Monday, 10 February 2025

Christ the True Vine, and the Branches

 Reflection at Morning Worship with the Community of Brendan the Navigator, Tuesday 11th February 2025


Christ the True Vine, Lorenzo Lotto 1514, Suardi Chapel (detail)

In the reading we’ve just heard (John 15:1-11), Jesus uses the lovely metaphor of the vine to describe the relationship between God his loving Father, himself and his disciples.

Vine growers know that their vines must be heavily pruned to produce good grapes. Jesus tells his disciples that he is like the roots and trunk of the true vine, his Father is like the vine grower, and they are like his branches. His loving Father prunes them to make them more productive. They must abide in Jesus, cleave to him, to produce much fruit. If they don’t, they are like useless branches, they will be pruned and wither, and be fit only to be burned.

Jesus’s loving Father God wishes them to be his Son’s disciples, and wishes them to bear fruit. Jesus loves his disciples, as his Father has loved him. He calls them to abide in his love by keeping his commandments, just as he has kept his Father’s commandments, so that he may rejoice in them, and they may be filled with joy.

What a marvellous metaphor this is for how God’s love permeates Jesus and his disciples!

God will prune the branches, but will do so with love. He does not promise life will be easy. Left to their own devices, disciples would run off in every direction. They will sometimes need to be checked, redirected. They will sometimes find life is not what they hope or expect. There will be painful disappointments along the way. But this is the price they know they must pay to be part of Jesus’s marvellous vision, to know they are loved, and to be filled with the joy of knowing they are producing good fruit.

Jesus tells his disciples they must keep his commandments to abide in his love. What are these commandments? Three, I believe, summarise them all. When Jesus was asked what the greatest commandment was, he replied (Matthew 23:37-40), ‘“You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.” This is the greatest and first commandment. And a second is like it: “You shall love your neighbour as yourself.”’ These are the first two. And the third Jesus gave his disciples on the night before his crucifixion (John 13.34-35), ‘I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.’

And what is the good fruit that disciples will bear, when God’s skilful pruning has encouraged them to grow, and they keep Jesus’s commandments? I believe the good fruit are lives that deserve the blessings Jesus promised in the Beatitudes (Matthew 5:3-10), which I wrote about in this month’s Grapevine. Or as St Paul talks of in Galatians (5:22), lives that display the fruits of the Spirit ‘love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control’.

The good fruit is surely the holy lives of Jesus’s disciples. Let us pray that we will all bear such good fruit.

 

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