On these three great facts rests the mighty admonition: “ Remain in Me.” Count the number of times this word is repeated, as if to impress it indelibly upon our hearts. In John 3: 3-5 we learn how we come to be in Him. To remain in Jesus is to believe in Him always. The chief business of faith is to receive from Him. Remaining means ever receiving grace for grace, day by day, in ever greater fullness.
So, the branch remains and receives life from the Vine, and therefore, it develops and grows. This remaining and receiving is mediated by the Word and is impossible without this divine means.
This remaining and receiving will invariably manifest itself in two ways:
The main point in this parable is: The Necessity Of Remaining In Jesus! This has been repeated from the beginning of the chapter.
Just what remaining in Jesus means is now fully explained. Jesus says in verse 9: “ Just as the Father did love me, I, too, did love you. Remain in my love.” Jesus explains that to remain in Him means that we remain in His love. He and His love are one and the same.
Now, remember:
There are laws that allow no exceptions. To expect that fruit-bearing would be possible for the one who does not remain in Christ is even more foolish than to expect that a branch that has been severed from the vine can bring forth grapes.
Abiding in Christ has glorious results:
So, when we abide in Christ as a branch abides in the vine, we are utterly dependent upon Him. For He holds us up; supplies life; and reproduces His own particular kind of fruit in us. Jesus entreats, commands, exhorts, all in one breath. It is as though He were to say, “ Children, I am leaving you. There are many things I desire for you. There are many commands to utter. There are many cautions and many lessons to give. But I am content to leave all unsaid, if only you will remember this all-inclusive bidding: Abide in Me, remain in Me, that the union between you and Me might continue to deepen and intensify.”
We know that His claims are not exaggerations:
Prove Him for yourself. See, if this shall also be true for you.
Give yourself entirely up to Christ. Abide in Him. Remain in Him. Let thought and speech and life be bathed in the influences of His Holy Spirit. Let the sap of His life flow where the sap of the self-life was flowing. Then, old things will pass away and all things will become new.
So, when we talk about abiding, we are not talking about our integral oneness with Christ for life; we are talking about our abiding union with Him for fruit-bearing and service.
So, abiding is the continuous act by which the Christian lays aside all he might draw from his own wisdom, strength, and merit, to desire all from Christ by the inward aspiration of faith.
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