Chapter
73 -
Let Not Your Heart Be Troubled
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LOOKING upon His disciples with divine love and with the tenderest sympathy,
Christ said, "Now is the Son of man glorified, and God is glorified in Him."
Judas had left the upper chamber, and Christ was alone with the eleven. He
was about to speak of His approaching separation from them; but before doing
this He pointed to the great object of His mission. It was this that He kept
ever before Him. It was His joy that all His humiliation and suffering would
glorify the Father's name. To this He first directs the thoughts of His
disciples.
Then addressing them by the endearing term, "Little children," He said, "Yet
a little while I am with you. Ye shall seek Me: and as I said unto the Jews,
Whither I go, ye cannot come; so now I say to you."
The disciples could not rejoice when they heard this. Fear fell upon them.
They pressed close about the Saviour. Their Master and Lord, their beloved
Teacher and Friend, He was dearer to them than life. To Him they had looked
for help in all their difficulties, for comfort in their sorrows and
disappointments. Now He was to leave them, a lonely, dependent company. Dark
were the forebodings that filled their hearts.
But the Saviour's words to them were full of hope. He knew that they were to
be assailed by the enemy, and that Satan's craft is most successful against
those who are depressed by difficulties. Therefore He pointed them away from
"the things which are seen," to "the things which are not seen." 2 Cor.
4:18. From earthly exile He turned their thoughts to the heavenly home.
"Let not your heart be troubled," He said; "ye believe in God, believe also
in Me. In My Father's house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would
have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a
place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto Myself; that were I
am, there ye may be also. And whither I go ye know, and the way ye know."
For your sake I came into the world. I am working in your behalf. When I go
away, I shall still work earnestly for you. I came into the world to reveal
Myself to you, that you might believe. I go to the Father to co-operate with
Him in your behalf. The object of Christ's departure was the opposite of
what the disciples feared. It did not mean a final separation. He was going
to prepare a place for them, that He might come again, and receive them unto
Himself. While He was building mansions for them, they were to build
characters after the divine similitude.
Still the disciples were perplexed. Thomas, always troubled by doubts, said,
"Lord, we know not whither Thou goest; and how can we know the way? Jesus
saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life; no man cometh unto
the Father, but by Me. If ye had known Me, ye should have known My Father
also: and from henceforth ye know Him, and have seen Him."
There are not many ways to heaven. Each one may not choose his own way.
Christ says, "I am the way: . . . no man cometh unto the Father, but by Me."
Since the first gospel sermon was preached, when in Eden it was declared
that the seed of the woman should bruise the serpent's head, Christ had been
uplifted as the way, the truth, and the life. He was the way when Adam
lived, when Abel presented to God the blood of the slain lamb, representing
the blood of the Redeemer. Christ was the way by which patriarchs and
prophets were saved. He is the way by which alone we can have access to God.
"If ye had known Me," Christ said, "ye should have known My Father also: and
from henceforth ye know Him, and have seen Him." But not yet did the
disciples understand. "Lord, show us the Father," exclaimed Philip, "and it
sufficeth us."
Amazed at his dullness of comprehension, Christ asked with pained surprise,
"Have I been so long time with you, and yet hast thou not known Me, Philip?"
Is it possible that you do not see the Father in the works He does through
Me? Do you not believe that I came to testify of the Father? "How sayest
thou then, Show us the Father?" "He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father."
Christ had not ceased to be God when He became man. Though He had humbled
Himself to humanity, the Godhead was still His own. Christ alone could
represent the Father to humanity, and this representation the disciples had
been privileged to behold for over three years.
"Believe Me that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me: or else believe
Me for the very works' sake." Their faith might safely rest on the evidence
given in Christ's works, works that no man, of himself, ever had done, or
ever could do. Christ's work testified to His divinity. Through Him the
Father had been revealed.
If the disciples believed this vital connection between the Father and the
Son, their faith would not forsake them when they saw Christ's suffering and
death to save a perishing world. Christ was seeking to lead them from their
low condition of faith to the experience they might receive if they truly
realized what He was,--God in human flesh. He desired them to see that their
faith must lead up to God, and be anchored there. How earnestly and
perseveringly our compassionate Saviour sought to prepare His disciples for
the storm of temptation that was soon to beat upon them. He would have them
hid with Him in God.
