This week we are treated to the beautiful symbolic language
of John’s Gospel. Jesus uses the term I
AM. Here he says, “I AM the vine, you
are the branches.” The use of the words
I AM brings us back to the encounter Moses had with God at the burning bush, “Tell
them I AM sent you.” The term I AM
reminds us that God, now revealed in the person of Jesus Christ, is everything. We also hear him say, “I AM the way, the
truth, and the life.” And how great is
it that he calls each of us, in fact, he calls every human being, to remain connected
to him. How beautiful an image that each
of us has the opportunity to be connected to all that is, to the very source and
sustainer of everything.
But not every branch remains connected. Not every branch winds up having life in
it. Let’s just think for a moment of a
withered branch, or at least a fallen branch, a branch not connected to the
tree or the vine. We might be walking
along, and suddenly, in our path, is a fallen branch. We can step over that branch. We can kick the branch, either accidently or
on purpose, to get it out of our way.
Chances our we will probably just ignore the branch all together and
keep on our way. Our first instinct is to
not bother. Our first thought is that
the branch is done and has no life in it and has no use. We will likely feel that as long as we are
connected to the vine, as long as we have life in us, then we are okay, and all
other branches are on their own.
I’m no expert, but I get the impression, that if we look at
a bunch of trees or a bunch of vines, the ones with all or most their branches
intact are likely the healthiest. It seems like the healthy branches feed off
other healthy branches. If we see a tree
or vine with branches missing or branches ready to fall off, we get the
impression that all the branches might be in danger.
Now it is very unlikely that a fallen branch can be reattached
to a tree. Apparently, there are
scientific ways to do this, but there is only a remote chance that a dead branch
can be brought to life. That is where
the analogy of the vine and the branches falls short. For the branches that fall off the true vine
that is Jesus are never left for dead.
The Lord is ready to restore them to life, to reattach them to the vine. But he is counting on all the branches to
look out for each other.
So often we dismiss others who we think are not attached to
the vine. If they don’t agree with us,
if they don’t understand things the way we do, we leave them like fallen
branches on the path. We either step over
them or kick them aside. Our mission
should be to gently bring those branches back closer to the vine, to awaken in
them the desire to be restored to the vine.
God will then do what God does, he will bring life from death. He will unite that which is divided. In that restoration all the branches will
benefit, the vine will flourish. How beautiful that will be.
-The Servant
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