This sermon was preached at St Matthew's Lutheran Church, Maryborough, 8.15am, and Grace Lutheran Church, Childers, 10.30am.
Grace, mercy and peace be
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ.
No longer do I call you servants, for the servant does
not know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all that
I have heard from my Father I have made known to you.
Prayer: May
the words of my mouth and the meditations of our hearts be acceptable to you, O
Lord, our Rock and our Redeemer. Amen.
Today our Gospel reading comes from John chapter 15,
and this particular chapter is part of a sermon that Jesus gives to his
disciples on Maundy Thursday evening, on the night when Jesus was betrayed.
Maundy Thursday is a very special day in the church calendar, and it is the day
before Jesus died, which is Good Friday. So Jesus had had the Lord’s Supper
with his disciples, he had washed his disciples feet, and then in chapters 14,
15 and 16 of John, we read where Jesus gives a powerful sermon, a farewell
speech, before he goes out to the Garden of Gethsemane. Also he gives this
sermon to his disciples after Judas had left the room to go to the high priests
to organise Jesus’ arrest later that night. This message was not for Judas, but
for the other eleven disciples.
So at the beginning of
chapter 13 of John we read about where Jesus washes his disciples’ feet, and he
prophesies and predicts that Judas is going to betray him, and Judas leaves. We
also read where Jesus says: A new commandment I give to you, that you love one
another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another. This
is a very well-known verse. Jesus also foretells that Peter will deny him three
times. And then in chapters 14, 15 and 16 we read this sermon of Jesus, where
he says: In my Father’s house are many rooms… I am the way, the truth and
the life…Peace I leave with you, my peace I give to you… There are so many
memorable verses in this sermon. Also in chapter 17, Jesus prays a wonderful
prayer, often called the “High Priestly Prayer.”
Our reading from today comes from chapter 15, in the
middle of this Maundy Thursday sermon. Jesus says: I am the true vine, and
my Father is the vinedresser. Every branch in me that does not bear fruit he
takes away, and every branch that does bear fruit he prunes, that it may bear
more fruit. We see God the Father here cutting off and removing the dead
wood on the vine, but also he prunes the good branches so that they bear more
fruit. But also we see that Jesus is the vine. All the members of Christ’s church,
his family, his bride, are so intimately connected to him that the same juices
that flow through him flow through his disciples. And sometimes as Christians
we suffer tremendously, and we ask God why this is happening. But God is not
cutting us off, but pruning us.
Jesus says: Already you
are clean because of the word that I have spoken to you. Abide in me, and I in
you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine,
neither can you, unless you abide in me. I am the vine; you are the branches.
Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart
from me you can do nothing. Here Jesus is speaking to his disciples about
the way that he will be with them, and dwell with them and in them, and will be
so intimately connected with them in everything that they do. It is not just
Jesus’ teaching or his doctrine or his power that is with them, but himself! He
says: Apart from me you can do nothing. Jesus will be with them all the way.
Then Jesus says: If anyone does not abide in me he
is thrown away like a branch and withers; and the branches are gathered, thrown
into the fire, and burned. If you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask
whatever you wish, and it will be done for you. By this my Father is glorified,
that you bear much fruit and so prove to be my disciples. Everything that
turns away from this vine is thrown away. Everything comes from remaining in
Christ and his word. Jesus says: If you abide in me, and my words abide
in you. Jesus and his words go together. When we have Christ and his
word, then our prayers are wonderfully answered. Ask whatever you wish, and
it will be done for you. But none of this is for our glory, but for the
Father’s glory. Jesus says: By this my Father is glorified.
Now we come to our reading for today, which says: As
the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Abide in my love. If you keep my
commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s
commandments and abide in his love. Jesus speaks here about Christian love.
This wonderful love reaches from the Father to the Son, and from the Son to us.
And Jesus says: Abide in my love. Jesus has been talking about how we
are connected to him like branches on a vine. Love is a fruit of faith. St Paul
even calls love a fruit of the Spirit, in fact, he lists it as the first
of many fruits. So when we saved by faith, and this faith then looks to Christ
and our neighbours, faith produces the fruit of love, friendship, and
fellowship.