As Christ was speaking these words, the glory of God was shining from His
countenance, and all present felt a sacred awe as they listened with rapt
attention to His words. Their hearts were more decidedly drawn to Him; and
as they were drawn to Christ in greater love, they were drawn to one
another. They felt that heaven was very near, and that the words to which
they listened were a message to them from their heavenly Father.
"Verily, verily, I say unto you," Christ continued, "He that believeth on
Me, the works that I do shall he do also." The Saviour was deeply anxious
for His disciples to understand for what purpose His divinity was united to
humanity. He came to the world to display the glory of God, that man might
be uplifted by its restoring power. God was manifested in Him that He might
be manifested in them. Jesus revealed no qualities, and exercised no powers,
that men may not have through faith in Him. His perfect humanity is that
which all His followers may possess, if they will be in subjection to God as
He was.
"And greater works than these shall he do; because I go unto My Father." By
this Christ did not mean that the disciples' work would be of a more exalted
character than His, but that it would have greater extent. He did not refer
merely to miracle working, but to all that would take place under the
working of the Holy Spirit.
After the Lord's ascension, the disciples realized the fulfillment of His
promise. The scenes of the crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension of
Christ were a living reality to them. They saw that the prophecies had been
literally fulfilled. They searched the Scriptures, and accepted their
teaching with a faith and assurance unknown before. They knew that the
divine Teacher was all that He had claimed to be. As they told their
experience, and exalted the love of God, men's hearts were melted and
subdued, and multitudes believed on Jesus.
The Saviour's promise to His disciples is a promise to His church to the end
of time. God did not design that His wonderful plan to redeem men should
achieve only insignificant results. All who will go to work, trusting not in
what they themselves can do, but in what God can do for and through them,
will certainly realize the fulfillment of His promise. "Greater works than
these shall ye do," He declares; "because I go unto My Father."
As yet the disciples were unacquainted with the Saviour's unlimited
resources and power. He said to them, "Hitherto have ye asked nothing in My
name." John 16:24. He explained that the secret of their success would be in
asking for strength and grace in His name. He would be present before the
Father to make request for them. The prayer of the humble suppliant He
presents as His own desire in that soul's behalf. Every sincere prayer is
heard in heaven. It may not be fluently expressed; but if the heart is in
it, it will ascend to the sanctuary where Jesus ministers, and He will
present it to the Father without one awkward, stammering word, beautiful and
fragrant with the incense of His own perfection.
The path of sincerity and integrity is not a path free from obstruction, but
in every difficulty we are to see a call to prayer. There is no one living
who has any power that he has not received from God, and the source whence
it comes is open to the weakest human being. "Whatsoever ye shall ask in My
name," said Jesus, "that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in the
Son. If ye shall ask anything in My name, I will do it."
"In My name," Christ bade His disciples pray. In Christ's name His followers
are to stand before God. Through the value of the sacrifice made for them,
they are of value in the Lord's sight. Because of the imputed righteousness
of Christ they are accounted precious. For Christ's sake the Lord pardons
those that fear Him. He does not see in them the vileness of the sinner. He
recognizes in them the likeness of His Son, in whom they believe.
The Lord is disappointed when His people place a low estimate upon
themselves. He desires His chosen heritage to value themselves according to
the price He has placed upon them. God wanted them, else He would not have
sent His Son on such an expensive errand to redeem them. He has a use for
them, and He is well pleased when they make the very highest demands upon
Him, that they may glorify His name. They may expect large things if they
have faith in His promises.
But to pray in Christ's name means much. It means that we are to accept His
character, manifest His spirit, and work His works. The Saviour's promise is
given on condition. "If ye love Me," He says, "keep My commandments." He
saves men, not in sin, but from sin; and those who love Him will show their
love by obedience.
All true obedience comes from the heart. It was heart work with Christ. And
if we consent, He will so identify Himself with our thoughts and aims, so
blend our hearts and minds into conformity to His will, that when obeying
Him we shall be but carrying out our own impulses. The will, refined and
sanctified, will find its highest delight in doing His service. When we know
God as it is our privilege to know Him, our life will be a life of continual
obedience. Through an appreciation of the character of Christ, through
communion with God, sin will become hateful to us.
