Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Sowing & Reaping-Secrets of the Kingdom







Mt. 13
18 Hear ye therefore the parable of the sower.
19 When any one
heareth the word of the kingdom, and understandeth it not, then cometh the
wicked one, and catcheth away that which was sown in his heart. This is he
which
received seed by the way side.
20 But he that received the seed
into stony
places, the same is he that heareth the word, and anon with joy
receiveth it;
21 Yet hath he not root in himself, but dureth for a while:
for when
tribulation or persecution ariseth because of the word, by and by
he is
offended.
22 He also that received seed among the thorns is he
that heareth
the word; and the care of this world, and the deceitfulness of
riches, choke the
word, and he becometh unfruitful.
23 But he that
received seed into the good
ground is he that heareth the word, and
understandeth it; which also beareth
fruit, and bringeth forth, some an
hundredfold, some sixty, some thirty.


---

Seed by the wayside: doesn't understand it - evil one snatches it

Seed into stony places: hears & receives the word with joy - has no root,
lasts only a short time, when tribulation/persecution come because of the
word, they are offended (rather than considering correction/examination from
the Holy Spirit)

Seed among thorns: hears the word - cares of this world, and deceitfulness of
riches choke the word, and they become unfruitful

Seed on good soil: hears the word, understands it - produces a crop yielding
a hundred, sixty or thirty times what was sown

----

Mt. 13
35 That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet, saying,
I will open my mouth in parables; I will utter things which have been kept
secret from the foundation of the world.


I think it's absolutely amazing that God would share with us those things that were kept secret from the foundation of the world. WOW! That He would trust us with it! Glory! How lovely is your dwelling place, O Lord!

Monday, August 27, 2007

Silly post time


Happy 40th Birthday, McD's!
That's alot of beef!


Sunday, August 26, 2007

Friday, August 24, 2007

Ultimate Shame Destroyer



We started Beth Moore's Beloved Disciple yesterday, and the introduction was just fabulous! I just love it when God blesses me right out of my socks reminding me of His love for me; and I'm reminded of my immaturity fussing or fighting over things that really don't matter, or not giving Him His proper place in my life as King and Lord. Can I get a witness? I think I'm doing well, that I'm loving Him, but am a really trusting Him?

A few months ago I felt like I was in a desert of some sort, and just could not get out of that muck. I recall it being Spring time before and after VBS. The demands of a homeschool mom, and wife can be overwhelming. I recall the whines of me, me, me, and your life is full of give, give, give. There's a dying to self alright. Someone told me we are Jesus to our families. The servant/sacrifice is demonstrated everyday. I don't think my family has seen that - hahaha. Sad. I hope they will see more of Him.

Springtime in Alaska is a big time for suicide. I think I'm starting to feel the affects of age. I will be 40 next year, and in my mind I feel like I'm 10 or 20 years younger, but in my body I feel 20 or 30 years older. This I discovered again in the Beth Moore study. I am growing, but I feel I have not reached the maturity in believing God as I would like through my actions. I will have head and heart knowledge, and obedience can come automatic, but somedays... I don't want to be 'bothered' with what I'm doing. I feel stretched out of my mind that I don't have enough hands. I'm embracing one moment, and it's time to move on to the next, and maybe I'm not ready. Now I know we are responsible for our decisions, but looking back, I see alot of it has to do with losing that trust as a young girl so many times through sexual abuse. As many times as I have grown to think I am over it, it shows it's ugly face over, and over again in something. Pride, not wanting to hurt, or get hurt. I will think that I have overcome...I know I have overcome, but the side affects still come through - sin.

I just needed to sit there for a moment after the session and sob my brains out. Thank God my sensitive sister allowed us to stop and ponder for a moment. Whew. Knowing Jesus Christ is the Ultimate Shame Destroyer was such a great reminder! I picture how He just comes to our rescue with this big sword ready to defend me. Sad part is in my immaturity I won't let Him. I've got used to being hurt, so why not live in the plain, same-o-same-o life we've become accustomed to. It's safe, no one gets hurt - NOT! It doesn't demand much. What a farce!

God won't have anything to do with it! He is Adventure! Trying to live outside of Christ just won't do. He won't accept it, and you will fail at it, get frustrated, and even want to quit the relationship.

