into monkey mode, replacing
the noise outside that is now gone with noise inside that I feel totally
powerless to stop. So a large benefit of the ancient silent practices is that
they remind us all just how UNspiritual we are, just how easily distracted we
are deep down, at our core, where we like to think that we’re so spiritual and
close to God.
So now I sit with a few other
people at our Living Vision gatherings and we battle our monkey minds together.
We’re getting a little better at cultivating inner silence and carving out
space in our cluttered minds for the vine to feed us. There’s a reason that
they call these spiritual disciplines “practices.” We need practice. We all
need practice when it comes to abiding in the vine. And let’s remember that all
we’re really trying to do with any of this stuff is follow the simple advice
Seals and Crofts tried to give us back in the 70’s, when they sang, “Darlin, if
you want me to be closer to you get closer to me.” God must dig that song. And
if you were God, what could be better than having a room full of your followers
just come into your presence, silently, humbly, with no props who just sit
there for no other reason than they want to be in your presence, they want to
be closer to you?
Now where does all this
practice lead? Where does God want all this practice to lead? In a word…it’s
fruit. What Jesus is interested in folks is fruit. Trees that don’t bear fruit
are worth nothing. (Reread the story of the Fig Tree – Mt 21:18-19) Christians,
people who allegedly follow Jesus, but don’t produce fruit, are of no real
interest or value to Jesus.
So what does it mean to bear
fruit. What is fruit, folks? Fruit is children, offspring, new life that you
create that outlives you, that is still there living and producing more fruit
when you are dead and gone, right? So let’s brainstorm a bit, first alone and
then with our tables, on what kind of fruit Jesus is interested in from his
disciples, from us. What kind of fruit can you produce that can satisfy Jesus’
hunger for fruit and fruit-bearing followers?
(a few more minutes for
personal and then table by table brainstorming)
Here are a few other ideas on
what Jesus might be after when it comes to fruit…
1) Actions that reflect or
mimic his actions in an authentic, other-serving way.
…Stopping to help someone
stranded on the roadside
…Stopping by a local jail,
hospital, or nursing home and asking if there are any folks who never seem to
get any visitors…then visiting them!
…Reading or hearing about a
person or family in need and then figuring out a way to help them, without them
ever finding out it’s you
…Talking to a school
counselor and asking if there are any kids he/she knows of who are struggling
to get lunch each day – then making or buying their lunch for a week or a month
anonymously
…Finding someone who is
lonely and/or alone and hanging out with them
2) Doing what you can to
mentor somebody about Jesus and his path
…invest yourself in showing
(more than telling) him/her everything you know about and do for Jesus. Bring
him/her along. When was the last time you introduced someone to Nexus, brought
someone here and helped them plug in?
…start a Bible Study, book
study, discussion group, or even an ancient spiritual practices group J with a
few spiritually hungry friends
…pick a person or two whom
you can bring along with you to those activities you do that are most
Christ-like
3) Lasting Legacy work – pick
one or two good things/programs, etc. you do and take action NOW to insure that
this work continues when you can no longer do it!
…If you’re serving habitat or
a local soup kitchen regularly, recruit your eventual replacement/successor and
bringing him/her along now so you know your work/fruit will continue.
The bottom line here, folks,
is that Jesus has NEVER been interested in our beliefs, what we think, how
often we come to church how well we know the Bible if we aren’t bearing fruit.
He has always been about fruit – what we DO here and now that LASTS, that
outlives us. God is most interested in our lasting legacy, what we do with our
time and with the gifts He gives us on earth. God is most interested in what we
do to make sure that the work HE cares about will keep being done long after we
have left this earth.
Let me close with a great
story about legacy. When I first started serving at Harbor Springs Presbyterian
Church, I noticed very quickly that every time I did something there –
preached, taught a class, took kids on a mission trip, etc. – I would very
shortly after receive a nice hand written thank you note from this retired doc,
Fritz Schwartz. Soon I had a stack of these wonderful notes of encouragement
and I decided to bring them up at a staff meeting. Now all the staff had been
at the church longer than I, and they all nodded knowingly when I talked about
these letters. They all had stacks of them too. My boss said, “You know why he
does that, don’t you?” I thought and said, “Because he knows the value of
encouragement and gratitude?” Then I heard the full story. For over 50 years,
his wife wrote these letters. Fritz didn’t. When she died and Fritz lost and
struggled to adjust to her being gone and his own retirement, he decided to
continue her legacy. He decided that to honor her and to stay attached to his
love, he would take up doing what she had done all those years. So all those
letters I got from Fritz were not merely thank you’s to me; they were his way
of staying connected to and honoring his beloved wife.
So abide in the vine and bear
fruit. Honor Jesus by continuing HIS legacy, doing something you KNOW he did. That’s
what it means to follow Jesus. That’s what he meant by “I am the vine and you
are the branches.”
Thank you for the story about Fritz, his wife, and their notes. This passage in John is one of my favorites. We are reading "Liquid Church" by Pete Ward now, and this is what helps make "church" relevant.
ReplyDeleteJust got around to reading this Toby - great stuff, and thanks for the story about Fritz. Wow ... now there's something to take home.
ReplyDeleteToby, the story just made it into this coming Sunday's sermon!
ReplyDelete