As Christ lived the law in humanity, so we may do if we will take hold of
the Strong for strength. But we are not to place the responsibility of our
duty upon others, and wait for them to tell us what to do. We cannot depend
for counsel upon humanity. The Lord will teach us our duty just as willingly
as He will teach somebody else. If we come to Him in faith, He will speak
His mysteries to us personally. Our hearts will often burn within us as One
draws nigh to commune with us as He did with Enoch. Those who decide to do
nothing in any line that will displease God, will know, after presenting
their case before Him, just what course to pursue. And they will receive not
only wisdom, but strength. Power for obedience, for service, will be
imparted to them, as Christ has promised. Whatever was given to Christ--the
"all things" to supply the need of fallen men--was given to Him as the head
and representative of humanity. And "whatsoever we ask, we receive of Him,
because we keep His commandments, and do those things that are pleasing in
His sight." 1 John 3:22.
Before offering Himself as the sacrificial victim, Christ sought for the
most essential and complete gift to bestow upon His followers, a gift that
would bring within their reach the boundless resources of grace. "I will
pray the Father," He said, "and He shall give you another Comforter, that He
may abide with you forever; even the Spirit of truth; whom the world cannot
receive, because it seeth Him not, neither knoweth Him: but ye know Him; for
He dwelleth with you, and shall be in you. I will not leave you orphans: I
will come to you." John 14:16-18, margin.
Before this the Spirit had been in the world; from the very beginning of the
work of redemption He had been moving upon men's hearts. But while Christ
was on earth, the disciples had desired no other helper. Not until they were
deprived of His presence would they feel their need of the Spirit, and then
He would come.
The Holy Spirit is Christ's representative, but divested of the personality
of humanity, and independent thereof. Cumbered with humanity, Christ could
not be in every place personally. Therefore it was for their interest that
He should go to the Father, and send the Spirit to be His successor on
earth. No one could then have any advantage because of his location or his
personal contact with Christ. By the Spirit the Saviour would be accessible
to all. In this sense He would be nearer to them than if He had not ascended
on high.
"He that loveth Me shall be loved of My Father, and I will love him, and
will manifest Myself to him." Jesus read the future of His disciples. He saw
one brought to the scaffold, one to the cross, one to exile among the lonely
rocks of the sea, others to persecution and death. He encouraged them with
the promise that in every trial He would be with them. That promise has lost
none of its force. The Lord knows all about His faithful servants who for
His sake are lying in prison or who are banished to lonely islands. He
comforts them with His own presence. When for the truth's sake the believer
stands at the bar of unrighteous tribunals, Christ stands by his side. All
the reproaches that fall upon him, fall upon Christ. Christ is condemned
over again in the person of His disciple. When one is incarcerated in prison
walls, Christ ravishes the heart with His love. When one suffers death for
His sake, Christ says, "I am He that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am
alive forevermore, . . . and have the keys of hell and of death." Rev. 1:18.
The life that is sacrificed for Me is preserved unto eternal glory.
At all times and in all places, in all sorrows and in all afflictions, when
the outlook seems dark and the future perplexing, and we feel helpless and
alone, the Comforter will be sent in answer to the prayer of faith.
Circumstances may separate us from every earthly friend; but no
circumstance, no distance, can separate us from the heavenly Comforter.
Wherever we are, wherever we may go, He is always at our right hand to
support, sustain, uphold, and cheer.
The disciples still failed to understand Christ's words in their spiritual
sense, and again He explained His meaning. By the Spirit, He said, He would
manifest Himself to them. "The Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom the
Father will send in My name, He shall teach you all things." No more will
you say, I cannot comprehend. No longer will you see through a glass,
darkly. You shall "be able to comprehend with all saints what is the
breadth, and length, and depth, and height; and to know the love of Christ,
which passeth knowledge." Eph. 3:18, 19.
The disciples were to bear witness to the life and work of Christ. Through
their word He was to speak to all the people on the face of the earth. But
in the humiliation and death of Christ they were to suffer great trial and
disappointment. That after this experience their word might be accurate,
Jesus promised that the Comforter should "bring all things to your
remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you."
