Series Title: The Life You Were Meant to Live
Sermon 1: Your Purpose in Life
John 15:1-8
June 11, 2006
Introduction to the Series
For the next six weeks I will be preaching a series of messages
under the title, “The Life You Were Meant to Live.” My greatest
burden as a pastor is the constant realization that so many of us so often
seem to live far beneath our privilege in Christ. Life in this compromised
world seems to entice us toward settling for far less than what Jesus
Christ actually died and rose again to provide for us.
Let me ask you a simple question as we begin: Is there enough
power in the cross and resurrection of Jesus Christ to transform a person’s
life? Yes or no? I think anyone who genuinely believes in Jesus as the
Son of God would answer, “Yes.” Certainly there is enough
power in what Jesus did for us on the Cross and in what was sealed for
eternity when God mightily raised Jesus from the dead, that our lives
truly can be changed.
But if that’s true, then among those who claim the
name of Christ and who truly have received Jesus as savior, why are so
many of us so un-changed? Why are so many Christians without victory over
the trials and temptations of this world? Why are so many Christians living
with a constant sense of anxiety and fear? Why are so many who claim to
be Christ-followers not living lives distinct from the average, happy,
American pagan? Why are so many Christians still entangled by sin?
It’s out of those concerns and burdens that I cried
out to God saying, “Lord please give me a way to talk to my people
about what you want to do for us and what you can do for us if only we’ll
receive it.” Out of the prayer emerged this series and several key
texts, six of which I’ve selected for this series. These texts are,
in my judgment, at the heart of what Jesus wants to do for us.
So, let’s begin with Jesus’ final instruction
to His disciples, just before He went up to Jerusalem to face the Cross.
[Reading of the text]
Electronically speaking, we are more connected than ever.
The technology of our age has enabled us to make connections with one
another in ways we never imagined just a few years ago. Isn’t it
amazing to reflect on how email and Internet and cell phones have become
such a part of our lives? And yet we know very well that in spite of all
of our “connections,” we are having trouble staying meaningfully
connected to each other.
We understand something about what Mamie Adams was talking
about. She always went to a branch post office in her town because the
postal employees there were so friendly. She went there to buy stamps
just before Christmas one year and the lines were particularly long. Someone
pointed out that there was no need to wait in line because there was a
stamp machine in the lobby. To which Mamie replied, “I know, but
the machine won’t ask me about my arthritis.”
People are hungry today for almost any kind of personal
connection. What an opportunity for our church to make a meaningful difference
in this neighborhood. We were created with a deep need for meaningful
connection. Yet in spite of all the things that are supposed to facilitate
relationship building, we are profoundly disconnected.
This is why so many of us struggle to find our real sense
of purpose in life. It’s because God created us in such a way that
our deepest purpose can only be discovered in the context of meaningful
relationships. Vital connection is at the heart of what Jesus was talking
about in this passage on the vine and the branches. Jesus was teaching
on what it takes to be connected vitally to God and consequently to each
other in ways that bring life and health.
The life we were meant to live begins right here. God created
us with the need for connection. Of course the primary connection we need
is to God. Jesus used a word picture to describe it, one to which anybody
can relate. He said it’s like a vine and the branches of the vine.
If the branches stay vitally connected to the vine, they live and bear
fruit. If the branches are not vitally connected to the vine, they cannot
fulfill their intended function and they eventually die and are cut off
from the source. It’s a simple lesson. We see it in nature all the
time.
But there are some particulars of this lesson that we need
to get, if we’re really going to understand what Jesus is inviting
us to here. For example, Jesus said, “I am the true vine.”
The true vine. That suggests there are other possibilities—vines
that offer themselves as a source for life but cannot produce. It seems
especially true in a world like ours. There are so many options, nearly
limitless choices, many of which claim to be the source of true happiness
and fulfillment. Modern spirituality has become a buffet of choices where
we are invited to go through and pick and choose according to our own
preferences. But Jesus does not invite us to a connection of our own making.
He did not say here, “Find the connection to God within each of
us.” He did not say, “Get connected to your spirit.”
No, Jesus said, “I am the true vine.” “If you really
want to be plugged into the source of life and if you really want to find
vital connection, it’s through Me—and no one else.”
No matter what others may preach, there are not, according
to Jesus, many paths to God. He is the way, truth, and life—no one
comes to the Father except through Him. We need to get that first. If
we don’t, we can expend lots of effort trying to find our purpose
in life, but it will be futile work until we are connected to Christ,
the maker of our hearts.
Now once we are connected to Christ that’s not the
end of the story. Jesus made a big deal in this passage about staying
connected. Five or six times in what we heard, He said, “remain
in me.” The translation I grew up on says, “abide in me.”