I have so many times quit on the Savior, my husband and children. Don't want my position. Don't want their's. Removing myself from authority, because authority destroyed me. How terrible is that! Just a few weeks ago, I thought I was doing well in my walk, and things overwhelmed me. I told Jesus would You just get away. How can You love me? I cannot obey?

Tenderly, I hear Him say, Honey, it's me, Jesus. You know the one that was hurt for you?

What seek ye?

I saw you in your time of need.

What do you want?

What's your heart's desire?

I want to see Jesus. Plain as day.

I want to see the nail scarred hands and feet.

I want to run my hands through His hair.

I want to feel the palm of His hand on my forehead.

Daddy, today I did.

I saw Your compassion over me.

Thank you, thank you, thank you.... for the many ways You have given me glimpses of freedom in You.

Forgive me of my bitterness, and ungratefulness.

Forgive me for expecting You to act, and deliver me from what I thought/think You should have.

You are the God of Isaac, Jacob, and me.

I see You don't have to deliver me. Despite the ugliness of this sin, You have used it for my good to depend on You.

Quicken me to maturity, Lord.

Be my vision always, through and through, Jesus.

I want to see You at the end of this race.

I realize You are running it with me.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Score!!!






Goals are good to have. I have made some myself today, and as I look to close out this year, Lord willing.

-New Homeschool Curriculum

-New Bible Study & a Doctrine/Theology Class

---these were clarified today-but, had been on the backburner for some time.

-Moving of the interior of our house ---this has been in progress for a month or maybe two.
(spare room a homeschool room)

-complete kids rooms

-scapbooking starts this Saturday - yea! At least with cropping.

-Hospitality after house is done with dinner at our place - this I hope to do before the year is over. I'm hoping I'll be done with the house next month.

But, my most important goal is to walk with Jesus everyday. Make that time of quietness with Him. Rest in Him. Enjoying Him in my life, the most important priority. Lord, help me to do Your will.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

My Faith Looks up to Thee


My faith looks up to thee,
Thou Lamb of Calvary,
Savior divine!
Now hear me while I pray,
Take all my guilt away,
O let me from this day
Be wholly thine!

May thy rich grace impart
Stength to my fainting heart,
My zeal inspire;
As thou hast died for me,
O may my love to thee
Pure, warm, and changeless be,
A living fire!

While life's dark maze I tread,
And griefs around me spread,
Be thou my guide;
Bid darkness turn today,
Wipe sorrow's tears away,
Nor let me ever stray
From thee aside.

When ends life transient dream,
When death's cold, sullen stream
Shall o'er me roll,
Blest Savior, then, in love,
Fear and distrustr remove;
O bear me safe above,
A ransomed soul! Amen.


Ray Palmer/Lowell Mason




Monday, August 20, 2007

Once a Marine...Always a Marine


Ooorah!


Hats off to Reagan's compassion.


EDMONDS, Wash. (Aug. 7, 2007)- Michael Reagan, 60, a Seattle native,
sketches a portrait of Army Pfc. Jeffrey A. Avery, a soldier who died while
serving with the Fort Lewis, Wash.-based 571st Military Police Company, 504th MP
Battalion, 42nd MP Brigade, in Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. The
former Marine and Vietnam veteran has drawn portraits for the families of fallen
service members for the past three and a half years. His more than 800 portraits
are completely free to the families. Reagan has had families tell him his
“real-looking” portraits capture the lives of their loved ones.


http://www.marines.mil/marinelink/mcn2000.nsf/main5/F1CD35BA1B163A82852573370070FCED?opendocument



Friday, August 17, 2007

It's soooo not about us!



Jesus is Lord.





It's so not about us, it's all about Him.





So, what does that look like in our day?





In our church?





In our talks?





Is Jesus getting His rightful place in our life?





Praying through the Ten Commandments helped me see how I struggle worshipping God as He is putting nothing else, and no one before Him. Now I didn't say do you keep the Ten Commandments. I said pray through them, or the Beattitudes in Matthew 5. Try it some time. They help you see the Lord.





It's so easy to get cooped up with stuff you have to do, or things going on, that we miss out on turning everything off, and tuning Jesus in.





Come back to the heart of worship, where it is all about Jesus.