"I have yet many things to say unto you," He continued, "but ye cannot bear
them now. Howbeit when He, the Spirit of truth, is come, He will guide you
into all truth: for He shall not speak of Himself; but whatsoever He shall
hear, that shall He speak: and He will show you things to come. He shall
glorify Me: for He shall receive of Mine, and shall show it unto you." Jesus
had opened before His disciples a vast tract of truth. But it was most
difficult for them to keep His lessons distinct from the traditions and
maxims of the scribes and Pharisees. They had been educated to accept the
teaching of the rabbis as the voice of God, and it still held a power over
their minds, and molded their sentiments. Earthly ideas, temporal things,
still had a large place in their thoughts. They did not understand the
spiritual nature of Christ's kingdom, though He had so often explained it to
them. Their minds had become confused. They did not comprehend the value of
the scriptures Christ presented. Many of His lessons seemed almost lost upon
them. Jesus saw that they did not lay hold of the real meaning of His words.
He compassionately promised that the Holy Spirit should recall these sayings
to their minds. And He had left unsaid many things that could not be
comprehended by the disciples. These also would be opened to them by the
Spirit. The Spirit was to quicken their understanding, that they might have
an appreciation of heavenly things. "When He, the Spirit of truth, is come,"
said Jesus, "He will guide you into all truth."
The Comforter is called "the Spirit of truth." His work is to define and
maintain the truth. He first dwells in the heart as the Spirit of truth, and
thus He becomes the Comforter. There is comfort and peace in the truth, but
no real peace or comfort can be found in falsehood. It is through false
theories and traditions that Satan gains his power over the mind. By
directing men to false standards, he misshapes the character. Through the
Scriptures the Holy Spirit speaks to the mind, and impresses truth upon the
heart. Thus He exposes error, and expels it from the soul. It is by the
Spirit of truth, working through the word of God, that Christ subdues His
chosen people to Himself.
In describing to His disciples the office work of the Holy Spirit, Jesus
sought to inspire them with the joy and hope that inspired His own heart. He
rejoiced because of the abundant help He had provided for His church. The
Holy Spirit was the highest of all gifts that He could solicit from His
Father for the exaltation of His people. The Spirit was to be given as a
regenerating agent, and without this the sacrifice of Christ would have been
of no avail. The power of evil had been strengthening for centuries, and the
submission of men to this satanic captivity was amazing. Sin could be
resisted and overcome only through the mighty agency of the Third Person of
the Godhead, who would come with no modified energy, but in the fullness of
divine power. It is the Spirit that makes effectual what has been wrought
out by the world's Redeemer. It is by the Spirit that the heart is made
pure. Through the Spirit the believer becomes a partaker of the divine
nature. Christ has given His Spirit as a divine power to overcome all
hereditary and cultivated tendencies to evil, and to impress His own
character upon His church.
Of the Spirit Jesus said, "He shall glorify Me." The Saviour came to glorify
the Father by the demonstration of His love; so the Spirit was to glorify
Christ by revealing His grace to the world. The very image of God is to be
reproduced in humanity. The honor of God, the honor of Christ, is involved
in the perfection of the character of His people.
"When He [the Spirit of truth] is come, He will reprove the world of sin,
and of righteousness, and of judgment." The preaching of the word will be of
no avail without the continual presence and aid of the Holy Spirit. This is
the only effectual teacher of divine truth. Only when the truth is
accompanied to the heart by the Spirit will it quicken the conscience or
transform the life. One might be able to present the letter of the word of
God, he might be familiar with all its commands and promises; but unless the
Holy Spirit sets home the truth, no souls will fall on the Rock and be
broken. No amount of education, no advantages, however great, can make one a
channel of light without the co-operation of the Spirit of God. The sowing
of the gospel seed will not be a success unless the seed is quickened into
life by the dew of heaven. Before one book of the New Testament was written,
before one gospel sermon had been preached after Christ's ascension, the
Holy Spirit came upon the praying apostles. Then the testimony of their
enemies was, "Ye have filled Jerusalem with your doctrine." Acts 5:28.
Christ has promised the gift of the Holy Spirit to His church, and the
promise belongs to us as much as to the first disciples. But like every
other promise, it is given on conditions. There are many who believe and
profess to claim the Lord's promise; they talk about Christ and about the
Holy Spirit, yet receive no benefit. They do not surrender the soul to be
guided and controlled by the divine agencies. We cannot use the Holy Spirit.