Now if love is produced from faith, it’s also very
important that faith is right. When we speak about faith, we don’t put our
trust in ourselves or in the things in our sinful human hearts; we put our
trust in the pure, clear word of God. Faith clings to the word, just as Jesus says:
If you abide in me and my words abide in you… So when we turn our backs
on the truth of God’s word, love also dries up, and we end up with tremendous
fighting in the church. St Paul wrote a wonderful chapter on love in 1
Corinthians 13, where it says: Love is patient and kind, and all that
kind of thing. We often read this passage at weddings. But in the middle of
that chapter it says: Love does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but rejoices with
the truth. Also, there’s another wonderful passage about love in 1 John 4,
where it says: God is love. Perfect love casts our fear. But at the
beginning of the chapter it says: Test the spirits to see whether they are
from God. We are from God. Whoever knows God listens to us; whoever is not from
God does not listen to us. By this we know the Spirit of truth and the spirit
of error. Do you see how John here talks about truth and then he goes on to
talk about love? Also St Paul says in Ephesians, not simply to speak with love,
but to speak the truth in love. I mention these things because today
often when we talk about love, people often say that speaking the truth even
when people don’t want to hear it is loveless. No—it’s not loveless at all! As
Christians we should strive to believe the same thing, live the same way, and
help each other in doing this—all on the basis of God’s word. We see all
throughout the New Testament about how the apostles stood very firmly together,
in unity and peace, being of one mind and one heart, speaking the truth with the
very voice of the Holy Spirit. It is the same oneness and unity of mind and
heart around the word of Christ that we should also strive together for, which
draws us together in love.
And so we read in our reading how Jesus says: If
you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my
Father’s commandments and abide in his love. By faith we are grafted on and
united to Christ, like branches on a vine. And branches bear fruit. Each day we
learn what it means to love. Jesus tells us to keep his commandments, and to do
good works, not because the good works save us, but because this is simply what
branches on a vine do. A wheel doesn’t spin so that it can become round. The
fact that it is round is the reason why it spins. So we don’t love in order to
be grafted into the vine, but because we are grafted in, we then start to bear
the fruit of love.
Jesus then says: These things I have spoken to you,
that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full. Jesus is the
bringer of joy. Now many people in the world seem happy enough, and don’t look
to Jesus at all for joy. Sometimes these people are even happier than most
Christians. But it is short-lived. Something happens in their life that they
don’t expect, and everything is wrecked, and they don’t understand why. Jesus
was sometimes very sorrowful and sad, especially when he went to the cross. But
he had sadness first and joy later. So like Jesus, we have sadness and
suffering first, and then eternal joy which Jesus promises us comes afterwards.
Jesus shares with his people not just any joy, but his own joy: that my joy
may be in you, and that your joy may be full.
So Jesus says: This is my commandment, that you
love another as I have loved you. Jesus has loved us, by dying on the
cross, and saving us completely freely, without any contribution from us. And
we see here that Jesus commandment to love one another comes from the wonderful
way in which he has loved us. He loves us even though we don’t deserve it and we
have really treated him terribly, and so also even when we hurt each other and
treat each other badly, Jesus calls us to love one another, to model and
picture that love which he has shown us. Sometimes this love is very difficult
for us, but it is this kind of love that Jesus shows to us all the time, and
which is continually pumped into us because we are his branches connected to
him, the vine.
Now, Jesus goes on to show exactly what this kind of
love looks like. He says: Greater love has no one than this, that someone
lay down his life for his friends. Jesus’ love is not just a sentimental,
emotional, soppy love, like from a love story on some kind of soap opera. Jesus
is not a man of feelings and sentiments and warm fuzzies, but he is a man of
action. He speaks the truth, and then he acts upon it. And what is this
wonderful act of love that he has done for us? He laid down his life for us.
Jesus says: The Good Shepherd lays down his life for the sheep. Here he
says: Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for
his friends. Jesus sees what needs to be done for us, and he does it.
But Jesus doesn’t die for his friends, for people who
already love him. St Paul says: While we were still sinners, Christ died for
us. When Jesus dies, then he makes us his friends, even though we
were his enemies. So he says: You are my friends if you do what I command
you. No longer do I call you servants, for the servant does not know what his
master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all that I have heard from
my Father I have made known to you. In ancient times, a friend of a king
was like a member of his cabinet, or inner circle. A servant is just told to do
something without thinking. But Jesus tells his apostles everything, and the
apostles then preached and wrote it out for our benefit.
