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Well, a good morning to all those
who are physically here and those who are here by other means.
And we are looking at abiding in Christ, John 15 in particular. We have verse 4 in our bulletins
if you are here presently. It's printed right smack in the
middle, right down at the bottom here. So let's work on that first
and then we'll continue on. John 15.4. Abide in me, and I
in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit
of itself except it abide in the vine, no more can ye except
ye abide in me. John 15.4. Let's do this silently
for a bit. etching it in the cereal of our
mind. Okay, well, we spent a little
bit of time with this and each Sunday for the last couple of
them. Let's see how we do today. John 15, four. Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit
of itself, except it abide in the vine, no more can ye except
ye abide in me. John 15, four. And so we have
it. Also, our pastor is challenging
us to learn the first three verses of the chapter. So if you're
bored and have nothing else to do, certainly go ahead and tackle
that. If you're not bored, go ahead
and tackle it anyway. All right. So John 15, very important
things Jesus had to say about our life, our Christian life,
abiding staying, growing, bearing fruit. So, as a matter of view,
we can come across and see the application. If a man loves Christ, he will
obey Him. And of course, this is in John
15, verse 9, as well as in John 14, 23. God the Father in Christ will
love him. We think about these things and we say, how is it
that God loves me? He just does, it's part of his
character. But he said, if you abide in me, if you obey my voice,
the Father will love you and I will love you. The promise
made. He who bears fruit, he's the
one abiding in Christ. So you can look, what's the fruit
of his life? What is the outcome of his actions? Every branch that doesn't bear
fruit is taken away. And Jesus said here in verse
five, without me you can do nothing. That's important because we try
to do so many things in life. We want to be successful. We
want to have influence over others. We want to do. But he said, without
me you can do nothing. And that's success in God's eyes. Maybe not the world's eyes. You
may know some people, they are trying and it looks like they're
succeeding. But when you measure it against
eternity and all the things that matter to God, even those people
have failed. Why? Because the will of God
is success, not the size of the bank account. how many yachts
you have, or any of the rest of it. It's a little gone. You don't abide in Christ until
you cast forth whither worth was cast into the fire and burned.
Those are also very heavy words. But I have noticed that what
Jesus says, he means. So however that works out, this
is what he's talking about here. But abiding in Christ opens the
door of blessing from God. So you abide in Christ, verse
7 and 16. There are two verses that say
this. Now, it would be enough if one verse said this, but we
have two in this same chapter that say this. Abide in Christ
and you'll have blessing from God. You want blessing from God,
there you go. That's it right there. Those who abide bring
glory to the Father, So you want to glorify God the Father you
abide in Christ Obedience Brings abiding Obedience Brings abiding
and that's more to the point But we're not done because in
verse 11 Comes up and says these things that I've spoken to you
that you might joy might remain in you and that your joy might
be full joy You know, in life, many things
can be a burden. All kinds of stuff going on.
In Korea here, it's tax time. People are having to pay their
taxes. And we're aware of how thrilling it is to pay your taxes
every year. But this is how the thing goes.
They pay their taxes April 15th, then on for ever, it seems like. And here, this time of year,
Koreans pay taxes. But what does he say? I say,
I'm telling you these words that my joy might be in you. Now,
did Christ pay taxes? Sure. He said, Peter, get out
to the lake, grab a fish, open its mouth, pull out the coin,
pay your tax. Christ paid taxes. He recognized the authority of
the government that was there. God raises up kings. God takes
them down. God instituted government. And
we have that record way back in the first five books of the
Bible. So we have that. Government has a legitimate place.
But government of God. So this is what we have. that
we have his joy no matter what, and that your joy might be full.