The Spirit is to use us. Through the Spirit God works in His people "to will
and to do of His good pleasure." Phil. 2:13. But many will not submit to
this. They want to manage themselves. This is why they do not receive the
heavenly gift. Only to those who wait humbly upon God, who watch for His
guidance and grace, is the Spirit given. The power of God awaits their
demand and reception. This promised blessing, claimed by faith, brings all
other blessings in its train. It is given according to the riches of the
grace of Christ, and He is ready to supply every soul according to the
capacity to receive.
In His discourse to the disciples, Jesus made no mournful allusion to His
own sufferings and death. His last legacy to them was a legacy of peace. He
said, "Peace I leave with you, My peace I give unto you: not as the world
giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be
afraid."
Before leaving the upper chamber, the Saviour led His disciples in a song of
praise. His voice was heard, not in the strains of some mournful lament, but
in the joyful notes of the Passover hallel:
"O praise the Lord, all ye nations:
Praise Him, all ye people.
For His merciful kindness is great toward us:
And the truth of the Lord endureth forever.
Praise ye the Lord." Psalm 117.
After the hymn, they went out. Through the crowded streets they made their
way, passing out of the city gate toward the Mount of Olives. Slowly they
proceeded, each busy with his own thoughts. As they began to descend toward
the mount, Jesus said, in a tone of deepest sadness, "All ye shall be
offended because of Me this night: for it is written, I will smite the
shepherd, and the sheep of the flock shall be scattered abroad." Matt.
26:31. The disciples listened in sorrow and amazement. They remembered how
in the synagogue at Capernaum, when Christ spoke of Himself as the bread of
life, many had been offended, and had turned away from Him. But the twelve
had not shown themselves unfaithful. Peter, speaking for his brethren, had
then declared his loyalty to Christ. Then the Saviour had said, "Have not I
chosen you twelve, and one of you is a devil?" John 6:70. In the upper
chamber Jesus said that one of the twelve would betray Him, and that Peter
would deny Him. But now His words include them all.
Now Peter's voice is heard vehemently protesting, "Although all shall be
offended, yet will not I." In the upper chamber he had declared, "I will lay
down my life for Thy sake." Jesus had warned him that he would that very
night deny his Saviour. Now Christ repeats the warning: "Verily I say unto
thee, That this day, even in this night, before the cock crow twice, thou
shalt deny Me thrice." But Peter only "spake the more vehemently, If I
should die with Thee, I will not deny Thee in anywise. Likewise also said
they all." Mark 14:29, 30, 31. In their self-confidence they denied the
repeated statement of Him who knew. They were unprepared for the test; when
temptation should overtake them, they would understand their own weakness.
When Peter said he would follow his Lord to prison and to death, he meant
it, every word of it; but he did not know himself. Hidden in his heart were
elements of evil that circumstances would fan into life. Unless he was made
conscious of his danger, these would prove his eternal ruin. The Saviour saw
in him a self-love and assurance that would overbear even his love for
Christ. Much of infirmity, of unmortified sin, carelessness of spirit,
unsanctified temper, heedlessness in entering into temptation, had been
revealed in his experience. Christ's solemn warning was a call to heart
searching. Peter needed to distrust himself, and to have a deeper faith in
Christ. Had he in humility received the warning, he would have appealed to
the Shepherd of the flock to keep His sheep. When on the Sea of Galilee he
was about to sink, he cried, "Lord, save me." Matt. 14:30. Then the hand of
Christ was outstretched to grasp his hand. So now if he had cried to Jesus,
Save me from myself, he would have been kept. But Peter felt that he was
distrusted, and he thought it cruel. He was already offended, and he became
more persistent in his self-confidence.
Jesus looks with compassion on His disciples. He cannot save them from the
trial, but He does not leave them comfortless. He assures them that He is to
break the fetters of the tomb, and that His love for them will not fail.
"After I am risen again," He says, "I will go before you into Galilee."
Matt. 26:32. Before the denial, they have the assurance of forgiveness.
After His death and resurrection, they knew that they were forgiven, and
were dear to the heart of Christ.
Jesus and the disciples were on the way to Gethsemane, at the foot of Mount
Olivet, a retired spot which He had often visited for meditation and prayer.
The Saviour had been explaining to His disciples His mission to the world,
and the spiritual relation to Him which they were to sustain. Now He
illustrates the lesson. The moon is shining bright, and reveals to Him a
flourishing grapevine. Drawing the attention of the disciples to it, He
employs it as a symbol.