Jesus’ friends are the people to whom he has told
everything. All that I have heard from my Father I have made known to you. When
the apostle Paul was preaching once, he said: I did not shrink from declaring
to you the whole counsel of God. Jesus didn’t shrink from telling
everything to the apostles, and Paul and the other apostles didn’t shrink from
passing everything on from Jesus. Even in the church, we continually pass
everything on. Jesus says: teach them to observe everything I have commanded
you. In the church, we pass on everything—the law and the gospel—the things
we should do and not do, and the things we should believe. We are Jesus’
friends, and we learn his teaching and his doctrine, we grow in love, and we
tell it to others. And this is how Christian friendship grows: we talk about
everything there is to know in the Scriptures, just as Jesus told his disciples
everything from God the Father’s own heart and mouth.
Jesus says: You are my friends if you do what I
command you. We often hear this as meaning that we are only Jesus’ friends
when we do good works. If our good works are not perfect as Jesus commands us,
then we are not his friends. But Jesus has also commanded us to pray: Forgive
us our sins. We also do his commandments not when we simply follow his
laws, but also when in all of our failures we continually bring our sins to him
and receive his forgiveness. Jesus also commands us to believe the good news,
and we are his friends when in all our sinfulness, we believe these pure words
of forgiveness which he speaks to us.
And so Jesus says: You did not choose me, but I
chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and that your
fruit should abide, so that whatever you ask the Father in my name, he may give
to you. When we think about making friends, we often think about choosing
friends. Some Christians often think that they became a Christian by choosing
to follow Jesus. There’s even an old song: “I have decided to follow Jesus”!
But it is not us who have chosen to follow Jesus, it is Jesus who chose us to
follow him. Even with the apostles, we read about how Jesus went to them and
said: Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men! He chose them, and
so also through his word and holy baptism, Jesus also chose you to be his
disciple and to follow him.
As Jesus’ friends, we learn and talk about all his
words in the Scripture—he has hidden no secrets from us. Jesus chose and
appointed these disciples, and he has chosen and appointed you, not to
accomplish nothing, but to bear fruit, and fruit that will last, that will
remain, that will abide. As soon as you and I are taken out of the picture, the
living words of Jesus and the Holy Spirit will continue. The Holy Spirit will
continue to work long after we have died. We human beings won’t last, but the
fruit that has been produced from Jesus the vine will continue to abide until
the very last days of this world.
Jesus says: So that whatever you ask the Father in
my name, he may give to you. As we learn Christ’s word and grow in
Christian love, we also grow in prayer. Prayer is also a fruit of faith—when we
in faith see our own need and look to God, then our faith produces the fruit of
prayer. Jesus says: Whatever you ask the Father in my name, he may give to
you. We might look at many prayers we have asked, and they seem to be
unanswered, even some of those prayers that we have asked from such a state of
desperation and helplessness and despair. God was our only help, and even then
he didn’t seem to help.
But Jesus and the Father know what we need so much
better than we do. Little children ask their parents for such ridiculous things
like trains and aeroplanes and pet ponies. We are such little children when it
comes to prayer. We stumble and stammer, and God knows what we need. And he
will give us whatever we need to serve him in his kingdom. His ways are often
above our ways, and we don’t understand why he gives someone something and
doesn’t give someone something else. But we simply ask in Jesus’ name, and if
it glorifies that holy name of Jesus, God will give it to us. He gives us so
much that we so often don’t notice or even thank him for. The most wonderful
thing he gives us is the precious gift of making us friends of his own son, and
grafting us onto this vine, so that we may produce wonderful rich fruit.
And so let’s thank Jesus for this wonderful message
that he gives us today. Let’s thank him for the wonderful words of forgiveness
that he continually speaks to us, because of his death on the cross. We thank
you for the way in which he comes and dwells with us and in us, and connects us
so intimately to himself like branches on a vine. And we pray in his name that
we may continually learn his word, learn his perfect sacrificial love, and ask
him to use us in his kingdom in whatever way he sees fit. Jesus says: By
this my Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit and so prove to be my
disciples. Amen.
Dear Jesus, our true vine, use us, your branches, to
bear fruit, and fruit that will abide. Let your Father be glorified in us, so
that we may bear much fruit not to our glory, but to his glory. Into your
hands, dear Jesus, we commend our bodies, our souls, our minds and our spirits.
Amen.
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