Close off all the distractions in your mind. And just be real with Him, and enjoy Him.



Listen to what He's telling you, and respond.

Lord, help me to close off the world in the secret place continuously.

I am weak. I am distracted. I need to keep my eyes on you, Jesus.

Therefore if there is any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of love, if any
fellowship of the Spirit, if any affection and mercy, fulfill my joy by
being like-minded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind.
Let nothing be done through selfish ambition or conceit, but in lowliness of
mind let each esteem others better than himself. Phil. 2:1-3

Monday, August 13, 2007

A Bondservant of Jesus

Old devotion, but still rings true, and well with me.


November 3, 2006
A Bondservant of Jesus

I have been crucified with
Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me . . . —Galatians
2:20
-->
These words mean the breaking and collapse of my independence
brought about by my own hands, and the surrendering of my life to the supremacy
of the Lord Jesus. No one can do this for me, I must do it myself. God may bring
me up to this point three hundred and sixty-five times a year, but He cannot
push me through it. It means breaking the hard outer layer of my individual
independence from God, and the liberating of myself and my nature into oneness
with Him; not following my own
ideas, but choosing absolute loyalty to
Jesus. Once I am at that point, there is
no possibility of misunderstanding.
Very few of us know anything about loyalty
to Christ or understand what He
meant when He said, ". . . for My sake"
( Matthew
5:11
). That is what makes a strong saint.
Has that breaking of
my
independence come? All the rest is religious fraud. The one point to
decide is—
will I give up? Will I surrender to Jesus Christ, placing no
conditions
whatsoever as to how the brokenness will come? I must be broken
from my own
understanding of myself. When I reach that point, immediately
the reality of the
supernatural identification with Jesus Christ takes
place. And the witness of
the Spirit of God is unmistakable— "I have been
crucified with Christ . . .
."
The passion of Christianity comes from
deliberately signing away my own
rights and becoming a bondservant of Jesus
Christ. Until I do that, I will not
begin to be a saint.
One student a
year who hears God’s call would be
sufficient for God to have called the
Bible Training College into existence.
This college has no value as an
organization, not even academically. Its sole
value for existence is for God
to help Himself to lives. Will we allow Him to
help Himself to us, or are we
more concerned with our own ideas of what we are
going to be?--

http://www.rbc.org/utmost/index.php?month=11&day=03&year=06

Friday, August 10, 2007

I bow amazed

I am amazed over how much beauty God allows us to see in our lifetime. Today the kids and I were watching some videos http://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/planet-earth/planet-earth.html?dcitc=w99-502-ah-1017 from the series Planet Earth. It is just amazing the vast, the depth, the strength, and fear of God's creatures and creations. I live in Alaska, and seeing some of the wildlife, enormous trees and mountains amazes me. These are glimpses of God's glory. The pack of wildlife running together. The depths of the caves underwater. Everyone should cry, holy.

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Signs of a Healthy Biblical Church

It seems everyone has their own opinion of what a healthy biblical church looks like, but according to scripture in Revelation, the churches were not addressed for some things we think are important...or do they?

Christianity Today:

Jesus' Surprising Definitionby Lee Eclov
In the second and third
chapters of John's Revelation, we find the letters dictated to the seven
churches. Here, in a uniquely direct way, we have the Lord's assessment of
health indicators for local congregations.
What strikes me is that some of
the usual indicators—evangelism, stewardship, church planting, attendance—are
not evident. In a quick scan of these two chapters, the indicators that stand
out are:
—holiness and dealing with sin.
—endurance—being "overcomers."
The Lord praises churches that face corporate challenges with vital faith.
That's an idea I hadn't thought much about, but churches do face difficult
times—a rash of deaths or unemployment or natural disaster.
—confronting evil
and heresy in the church.
—exclusive love for Christ.
—corporate growth in
ministry—"you are doing more now than before."
—love for one another. This is
evident in the specifics of how the Christians are called to relate to each
other—dealing with sin, earnestness of purpose, etc.
More careful study will
probably refine this list considerably. Interacting with a text like this would
be an important exercise for church leaders seeking to discern the health of
their congregations.
Lee Eclov is pastor of Chippewa Evangelical Free Church
in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania.