"I am the true Vine," He says. Instead of choosing the graceful palm, the
lofty cedar, or the strong oak, Jesus takes the vine with its clinging
tendrils to represent Himself. The palm tree, the cedar, and the oak stand
alone. They require no support. But the vine entwines about the trellis, and
thus climbs heavenward. So Christ in His humanity was dependent upon divine
power. "I can of Mine own self do nothing," He declared. John 5:30.
"I am the true Vine." The Jews had always regarded the vine as the most
noble of plants, and a type of all that was powerful, excellent, and
fruitful. Israel had been represented as a vine which God had planted in the
Promised Land. The Jews based their hope of salvation on the fact of their
connection with Israel. But Jesus says, I am the real Vine. Think not that
through a connection with Israel you may become partakers of the life of
God, and inheritors of His promise. Through Me alone is spiritual life
received.
"I am the true Vine, and My Father is the husbandman." On the hills of
Palestine our heavenly Father had planted this goodly Vine, and He Himself
was the husbandman. Many were attracted by the beauty of this Vine, and
declared its heavenly origin. But to the leaders in Israel it appeared as a
root out of a dry ground. They took the plant, and bruised it, and trampled
it under their unholy feet. Their thought was to destroy it forever. But the
heavenly Husbandman never lost sight of His plant. After men thought they
had killed it, He took it, and replanted it on the other side of the wall.
The vine stock was to be no longer visible. It was hidden from the rude
assaults of men. But the branches of the Vine hung over the wall. They were
to represent the Vine. Through them grafts might still be united to the
Vine. From them fruit has been obtained. There has been a harvest which the
passers-by have plucked.
"I am the Vine, ye are the branches," Christ said to His disciples. Though
He was about to be removed from them, their spiritual union with Him was to
be unchanged. The connection of the branch with the vine, He said,
represents the relation you are to sustain to Me. The scion is engrafted
into the living vine, and fiber by fiber, vein by vein, it grows into the
vine stock. The life of the vine becomes the life of the branch. So the soul
dead in trespasses and sins receives life through connection with Christ. By
faith in Him as a personal Saviour the union is formed. The sinner unites
his weakness to Christ's strength, his emptiness to Christ's fullness, his
frailty to Christ's enduring might. Then he has the mind of Christ. The
humanity of Christ has touched our humanity, and our humanity has touched
divinity. Thus through the agency of the Holy Spirit man becomes a partaker
of the divine nature. He is accepted in the Beloved.
This union with Christ, once formed, must be maintained. Christ said, "Abide
in Me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it
abide in the vine; no more can ye, except ye abide in Me." This is no casual
touch, no off-and-on connection. The branch becomes a part of the living
vine. The communication of life, strength, and fruitfulness from the root to
the branches is unobstructed and constant. Separated from the vine, the
branch cannot live. No more, said Jesus, can you live apart from Me. The
life you have received from Me can be preserved only by continual communion.
Without Me you cannot overcome one sin, or resist one temptation.
"Abide in Me, and I in you." Abiding in Christ means a constant receiving of
His Spirit, a life of unreserved surrender to His service. The channel of
communication must be open continually between man and his God. As the vine
branch constantly draws the sap from the living vine, so are we to cling to
Jesus, and receive from Him by faith the strength and perfection of His own
character.
The root sends its nourishment through the branch to the outermost twig. So
Christ communicates the current of spiritual strength to every believer. So
long as the soul is united to Christ, there is no danger that it will wither
or decay.
The life of the vine will be manifest in fragrant fruit on the branches. "He
that abideth in Me," said Jesus, "and I in him, the same bringeth forth much
fruit: for without Me ye can do nothing." When we live by faith on the Son
of God, the fruits of the Spirit will be seen in our lives; not one will be
missing.
"My Father is the husbandman. Every branch in Me that beareth not fruit He
taketh away." While the graft is outwardly united with the vine, there may
be no vital connection. Then there will be no growth or fruitfulness. So
there may be an apparent connection with Christ without a real union with
Him by faith. A profession of religion places men in the church, but the
character and conduct show whether they are in connection with Christ. If
they bear no fruit, they are false branches. Their separation from Christ
involves a ruin as complete as that represented by the dead branch. "If a
man abide not in Me," said Christ, "he is cast forth as a branch, and is
withered; and men gather them, and cast them into the fire, and they are
burned."
