From FSAOF blog:
"Howard Webber is a retired Pastor having served for many years in various appointments as a Salvation Army officer. He is an award-winning author and weekly contributor to this SA related blog.
On occasion, he favours us by sharing hitherto unpublished articles. Here then is one such offering; a three-part Bible study."
"Howard Webber is a retired Pastor having served for many years in various appointments as a Salvation Army officer. He is an award-winning author and weekly contributor to this SA related blog.
On occasion, he favours us by sharing hitherto unpublished articles. Here then is one such offering; a three-part Bible study."
Above we came to the conclusion that our situation is an
impossible one, that what God requires is unachievable, unreasonable. We see it
elsewhere too. Jesus said, 'Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is
perfect,' Matthew 5:48, and 'Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful,'
Luke 6:36. However we might translate the words, we are being called to have
the character of God, something most clearly seen in Jesus! 'But just as he who
called you is holy, so be holy in all you do,' 1 Peter 1:15.
Like St Paul, we might readily throw up our hands in despair
and cry out, 'What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from this body of
death?' Romans 7:24. You see, we are trapped. We are prisoners of our sinful
nature whatever our good intentions. But St Paul found the answer to his
conundrum and ours, 'Thanks be to God - through Jesus Christ our Lord!' v25. In
other words, through Jesus Christ we can be rescued! Hallelujah!
'I am the true vine,' says Jesus, 'and my Father is the
gardener.' What Jesus is saying in that second important phrase is, 'I am not a
law unto myself, but have subjected and submitted myself to the will of my
Father.' His Father could do whatever he wished to achieve the ends that he had
in mind. Historically, we human beings have proved to be incapable of being the
fruitful vines that God desired us to be. In this passage we are not being
invited to be vines like Jesus, but to be mere branches of the one and only
True Vine, Christ Jesus.
A branch has no life of its own. It is an extension of the
vine. The sap that runs through the vine is the self-same sap that runs through
the branches. The key to living a
successful life, fruitful and pleasing to God, is in dispensing with our
independence and becoming totally dependent on Christ Jesus, abiding in an
intimate, personal relationship with Jesus, where every thought, every motive,
every word is expressed in relation to Jesus. It's more than trying to mimic
him or live by a set of rules.
Attached to Christ like a branch to a vine, emptied of self
and full of his Spirit, his sap if you like, we will naturally start to reveal
what previously we were incapable of achieving ourselves no matter how much we
tried. 'Remain in me, as I also remain in you,' Jesus said. The Spirit of
Christ must fill us and take the place of our human Spirit: the spiritual in
place of the carnal: the nature we inherited being replaced by God's nature. It
is about dying to self and self-centred concerns. St Paul expressed it most clearly
in Galatians 2:20, when he said, 'I have been crucified with Christ and I no
longer live, but Christ lives in me.'
The tragedy is that many Christians who give the appearance
of being attached are not attached or abiding in Christ at all. They live such
a frustrating life, trying to be what they can never be. It's no good
cello-taping a branch on to a tree to give the appearance of being attached. It
will not bear the spiritual fruit that pleases God and lasts(v 16), whatever
the pretence or appearance. Others might think we are achieving much and doing
sterling work, but Jesus, repeating himself, said 'I am the vine; you are the
branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart
from me you can do nothing.' v5
When I started my journey with Jesus, I thought that being a
Christian was all about my effort and God helping me and providing the
resources I needed to achieve what he wanted for my life. I was always praying,
'Help me to be what you want me to be.' And you know what? It seemed as though
he turned a deaf ear to my prayers. It was years....I was an officer....before
I realised that it wasn't about me and my efforts, my capabilities, but about
me getting out of the way and letting him live his life through me.
Is your Christian life one of struggles, disappointments and
failure?
Have you yet to be filled with the Holy Spirit?
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