You might think you have an unhealthy church, and you just might. Just be careful that what you think is wrong may not be.

full article here: http://www.biblestudy.org/prophecy/the-seven-churches-of-book-of-revelation.html

Seize the Moment
It is very clear that God wants all the elect to serve him
in various ways. The point is that God watches for individuals and even groups
of individuals who will take hold of a particular opportunity to serve him. If
they act, God uses them in that responsibility. God the Father and Jesus look at
each of those who have been called to salvation as individuals and, if they as
individuals will seize the moment and take action, God will use them in his
great and awesome plan for the salvation of humanity.
From what is written
about the church of Philadelphia, it seems that this group of people are in the
forefront of proclaiming the gospel message. Because they have a correct
attitude toward God and are actively performing the task that they have been
given, they receive no correction from Christ. In fact, they are spared from the
hour of trial that comes upon the whole earth and will receive an incredibly
awesome reward for their diligence.
THE MESSAGE TO THOSE OF LAODICEA
"To
the angel [messenger] of the church of the Laodiceans write: These things says
the Amen [Jesus Christ], the faithful and true witness, the beginning of the
creation of God; I know your works, that you are neither cold nor hot: I wished
that you were either cold or hot. So, because you are lukewarm, and neither cold
nor hot, I am about to vomit you out of my mouth" (Rev. 3:14-16, Para.).
Of
all the seven congregational groupings of God's elect directly spoken to by
Jesus Christ, this group is the most pointedly condemned. They are neither
faithful nor unbelieving; rather, they are completely indifferent. Their
indifference to God's truth is sickening to Jesus. The Laodiceans are so
self-satisfied that they think everything is fine and that they are doing great
works. They view themselves as the recipients of great spiritual understanding,
but they have practically none.
"Because you say, 'I am rich; and have need
of nothing, and do not know that you are wretched, and miserable and poor and
blind and naked. I advise you to buy from me gold having been refined in the
fire by me, that you may be rich; and white garments, that you may be clothed,
and your shame and nakedness may not be revealed. And anoint your eyes with
eye-salve, that you may see" (Rev. 3:17-18, Para.).
Here, we see a people
who are so apathetic and lazy because of their perceived knowledge and
spirituality that they are in danger of being cast away from God. They are
self-deceived into thinking that they are spiritually rich; however, they are
not. Christ is giving them their last opportunity to repent and become zealous
for God. If these people will hear and heed what he is saying, he will again
establish fellowship with them. If not, they will be cast into the Lake of Fire
with the unrepentant wicked.
Christ is searching for people that want him
and his Father to be a major part of their life. He says he is at the door
knocking, hoping the wayward elect will let him back into their hearts and
minds. But he will not force his way into their lives. These individuals have to
make a decision to repent of their nauseating quality of being spiritually
lukewarm, self-satisfied, complacent, and in need of nothing.
Their
indifference has left them self-deluded and they do not realize they are
spiritually poor, miserable, wretched, blind, and naked. Those who lead such a
people and do not themselves repent are in deep trouble. Those individuals have
an attitude of having it made, but have no real commitment for spiritual growth.
They feel secure as long as they associate with a particular group (i.e.,
success by association). That kind of attitude leads to indifference and
complacency, which Christ severely rebukes. He will bring fiery trials in order
to bring those with such an attitude to genuine repentance:
"As many as I
love, I rebuke and chasten. Be zealous then, and repent. Behold I stand at the
door and knock; If any one hears my voice and opens the door, I will go in to
him, and I will dine with him and he with me" (Rev. 3:19-20, Para.).
The
Greek word 'elegchein', which is used in connection with the rebuke of those
with the Laodicean attitude, means a severe rebuke that compels a person to see
the error of their ways. Christ is showing, in an extremely strong way, that
some of the elect who are in this decadent condition can expect extremely severe
trials that come directly from him.
Because of their self-righteous
attitudes, Jesus says they will be tried in fire. A Laodicean needs a major
attitude adjustment in order for him to be used by God, and allowed to enter the
Father's Family and Kingdom. This is why Jesus has to deal so severely with
them. God the Father and his son are extremely merciful. If a Laodicean repents,
he will be forgiven and welcomed into the Family and Kingdom of God:
"To him
who overcomes, I will give the right to sit with me on my throne, just as I
overcame and sat down with my Father on his throne. He who has an ear, let him
hear what the spirit says to the churches" (Rev. 3:21-22, NIV).
SUMMARY
The messages to the seven churches are not only meant to be a
severe reprimand from Christ, but are also meant to give hope and encouragement.
For those who do not heed these warnings, there is death and dishonor ahead. For
those who heed them, there is eternal life and immortality in the Family and
Kingdom of God.
God the Father and Jesus Christ are in the process of
molding the body of the sons of God for an awesome and dynamic spiritual work to
