Ye Did Not Choose Me, But I Chose You, and Appointed You That Ye Should Go
and Bear Fruit--John 15:16
The branch does not choose the vine, or decide on which vine it will grow. The
vine brings forth the branch, as and where it will. Even so Christ says: "Ye did
not choose me, but I chose you." But some will say is not just this the
difference between the branch in the natural and in the spiritual world, that
man has a will and a power of choosing, and that it is in virtue of his having
decided to accept Christ, his having chosen Him as Lord, that he is now a
branch? This is undoubtedly true. And yet it is only half a truth. The lesson of
the Vine, and the teaching of our Lord, points to the other half, the deeper,
the divine side of our being in Christ. If He had not chosen us, we had never
chosen Him. Our choosing Him was the result of His choosing us, and taking hold
of us. In the very nature of things, it is His prerogative as Vine to choose and
create His own branch. We owe all we are to "the election of grace." If we want
to know Christ as the true Vine, the sole origin and strength of the branch
life, and ourselves as branches in our absolute, most blessed, and most secure
dependence upon Him, let us drink deep of this blessed truth: "Ye did not choose
me, but I chose you."
And with what view does Christ say this? That they may know what the object is
for which He chose them, and find, in their faith in His election, the certainty
of fulfilling their destiny. Throughout Scripture this is the great object of
the teaching of election. "Predestinated to be conformed to the image of his
son." (to be branches in the image and likeness of the Vine). "Chosen that we
should be holy." "Chosen to salvation, through sanctification of the Spirit."
"Elect in sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience." Some have abused the
doctrine of election, and others, for fear of its abuse, have rejected it,
because they have overlooked this teaching. They have occupied themselves with
its hidden origin in eternity, with the inscrutable mysteries of the counsels of
God instead of accepting the revelation of its purpose in time, and the
blessings it brings into our Christian life.
Just think what these blessings are. In our verse Christ reveals His twofold
purpose in choosing us to be His branches: that we may bear fruit on earth, and
have power in prayer in Heaven. What confidence the thought that He has chosen
us for this gives, that He will not fail to fit us for carrying out His purpose!
What assurance that we can bear fruit that will abide, and can pray so as to
obtain! What a continual call to the deepest humility and praise, to the most
entire dependence and expectancy! He would not choose us for what we are not fit
for, or what He could not fit us for. He has chosen us; this is the pledge, He
will do all in us.
Let us listen in silence of soul to our holy Vine speaking to each of us: "You
did not choose Me!" And let us say, "Yea, Lord, but I chose You! Amen, Lord!"
Ask Him to show what this means. In Him, the true Vine, your life as branch has
its divine origin, its eternal security, and the power to fulfill His purpose.
From Him to whose will of love you owe all, you may expect all. In Him, His
purpose, and His power, and His faithfulness, in His love let me abide.
I chose you. Lord, teach me what this means--that Thou hast set Thy heart
on me, and chosen me to bear fruit that will abide, and to pray prayer that will
prevail. In this Thine eternal purpose my soul would rest itself and say: "What
He chose me for I will be, I can be, I shall be."
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The True Vine by Andrew Murray - Public Domain [Copy Freely]