So it isn't the fact that you have joy only, but the joy is
full, complete, everything is there. Then in 12 and 17, again, one
time is not enough. He's saying it twice. This is
my commandment. Love one another. It's an active
taking care. Take care of each other. Love
each other. Sometimes it requires a bit of sacrifice. Sometimes
that requires a bit of doing beyond. But this is his commandment,
that you love one another as I have loved you. What? Wow. That's big. How much does God love you? You
ever stop and think about that one? Can I do it? In the power of God? Yes. Because
remember, Christ came down upon earth and ministered among us,
gave up his life for us. As I have loved you. Humanist
speaking, that is a tall order. but we're going right back to
without me you can do nothing. Who would try to fulfill that
in his own strength? Now we might have that desire,
but there's not gonna be a way for us to do that in our own
strength. As I have loved you, that's a
high standard. So what is it? In Christ, abide
in me, and I in you, you're gonna bear fruit, you're gonna love
one another, okay, that's how you're going to do it. Staying in there. Verse 17, these things I command
you that you love one another. So he ends that section with
the command again. Verse 13, how do we know we have
great love for one another? A man lays down his life What bigger sacrifice can a person
make? Historically, we see this. Christ
himself, other Christians. We have the record in Europe,
for example, of Jan Hus. Jan Hus, Croatia. He said, this
is how God said things. This is what God meant. And I'm
ready to be sacrificed for this. He faced the council. He faced
the fire. He faced death, certain death. That was a tall order. But people
to this day honor his memory because he stood where he should
have. Very difficult thing to do. I
mean, think about it. If you were called upon to do
this, could you do it? I can't say for sure I would,
because it's that deep and that powerful. But he did. Martin Luther, well, he was pursued
by those who would take him down. He had the protection of the
prince, but he was still pursued by the Catholic Church in those
days. Here I stand, I can do no other.
He took his stand on the word of God, abiding in Christ. And
though he had the training in that church, he could not abide
it. Why? Because it did not abide
in Christ. In those days, it had departed.
The tradition was more than the word of God itself. And this
is the condemnation that Christ brought against the religious
leaders of his day. You have your tradition, but
I say to you, he countered that. Abiding in Christ sometimes requires
us to go against things that are popular and viewed as normal
in our society. Not an easy thing. And particularly
if it's connected with some power. People who are given the authority
to do things to circumvent the law of God, to go around it. But we have Christ's friendship
if we obey him. Now, this is also found in Matthew.
Matthew 12, 15. Go there, take a look at that. Okay? Matthew 12, 15. Verse five,
zero. For whosoever shall do the will
of my Father which is in heaven, the same is my brother, and sister,
and mother." Interesting. Christ's friendship,
part of the family, brother, sister, mother. See, Christ did
have a mother, as we all recognize. Her name was Mary, we know that.
But here he says, the person that does the will of the Father,
she's my mother. She's my sister. The man that
does that, he's my brother. A brother to Christ. The one
who spoke the universe into existence, and he's my brother. Hopefully
that's making some kind of impression here. This is incredible. But this is his word, and this
is what he says. And how does he know? How does
he count friendship? I call you friends, right in
the middle of verse 15. All things that I have heard
of my father have been known to you. How do we know? He tells us the secret things,
the things he does not tell his enemies, the things he does not
tell his mere acquaintances. We're his servants. Yes, we serve
Christ, we're his servants. But he says, I call you friends.
He goes beyond. The things I have heard from
my father, I'm now telling you. So you read those words. Have we heard all the secrets
of God? No. The secret things belong
to the Lord our God. But so many of the things that
he could have kept secret from us, he opened it up. and let us know of her." Incredible. This is the King of kings, the
Lord of lords, the one who is in charge of all. And 16, Christ chose us and ordained
us, set us aside. And he said, you never choose
me, I chose you. Now this is it. When a person
comes to Christ, we say, he chose Jesus. Well, what about it? You have not chosen me, but I
have chosen you. Who was doing the searching in
the beginning? God was searching for us. When
we are yet outside of God's family, we're not naturally looking for
God. We're not naturally looking to be his family or to do his
will or any of that. You have not chosen me, but I
have chosen you. He goes for us. So we sit here
in the midst of this body to worship a God who picked us out. You. You. Privilege. Very deep, very strong
privilege. Now, we've been talking about
all this, and I wanna go beyond this and take this as an illustration
point in John 17. Now, John 15 talks about the
vine and the branches, but how do we see it worked out? All
these things that Christ talks about. Okay, just flip another
page over to John 17 and we'll take another look. John 17, you ready? This is it right here. Abiding in the Father by obedience. Now, John 8.29 talks about that. So, this is what we do. Obey. And then we abide in the
Father. But we take a look, and we see
Jesus' prayer for his disciples. Jesus is praying, I have manifested
thy name. I'm talking about verse six here. Because before this, it's a lead
up. to this point in the prayer.