"And every branch that beareth fruit, He purgeth [pruneth] it, that it may
bring forth more fruit." From the chosen twelve who had followed Jesus, one
as a withered branch was about to be taken away; the rest were to pass under
the pruning knife of bitter trial. Jesus with solemn tenderness explained
the purpose of the husbandman. The pruning will cause pain, but it is the
Father who applies the knife. He works with no wanton hand or indifferent
heart. There are branches trailing upon the ground; these must be cut loose
from the earthly supports to which their tendrils are fastening. They are to
reach heavenward, and find their support in God. The excessive foliage that
draws away the life current from the fruit must be pruned off. The
overgrowth must be cut out, to give room for the healing beams of the Sun of
Righteousness. The husbandman prunes away the harmful growth, that the fruit
may be richer and more abundant.
"Herein is My Father glorified," said Jesus, "that ye bear much fruit." God
desires to manifest through you the holiness, the benevolence, the
compassion, of His own character. Yet the Saviour does not bid the disciples
labor to bear fruit. He tells them to abide in Him. "If ye abide in Me," He
says, "and My words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be
done unto you." It is through the word that Christ abides in His followers.
This is the same vital union that is represented by eating His flesh and
drinking His blood. The words of Christ are spirit and life. Receiving them,
you receive the life of the Vine. You live "by every word that proceedeth
out of the mouth of God." Matt. 4:4. The life of Christ in you produces the
same fruits as in Him. Living in Christ, adhering to Christ, supported by
Christ, drawing nourishment from Christ, you bear fruit after the similitude
of Christ.
In this last meeting with His disciples, the great desire which Christ
expressed for them was that they might love one another as He had loved
them. Again and again He spoke of this. "These things I command you," He
said repeatedly, "that ye love one another." His very first injunction when
alone with them in the upper chamber was, "A new commandment I give unto
you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one
another." To the disciples this commandment was new; for they had not loved
one another as Christ had loved them. He saw that new ideas and impulses
must control them; that new principles must be practiced by them; through
His life and death they were to receive a new conception of love. The
command to love one another had a new meaning in the light of His
self-sacrifice. The whole work of grace is one continual service of love, of
self-denying, self-sacrificing effort. During every hour of Christ's sojourn
upon the earth, the love of God was flowing from Him in irrepressible
streams. All who are imbued with His Spirit will love as He loved. The very
principle that actuated Christ will actuate them in all their dealing one
with another.
This love is the evidence of their discipleship. "By this shall all men know
that ye are My disciples," said Jesus, "if ye have love one to another."
When men are bound together, not by force or self-interest, but by love,
they show the working of an influence that is above every human influence.
Where this oneness exists, it is evidence that the image of God is being
restored in humanity, that a new principle of life has been implanted. It
shows that there is power in the divine nature to withstand the supernatural
agencies of evil, and that the grace of God subdues the selfishness inherent
in the natural heart.
This love, manifested in the church, will surely stir the wrath of Satan.
Christ did not mark out for His disciples an easy path. "If the world hate
you," He said, "ye know that it hated Me before it hated you. If ye were of
the world, the world would love his own: but because ye are not of the
world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth
you. Remember the word that I said unto you, The servant is not greater than
his lord. If they have persecuted Me, they will also persecute you; if they
have kept My saying, they will keep yours also. But all these things will
they do unto you for My name's sake, because they know not Him that sent
Me." The gospel is to be carried forward by aggressive warfare, in the midst
of opposition, peril, loss, and suffering. But those who do this work are
only following in their Master's steps.
As the world's Redeemer, Christ was constantly confronted with apparent
failure. He, the messenger of mercy to our world, seemed to do little of the
work He longed to do in uplifting and saving. Satanic influences were
constantly working to oppose His way. But He would not be discouraged.
Through the prophecy of Isaiah He declares, "I have labored in vain, I have
spent My strength for nought, and in vain: yet surely My judgment is with
the Lord, and My work with My God. . . . Though Israel be not gathered, yet
shall I be glorious in the eyes of the Lord, and My God shall be My
strength." It is to Christ that the promise is given, "Thus saith the Lord,
the Redeemer of Israel, and His Holy One, to Him whom man despiseth, to Him
whom the nation abhorreth; . . . thus saith the Lord: . . . I will preserve
Thee, and give Thee for a covenant of the people, to establish the earth, to
cause to inherit the desolate heritages; that Thou mayest say to the
prisoners, Go forth; to them that are in darkness, Show yourselves. . . .
