Christ the King Church, Hiawassee

Abide in Me: Rogation Sunday 2026 (John 15:1-11)

1 h 0 min · 10. Mai 2026
Episode Abide in Me: Rogation Sunday 2026 (John 15:1-11) Cover

Beschreibung

On Rogation Sunday — when the Church traditionally processes through fields and farmland asking God's provision for the harvest — the Gospel appointed is John 15, the vine and the branches. The Church did not place an agricultural observance alongside the most agricultural image Jesus ever used of himself by accident. Still in the Upper Room on Maundy Thursday night, Jesus gives the last great I AM statement of John's Gospel before the cross: I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser. The Father prunes the fruitful branches — not the barren ones, the fruitful ones — not as punishment but as preparation. It looks like damage and feels like loss, but the vinedresser knows exactly where to cut and what the branch is capable of bearing. The central command of the passage, repeated ten times in eleven verses, is simply abide — “meno”, to remain, to stay, to dwell. Not a dramatic word. Not a mountaintop experience. The branch does not produce fruit by trying harder — it produces fruit by staying on the vine. Apart from him we can do nothing. Psalm 148 calls all of creation to praise God by being what it was made to be, and the passage opens into its deepest point in verse 9: as the Father has loved me, so have I loved you — the sap running through the vine is the love of the Trinity itself. Obedience is not the condition for earning that love but the fruit of abiding in it — put the cart before the horse and you get it exactly backwards. First Peter 3 calls the community formed by abiding to be ready to give a defense of the hope that is visible in them, with gentleness and respect. The sermon closes where the passage closes: the goal of abiding is not productivity but joy. The fruitfulness is for the Father's glory. The joy is for the branches. Abide in him, and your joy will be full.

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