I have manifested thy name unto the men who thou gavest to me
out of the world. I and they were, and thou gavest
to me, and they have kept thy word. So Christ prays for their
obedience. And he says, and they have kept
my word. What did they do? They abided.
They stayed put. John 17.6. So Christ gives testimony to
that in John 17. Okay, so now we're looking at
it. And remember, John 15, verses seven and 16, he says, this brings
blessing. And you stop and think about
it. You say, blessing? How is it? And in John 17, The very fact
that he's praying for us, he's blessing us. He's setting us
aside. He's giving us more than we would
have had. That's what we're talking about. So we skip down to verse 20 in
John 17, neither pray I for these alone. Verse 20, but for them
also which shall believe on me through their word. that they
all may be one, as Thou, Father, art in me, and I in Thee, that
they also may be one in us, that the world may believe that Thou
hast sent me." So unity with God, unity with each other. How blessed it is for brothers
to dwell together in unity. And here we have it. And it's
not a made-up unity. It's a unity that is made by
God himself and given to us, as we see here, that they may
all be one. Christ, the Father, the Spirit,
they are one. We say we have one God. People
wanna come along and say, well, you have three gods. No, we have
one God. But this is it right here. His prayer was for us. to be one, in unity, as God is,
thinking the same thoughts, having the same goals, doing the same
kinds of things, unity, that they may all be one. But that's not all the blessing,
there's more. Verse 22, in the glory which
thou gavest me, I have given them. So it's not just unity, it's
glory. Now that's something we tend
to fight for. We want prestige. We want recognition. What better way than for him
to give that to us? Rather than us fighting for it,
contending, trying to make ourselves look better, abide in Christ. He gives this freely. He values
it, certainly. He gives it to us. That I might
glorify them, as thou hast glorified me. I in them, and thou in me,
that they may be made perfect in one. Complete. Nothing we see, nothing lacking.
There it is, right there. Now, following this, convenience
brings blessing, we're gonna walk a little trail here, okay? So let's go to Matthew 3 now. We're gonna go to Matthew 3,
get this thing done. Convenience brings blessing. Matthew 3. We have the record
of the baptism of Jesus. Right before the temptations,
right before Satan tries to trick him. But here he is in the baptism. And let's drop down to verse
17. We have the baptism where he
comes to the River Jordan and John baptizes him. I should be
baptized by you. No, you baptize me. You carry
out the will of the Father. And as this is done, verse 17
of Matthew 3, and lo, a voice from heaven saying, this is my
beloved son in whom I am well pleased. Now, keep in mind, this
is the beginning. He hasn't done all the healing
and preaching and everything yet. So, this is the testimony of
the Father. He is my Son, in Him I am well
pleased. So obedience brings blessing. Up to this point, Christ had
obeyed the Father, and the Father put a stamp of approval on that.
I am well pleased. He's letting people know. Jesus
is doing the right thing. Okay. Then you go to chapter
17 and verse 5. This is after a bunch of preaching
and miracles, work that Jesus did. So at the beginning of the
ministry, the Father speaks from heaven. In Matthew 17, we have the transfiguration,
Christ being glorified on the mount. Verse 5 of Matthew 17. Jesus is speaking to Moses and
Elijah. And while he yet speaks, Behold,
a bright cloud overshadowed them, and behold, a voice out of the
cloud which said, this is my beloved Son, in whom I am well
pleased. And God the Father adds one more
thing now. He said this before, right? Now
he says this, hear ye him. He's going to tell you the truth.
He's going to tell you what you need to know. Matthew, verses
5 of 17, and 17 of 3. So chapter 3, 17, chapter 3.