be done at the end of this age. But not everyone that is called to this dynamic
work will be in one united congregation. There are seven distinct groupings of
the elect shown to exist during the times just prior to Christ's return.
Because each of us stands or falls to a certain degree based on our
association with other people, each of us needs to recognize if we have any of
the unrighteous attitudes, behaviors, and characteristics that Jesus warns the
seven churches about. We also need to recognize if we are associating with
individuals or congregations of God that exhibit these unrighteous traits.
Because, if we do not recognize these things in time and take the appropriate
action to repent and remove ourselves from sinful people who refuse to change
their ways, we will find ourselves in jeopardy of losing our own salvation and
we will be the recipients of strong correction from Christ in the form of severe
persecution.
A Time of Great Trouble
Any of the elect of God who are
alive during the time of the end and who think that they will live out their
lives in peaceful co-existence with non-believers while Jesus Christ pours out
the wrath of God upon a wicked and rebellious world are not in touch with
reality.
The battle lines have already been drawn, the hour of conflict is
set, and the warning messages to the seven churches shows that unrighteous
attitudes and behavior have rendered all but one-seventh of the elect of God
ill-equipped and unfit for spiritual battle.
It seems that only a few of the
elect understand the seriousness of the times that we live in and the things
that God the Father and Jesus Christ require of them. Most of the elect think
everything is just fine. But things are not just fine; this is why Jesus will
pour out his wrath on all but one- seventh of those of his church. Make no
mistake, Jesus would much rather see those who need to repent do so without
having to be corrected through trial and persecution. However, because Jesus
loves us deeply, he will attempt to shake the lazy, the lethargic, and the
sinful out of their sleep of death with strong persecution and trials of fire,
in the hope that they will awaken to their terminal condition and repent.
The Core Issue
In today's world, the elect are continually bombarded
with evil from the world around them. Many have allowed themselves to become
influenced by wrong values and have compromised themselves and become blind to
their sins.
It is easy to see how wrong attitudes, behaviors, and
characteristics of the seven ancient churches of Asia mentioned in Revelation
exist within various individuals and congregations of God scattered throughout
the earth today. We can almost say, in a sense, that the die is already cast and
that birds of a feather have flocked together. It is also easy to see why these
attitudes and behaviors bring severe correction upon God's people from Jesus
Christ who is the head of the church.
Separate from the World
Although
all seven churches suffer great persecution for the truth that they believe and
practice, the general admonition to all of God's people is to come out of and
remain separate from the things of the world that can pollute one spiritually:
"For all nations have drunk of the wine of the wrath of her fornication, and
the kings of the earth have committed fornication with her, and the merchants of
the earth are waxed rich through the abundance of her delicacies. And I heard
another voice from heaven, saying, Come out of her, my people, that you be not
partakers of her sins, and that you receive not of her plagues" (Rev. 18:3-4,
Para.).
Because of the increased activity of evil spirits during the time of
the end, there will be great religious confusion (especially concerning the
teachings of the Bible). As people become more and more confused as to what is
right and wrong, God's people who are not diligent in their pursuit of
righteousness will be drawn into evil behavior and compromising attitudes;
thereby, they will lose the love and zeal that they once had for God.
Jesus
often spoke to the disciples about the need to perform the task that they had
been given concerning the gospel and the persecution and rewards associated with
its proclamation:
"And when he had called the people to him along with his
disciples, he said, Whoever desires to follow me let him deny himself, and take
up his cross, and follow me. For whoever will save his life shall lose it; but
whoever shall lose his life for my sake and the gospel's, the same shall save
it. For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world and lose
his own soul? Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? Whoever shall
be ashamed of me and my words in this adulterous generation; of him also shall
the Son of man be ashamed, when he comes in the glory of his Father with the
holy angels" (Mk.8:34-38, Para.). See also 1Peter 3:14-17.
It is sad to say
that of the seven church groups noted in the Book of Revelation that exists
today, only one is found to be totally committed to the Father and Jesus Christ
and their ways. The other six are in varying degrees of rebellion and
disobedience to the Father and Jesus Christ and the truth of God. Make no
mistake, the Father and Jesus Christ are solidly against the tolerance of evil.
They want the elect to either repent and remove the evil from among them or
remove themselves from the evil.
During these times before Christ's return,
there are two primary questions that each of us who is a son of God needs to
answer in reference to the messages in chapters two and three of Revelation:
Is God the Father's calling to be part of his family and the kingdom of
priests truly my first priority?

