This is My Commandment, That Ye Love One Another, Even as I Have Loved You--John
15:12
This is the second time our Lord uses the expression--Even as I. The
first time it was of His relation to the Father, keeping His commandments, and
abiding in His love. Even so we are to keep Christ's commandments, and abide in
His love. The second time He speaks of His relation to us as the rule of our
love to our brethren: "Love one another, as I have loved you." In each case His
disposition and conduct is to be the law for ours. It is again the truth we have
more than once insisted on--perfect likeness between the Vine and the branch.
Even as I--But is it not a vain thing to imagine that we can keep His
commandments, and love the brethren, even as He kept His Father's, and as He
loved us? And must not the attempt end in failure and discouragement?
Undoubtedly, if we seek to carry out the injunction in our strength, or without
a full apprehension of the truth of the Vine and its branches. But if we
understand that the "even as I" is just the one great lesson of the parable, the
one continual language of the Vine to the branch, we shall see that it is not
the question of what we feel able to accomplish, but of what Christ is able to
work in us. These high and holy commands--"Obey, even as I! Love, even as
I"--are just meant to bring us to the consciousness of our impotence, and
through that to waken us to the need and the beauty and the sufficiency of what
is provided for us in the Vine. We shall begin to hear the Vine speaking every
moment to the branch: "Even as I. Even as I: My life is your life; and have a
share in all My fullness; the Spirit in you, and the fruit that comes from you,
is all just the same as in Me. Be not afraid, but let your faith grasp each
"Even as I" as the divine assurance that because I live in you, you may and can
live like Me."
But why, if this really be the meaning of the parable, if this really be the
life a branch may live,who do so few realize it? Because they do not know the
heavenly mystery of the Vine. They know much of the parable and its beautiful
lessons. But the hidden spiritual mystery of the Vine in His divine omnipotence
and nearness, bearing and supplying them all the day--this they do not know,
because they have not waited on God's Spirit to reveal it to them.
Love one another, even as I have loved you--"Ye, even as I." How are we
to begin if we are really to learn the mystery? With the confession that we need
to be brought to an entirely new mode of life, because we have never yet known
Christ as the Vine in the completeness of His quickening and transforming power.
With the surrender to be cleansed from all that is of self, and detached from
all that is in the world, to live only and wholly as Christ lived for the glory
of the Father. And then with the faith that this "even as I" is in very deed
what Christ is ready to make true, the very life the Vine will maintain in the
branch wholly dependent upon Him.
Even as I. Ever again it is, my blessed Lord, as the Vine, so the
branch--one life, one spirit, one obedience, one joy, one love.
Lord Jesus, in the faith that Thou art my Vine, and that I am Thy branch,
I accept Thy command as a promise, and take Thy "even as I" as the simple
revelation of what Thou dost work in me. Yea, Lord, as Thou hast loved, I will
love.
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The True Vine by Andrew Murray - Public Domain [Copy Freely]