If Ye Keep My Commandments, Ye Shall Abide in My Love, Even as I have Kept
My Father's Commandments, and Abide in His Love--John 15:10
We have had occasion more than once to speak of the perfect similarity of the
vine and the branch in nature, and therefore in aim. Here Christ speaks no
longer in a parable, but tells us plainly out of how His own life is the exact
model of ours. He had said that it is alone by obedience we can abide in His
love. He now tells that this was the way in which He abode in the Father's love.
As the Vine, so the branch. His life and strength and joy had been in the love
of the Father: it was only by obedience He abode in it. We may find our life and
strength and joy in His love all the day, but it is only by an obedience like
His we can abide in it. Perfect conformity to the Vine is one of the most
precious of the lessons of the branch. It was by obedience Christ as Vine
honored the Father as Husbandman; it is by obedience the believer as branch
honors Christ as Vine.
Obey and abide--That was the law of Christ's life as much as it is to be
that of ours. He was made like us in all things, that we might be like Him in
all things. He opened up a path in which we may walk even as He walked. He took
our human nature to teach us how to wear it, and show us how obedience, as it is
the first duty of the creature, is the only way to abide in the favor of God and
enter into His glory. And now He comes to instruct and encourage us, and asks us
to keep His commandments, even as He kept His Father's commandments and abides
in His love.
The divine fitness of this connection between obeying and abiding, between God's
commandments and His love, is easily seen. God's will is the very center of His
divine perfection. As revealed in His commandments, it opens up the way for the
creature to grow into the likeness of the Creator. In accepting and doing His
will, I rise into fellowship with Him. Therefore it was that the Son, when
coming into the world, spoke: "I come to do thy will, O God"! This was the place
and this would be the blessedness of the creature. This was what he had lost in
the Fall. This was what Christ came to restore. This is what, as the heavenly
Vine, He asks of us and imparts to us, that even as He by keeping His Father's
commandments abode in His love, we should keep His commandments and abide in His
love.
Ye, even as I--The branch cannot bear fruit except as it has exactly the
same life as the Vine. Our life is to be the exact counterpart of Christ's life.
It can be, just in such measure as we believe in Him as the Vine, imparting
Himself and His life to His branches. "Ye, even as I," the Vine says: one law,
one nature, one fruit. Do let us take from our Lord the lesson of obedience as
the secret of abiding. Let us confess that simple, implicit, universal obedience
has taken too little the place it should have. Christ died for us as enemies,
when we were disobedient. He took us up into His love; now that we are in Him,
His Word is: "Obey and abide; ye, even as I." Let us give ourselves to a willing
and loving obedience. He will keep us abiding in His love.
Ye, even as I. O my blessed Vine, who makest the branch in everything
partake of Thy life and likeness, in this too I am to be like Thee: as Thy life
in the Father's love through obedience, so mine in Thy love! Saviour, help me,
that obedience may indeed be the link between Thee and me.
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The True Vine by Andrew Murray - Public Domain [Copy Freely]