Am I going to be responsible for
my life and my conduct and consistently strive to overcome my faults through the
spiritual power that God has made available for me to draw upon?
Jesus said:
"Truly I say to you, There is no man that has left his house, brothers,
sisters, father, mother, wife, children, or lands for my sake, and the gospel's,
But that he shall receive an hundredfold now and in this time houses, brothers,
sisters, mother, children, and lands, and with them persecution; and in the
world to come eternal life" (Mk.10:29-30, Para.).
Terrifying and dynamic
things are going to occur in the world during the proclaiming of the Father's
good news to humanity just before Jesus Christ's return as the conquering King
of kings. The elect need to heed the warning:
"He that has an ear, let him
hear what the spirit (Jesus Christ) says to the churches "
The eternal
destiny of each individual whom the Father has called to salvation and that is
alive at this time hangs in the balance. Be a person who has an ear to hear what
Jesus Christ is saying to all the Father's elect children. If your heart is
right with God, you do not need to fear a severe reprimand from Christ, nor
should you be anxious about your salvation.
May our God help each of us to
contemplate the seriousness of the messages to the seven churches and heed the
reprimands and warnings that have been given to us in them, so that we may be
overcomers and inherit the awesome rewards and promises made to us by God the
Father and Jesus Christ.
Written by: C. E. Barrett and B. L.
Cocherell

------

We need to heed what God wants from the bride.

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Cool!!!

This is cool! Hubby got his blog going again and found some of the things I had been looking to figure out. So, I made some changes to the blog - for the better. Praise God!

I'm going to try this dark background for a while. I'm so excited I got to figure out how to post news, and show my videos! Yeah! And I got the title bar back! Woohoo!

God is good!

Friday, August 03, 2007

Examining My Branches
God, the lifter of my head, hands and arms
Essay: The Vinedresser

During His Passover instructions to His disciples in the upper room, Jesus uses an illustration to explain how God works with us to produce fruit in our lives:

I am the true vine, and My Father is the vinedresser. Every branch in Me that does not bear fruit He takes away; and every branch that bears fruit He prunes, that it may bear more fruit. . . . I am the vine, you are the branches. He who abides in Me, and I in him, bears much fruit; for without Me you can do nothing. (John 15:1-2, 5).

He speaks about four kinds of branches: 1) those that bear no fruit, 2) those that bear fruit, 3) those that bear more fruit, 4) and those that bear much fruit. We will focus on the branches that bear no fruit. To get a clearer understanding, we need to understand a few points.
Jesus is the vine: In the south, a vine is any kind of long, trailing branch, crawling along a fence or up a wall or wrapping itself around a pole or tree. In the vineyard, it is the whole grape plant. Vineyard keepers traditionally keep the vine at waist height—36 to 42 inches. The vine ends in a large gnarl from which branches grow in either direction along the trellis.

God the Father is the vinedresser: The vinedresser is the keeper of the vineyard. His task is to cultivate each branch so that it will bear as much fruit as possible. God will do this with love (I John 4:16), for our ultimate good (Romans 8:28).

We, the members of God's church, are the branches: In the vineyard the branches are the vinedresser's main focus because they produce the fruit. They must be carefully tended to produce the highest quality grapes and the biggest yield.

But, what is the fruit analogous to in this metaphor? What fruit are we to bear? Tracing the words "fruit" and "good works" through the Bible results in the conclusion that they are used nearly interchangeably. We can see this in Titus 3:14: "And let our people also learn to maintain good works, to meet urgent needs, that they may not be unfruitful." Colossians 1:10 is similar: ". . . that you may have a walk worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing Him, being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God." In practical terms, fruit represents good works or godly living. If we are not doing such things, then we are like the branches that are not producing fruit.