They shall not hunger nor thirst; neither shall the heat nor sun smite them:
for He that hath mercy on them shall lead them, even by the springs of water
shall He guide them." Isa. 49:4, 5, 7-10.
Upon this word Jesus rested, and He gave Satan no advantage. When the last
steps of Christ's humiliation were to be taken, when the deepest sorrow was
closing about His soul, He said to His disciples, "The prince of this world
cometh, and hath nothing in Me." "The prince of this world is judged." Now
shall he be cast out. John 14:30; 16:11; 12:31. With prophetic eye Christ
traced the scenes to take place in His last great conflict. He knew that
when He should exclaim, "It is finished," all heaven would triumph. His ear
caught the distant music and the shouts of victory in the heavenly courts.
He knew that the knell of Satan's empire would then be sounded, and the name
of Christ would be heralded from world to world throughout the universe.
Christ rejoiced that He could do more for His followers than they could ask
or think. He spoke with assurance, knowing that an almighty decree had been
given before the world was made. He knew that truth, armed with the
omnipotence of the Holy Spirit, would conquer in the contest with evil; and
that the bloodstained banner would wave triumphantly over His followers. He
knew that the life of His trusting disciples would be like His, a series of
uninterrupted victories, not seen to be such here, but recognized as such in
the great hereafter.
"These things I have spoken unto you," He said, "that in Me ye might have
peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have
overcome the world." Christ did not fail, neither was He discouraged, and
His followers are to manifest a faith of the same enduring nature. They are
to live as He lived, and work as He worked, because they depend on Him as
the great Master Worker. Courage, energy, and perseverance they must
possess. Though apparent impossibilities obstruct their way, by His grace
they are to go forward. Instead of deploring difficulties, they are called
upon to surmount them. They are to despair of nothing, and to hope for
everything. With the golden chain of His matchless love Christ has bound
them to the throne of God. It is His purpose that the highest influence in
the universe, emanating from the source of all power, shall be theirs. They
are to have power to resist evil, power that neither earth, nor death, nor
hell can master, power that will enable them to overcome as Christ overcame.
Christ designs that heaven's order, heaven's plan of government, heaven's
divine harmony, shall be represented in His church on earth. Thus in His
people He is glorified. Through them the Sun of Righteousness will shine in
undimmed luster to the world. Christ has given to His church ample
facilities, that He may receive a large revenue of glory from His redeemed,
purchased possession. He has bestowed upon His people capabilities and
blessings that they may represent His own sufficiency. The church, endowed
with the righteousness of Christ, is His depositary, in which the riches of
His mercy, His grace, and His love, are to appear in full and final display.
Christ looks upon His people in their purity and perfection, as the reward
of His humiliation, and the supplement of His glory,--Christ, the great
Center, from whom radiates all glory.
With strong, hopeful words the Saviour ended His instruction. Then He poured
out the burden of His soul in prayer for His disciples. Lifting His eyes to
heaven, He said, "Father, the hour is come; glorify Thy Son, that Thy Son
also may glorify Thee: as Thou hast given Him power over all flesh, that He
should give eternal life to as many as Thou hast given Him. And this is life
eternal, that they might know Thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom
Thou hast sent."
Christ had finished the work that was given Him to do. He had glorified God
on the earth. He had manifested the Father's name. He had gathered out those
who were to continue His work among men. And He said, "I am glorified in
them. And now I am no more in the world, but these are in the world, and I
come to Thee. Holy Father, keep through Thine own name those whom Thou hast
given Me, that they may be one, as We are." "Neither pray I for these alone,
but for them also which shall believe on Me through their word; that they
all may be one; . . . I in them, and Thou in Me, that they may be made
perfect in one; and that the world may know that Thou hast sent Me, and hast
loved them, as Thou hast loved Me."
Thus in the language of one who has divine authority, Christ gives His elect
church into the Father's arms. As a consecrated high priest He intercedes
for His people. As a faithful shepherd He gathers His flock under the shadow
of the Almighty, in the strong and sure refuge. For Him there waits the last
battle with Satan, and He goes forth to meet it.
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