It’s kind of an old-fashioned word, abide. As someone pointed out,
highway motel signs don’t say, “Abide with us tonight.”
They say, “Stay here.” And that’s really the sense of
what Jesus was talking about. “Stay here.” It has to do with
persevering, continuing, lasting, staying with it. Maybe that’s
why the word “abide” has fallen out of use. We live in a world
of constant change. And yet Jesus said, “If you really want vital
connection, if you hunger for a meaningful sense of purpose, then stay
put!”
How do I do that? Jesus gave the answer in verse 3 and repeated
it in verse 7. It’s through His word. Listen to this: “You
are already clean because of the word I have spoken to you” (v.
3). And then, “if you remain in me and my words remain in you .
. .” (v. 7). He was assuring these disciples that if they wanted
to stay connected to Him, it’s no big mystery—it’s by
living in the truth of His words about whom the Father is and where life
is really found.
Interesting that this passage takes us right up to the moment when Jesus
was betrayed. These were His final moments. Surrounding Him now are the
12 who would, each one, fail to abide with Him. And Jesus had some rather
frightening words for those who fail to abide. Verse 2 pulls no punches,
it’s just right out there. The Father “cuts off every branch
. . . that bears no fruit.” This is an all-or-nothing proposition.
If you stay vitally connected to Jesus by living within the truth of His
word, you are alive. If you don’t, you are dead. Simple as that.
By the way, it’s important to note that these “barren
branches” Jesus talked about are not completely outside when they
become unfruitful. These branches are also connected to the vine but they
are not connected in life-giving ways. Even though they may look attached
to the vine, they are really trying to draw nourishment from elsewhere.
They may go through the motions of “church,” but they are
seeking their life from places other than the vine. Do you realize what
He was saying? He was saying that hanging around the church won’t
get it done. Just being part of a community of faith like this won’t
keep you vitally connected to Christ. In fact that may be one reason so
many people are going from church to church, blaming the churches for
not meeting their needs when in reality they are nothing more than dried
up branches trying to hang on.
The unproductive branches of which verse 2 speaks are those
people within the Christian faith community who do not bear fruit. And
the fruit bearing Jesus had in mind here is love. Just a little earlier,
in chapter 13, Jesus said, “A new commandment I give you: Love one
another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this all
men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another”
(v. 34). When I realize this fruitfulness Jesus is talking about is love,
I remember that only God can do this in me. This kind of fruit bearing
cannot be of my own making. Somehow God has to make this happen or it
won’t happen.
A number of years ago, God placed His finger on a major
flaw in my Christian character. I had to face the hard truth that while
my love for God was total, my love for others was deficit. It was hard
to admit. I wanted that to change but I knew that in my own power, I would
not be able to love you like Jesus would love you. So I began to pray
that God in His mercy would fill my heart with His love for you. That’s
a dangerous prayer to pray! If you ask God to help you love others you
will begin to discover just how costly a prayer that can become. But today
I can honestly say as your pastor that I do love you. The work is not
complete in me yet, but it is much different than it was. I only tell
you this because it is God’s doing, not mine. If there is any fruitfulness
at all in my ministry, this is why. It’s all about being connected
to the Life-Giver.
Now the hard part of all this is implied in my testimony.
In order to see God’s love as the fruit of our discipleship, it
takes pruning. It doesn’t come to us naturally. And this pruning
deal can be ugly. Have you ever seen a freshly pruned tree or vine or
plant? It doesn’t look very good, at least to my untrained eye.
But what happens later? Because of the pruning it is able to leaf out
and produce fruit way beyond what it could have done without the pruning.
And right there is the connection for which our hearts long.
That ache for deep connection that exists within the heart of every one
of us cannot be met by just any old connection. It can only be met by
life-giving connection to the One who prunes and shapes through the struggles
and trials of life, until we conform to the image of Christ and live to
the glory of God.
Jesus’ teaching is really quite simple. If we stay
connected to Him we will live productive and meaningful lives. If we try
to find our source in anything or anyone but Christ, we will dry up and
die. The life you were meant to live begins right here. You will only
find your real sense of purpose in life when you can finally let go of
all the ways this world offers you to make life meaningful and pleasurable,
and turn to live your life totally in God’s direction.
Do you have a source for living that enables you to rise above the stresses
and strains of living in this world? Do you sense the very lifeblood of
Jesus coursing through your veins? Or do you feel dried up? Lifeless?
Like dead wood in danger of being burned up? It doesn’t have to
be that way. The risen Christ is here to breathe His life into you and
give you the most vital connection of all. It’s a connection that
will satisfy that ache deep in your heart to love and to be fully loved.
The invitation is for you. “Remain in me and I will
remain in you.”
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