Fruit, or good deeds, are evidence of what is inside a person. In Matthew 3:8, John the Baptist tells the Pharisees and Sadducees to "bear fruits worthy of repentance." In other words, they were to produce evidence in their actions that they had repented.

Is it possible to be in Christ yet produce no fruit? John 15:2 may seem to say that the Vinedresser cuts off every barren branch, but we need to look more closely at the words "takes away." This Greek verb, airo, actually means "to lift from the ground," "to lift so as to carry," and "to carry off." The translation "takes away" suggests cutting off, but in Greek literature, airo never means "cut off." "Lifts up" or "raises" is more correct in terms of vinedressing.
In his book, Secrets of the Vine, Dr. Bruce Wilkinson has a conversation with a vineyard owner from Northern California, who says, "New branches have a natural tendency to trail down and grow along the ground, but they don't bear fruit down there. When branches grow along the ground, the leaves get coated in dust. When it rains, they get muddy and mildewed. The branch becomes sick and useless."

Dr. Wilkinson, thinking about John 15:2, asks, "What do you do, cut it off and throw it away?"
"Oh, no," the vineyard owner replies, "the branch is much too valuable for that. We go through the vineyard with a bucket of water, looking for those branches. We lift them up and wash them off. Then we wrap them around the trellis or tie them up. Pretty soon, they're thriving."
Are we not more valuable to our Vinedresser than branches in a vineyard? Certainly! So how does our Vinedresser lift us up? We can find an answer in Hebrews 12:5-6: "My son, do not despise the chastening of the LORD, nor be discouraged when you are rebuked by Him; for whom the LORD loves He chastens, and scourges every son whom He receives." The intervention of the Vinedresser in John 15:2 is similar to the discipline a parent gives his or her child. God is our heavenly Father, and we are His children. The two metaphors are parallel.
There are three degrees of discipline or lifting up in Hebrews 12:5-6:

The First Degree, Rebuke: A rebuke is a strong verbal warning. When our children begin to misbehave, we rebuke them. Some parents can do this with just a look. God rebukes us by pricking our consciences through Bible study, sermons, and our interactions with each other.
The Second Degree, Chastening: If the child does not listen to rebuke, a parent might intensify the punishment by sending him to his room, restricting his activities, or taking away his privileges. When God chastens us, we may feel anxiety, frustration, or distress. Pressures may increase at work or at home, in our health or in our finances.

The Third Degree, Scourging: "To scourge" is to afflict with blows, to inflict physical punishment. The scourging Jesus received before His crucifixion caused Him excruciating pain. With rebellious children, a good paddling often does the trick, causing pain without injury. When God scourges us, the pressures of our chastening intensify: Instead of problems on the job, we may find ourselves without one. Instead of being merely sick, we may be deathly ill. The spouse may file for separation. Bankruptcy may loom over us.

These are our Vinedresser's ways of lifting us up and washing us off. They are godly discipline designed to put us in the right position to begin producing fruit again.

What about the rest of John 15:2? Pruning is indeed cutting, and cutting hurts. It might seem like punishment, like "lifting up," so we need to distinguish between the two. The Vinedresser lifts up, disciplines, because we are not producing fruit. We have become spiritually sick and useless, so He needs to spur us to repent and to return to fruitfulness. The Vinedresser prunes, however, because we are fruitful! That is when we need to count it all joy (James 1:2) and yield to His pruning shears, so that He may produce more fruit through us.

Job is a good example of God's pruning. God admits that Job was an upright man and that there was no one like him in all the earth (Job 1:1, 8), yet God puts him through loss, misery, and excruciating pain to increase his yield of godly fruit.

Why is fruit-bearing so important and valuable? Jesus gives us the answer in John 15:8: "By this My Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit; so you will be My disciples." He continues in verse 16, "I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit should remain." Paul echoes this Ephesians 2:10: "For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them." With Passover only days away, we would do well to inspect our "branch" of God's work to see what fruit God can expect from our corner of His vineyard.

- Clyde Finklea