If Ye Keep My Commandments, Ye Shall Abide In My Love--John 15:10
In our former meditation reference was made to the entrance into a life of rest
and strength which has often come through a true insight into the personal love
of Christ, and the assurance that that love indeed meant that He would keep the
soul. In connection with that transition, and the faith that sees and accepts
it, the word surrender or consecration is frequently used. The
soul sees that it cannot claim the keeping of this wonderful love unless it
yields itself to a life of entire obedience. It sees too that the faith that can
trust Christ for keeping from sinning must prove its sincerity by venturing at
once to trust Him for strength to obey. In that faith it dares to give up and
cut off everything that has hitherto hindered it, and to promise and expect to
live a life that is well pleasing to God.
This is the thought we have here now in our Saviour's teaching. After having in
the words, "Abide in my love," spoken of a life in His love as a necessity,
because it is at once a possibility and an obligation, He states what its one
condition is: "If ye keep my commandments, ye shall abide in my love."
This is surely not meant to close the door to the abode of His love which he had
just opened up. Not in the most distant way does it suggest the thought which
some are too ready to entertain, that as we cannot keep His commandments, we
cannot abide in His love. No; the precept is a promise: "Abide in my love,"
could not be a precept if it were not a promise. And so the instruction as to
the way through this open door points to no unattainable ideal; the love that
invites to her blessed abode reaches out the hand, and enables us to keep the
commandments. Let us not fear, in the strength of our ascended Lord, to take the
vow of obedience, and give ourselves to the keeping of His commandments. Through
His will, loved and done, lies the path to His love.
Only let us understand well what it means. It refers to our performance of all
that we know to be God's will. There may be things doubtful, of which we are not
sure. A sin of ignorance has still the nature of sin in it. There may be
involuntary sins, which rise up in the flesh, which we cannot control or
overcome. With regard to these God will deal in due tome in the way of searching
and humbling, and if we be simple and faithful, give us larger deliverance than
we dare expect. But all this may be found in a truly obedient soul. Obedience
has reference to the positive keeping of the commandments of our Lord, and the
performance of His will in everything in which we know it. This is a possible
degree of grace, and it is the acceptance in Christ's strength of such obedience
as the purpose of our heart, of which our Saviour speaks here. Faith in Christ
as our Vine, in His enabling and sanctifying power, fits us for this obedience
of faith, and secures a life of abiding in His love.
If ye keep My commandments, ye shall abide in My love--It is the heavenly
Vine unfolding the mystery of the life He gives. It is to those abiding in Him
to whom He opens up the secret of the full abiding in His love. It is the
wholehearted surrender in everything to do His will, that gives access to a life
in the abiding enjoyment of His love.
Obey and abide. Gracious Lord, teach me this lesson, that it is only
through knowing Thy will one can know Thy heart, and only through doing that
will one can abide in Thy love. Lord, teach me that as worthless as is the
doing in my own strength, so essential and absolutely indispensable is the doing
of faith in Thy strength, if I would abide in Thy love.
[Previous Page] - [Next Page]
- [Index]
The True Vine by Andrew Murray - Public Domain [Copy Freely]