17, verse 5. This is my beloved Son, in whom
I am well pleased. The blessing and the charge,
hear him, pay attention to what he says. If you abide in me and I in you,
How do we abide in him and how does he abide in us? Through
his word. If you obey, that means you listen,
you got the message, and you did it. Without the knowledge of his
command, how would we obey? But when he clearly commands
and communicates that to us, now we have something to go on
Now we have something we can do. And if we obey that, we're
abiding in him. So that whole thing follows. Now this is Christ. Obedience brings blessing. Historically, I wanna travel
on down. We're gonna go to Acts now. And as you know, the book of
the Acts is about the history of the early church. So in chapter
five, the apostles are suffering persecution. You go down to verse,
let's start at verse 29, because Peter and the other apostles
answered and said, because they're saying, didn't we tell you not
to speak in the name of Jesus? And Peter answers. So Acts 5.29,
then Peter and the other apostles answered and said, we ought to
obey God rather than men. Abide in me, and I in you. We ought to obey God rather than
men. The God of our fathers raised up Jesus when he slew and hanged
on a tree. Did they want to hear that? No. But it was the truth. Him hath
God exalted with his right hand to be a prince and a savior,
for to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins. This
is the instrument of blessing for all of Israel right here. Acts 5 31. So this is what we
have. Him hath God exalted with his
right hand. We remember something about the
right hand. He is seated at the right hand of his father by the
throne in heaven. A place of privilege and power,
authority. And here we have it, right here.
God exalted him with his right hand to be a prince and a savior,
to bring forgiveness. What more blessing This is huge,
this is absolutely marvelous to think about. This is where
Christ ended up. This is my beloved son in whom
I am well pleased. Why? He obeyed the will of the
Father, and he went through the cross, through the tomb, came
back up, resurrected, and now him hath God highly exalted. We talk about obedience bringing
blessing, this is Christ. But what about us? Go to Romans 8. We're gonna go to Romans 8, verse 30
in particular. And this can get a little tricky
here. Meet up to 30, starting at 28. Romans 8, 28, by the way, is
the favorite of a good many people. And we know, what do we know?
That all things work together for good to them that love God,
to them who are called according to his purpose. You love God? You're called by God? Okay. We know that all things work
together for good. Yeah, did you see what happened
yesterday? Hang on. You remember Joseph? They threw him in jail. But that all worked out. He became
the second ruler in all of Egypt. He brought his family out of
famine, out of trouble. and blessed his family and blessed
his nation because eventually they were the root and ground
for Israel to grow and to prosper. So, okay, we have this. Verse
29, for whom he did foreknow, he also did predestine to be
conformed to the image of his son. He set things up so it would
work out. that he might be the firstborn
among many brethren. Moreover, whom he did predestinate,
them he also called, and whom he called, them he also justified,
and whom he justified, them he also glorified. Blessing upon
blessing, right there in 30. He predestinated, and I'm not
gonna get into that whole tangle, but this is what it says. Not
only that, he called, He justified, He glorified. Who? Believers. Folks like you and
me. Right here. So Romans 8.30, that's
about us receiving the blessing, not just Christ. He also says, those who bear
fruit are purged. Now we go down through and we
see Christ again. What was it? Was Jesus necessarily
having to be purged? He was perfect already. But what
he went through shows us what the process is. What? He was crucified. Not for his
sins, for ours. He was crucified He was buried
in a borrowed tomb, Joseph's tomb, Joseph of Arimathea. But then he didn't stay there.
Three days and three nights, and boom, here he comes. Despite
the best efforts of his enemies, we're going to put soldiers there,
we're going to seal that. He's not coming out, and his
followers aren't going to break that seal, because then they'll
be under penalty of death by law. So we're going to make sure. Now, this is a dead person, right?
They're looking at this and saying, he's dead. He's not going to
walk out of there. Boy, did they get a shock. Not
only did he walk out of there, he walked out of that tomb in
triumph. Bright and shining were his angels
who gave the message, who had to say, don't be afraid. He's
not here. He's risen. He already came out
of that tomb. They had to roll the stone away.
Do you realize what this means? He walked out of that tomb right
through that rock. He didn't have to move it. I'm
going out of here, right through. And remember, later on, the disciples
were in that upper room with the door shut. Nobody's coming
in this room. We're all under threat. The Jewish
authorities want our heads. Jesus just walks in like the
door's open, but it's not. He walks right through that door.
So what is it that people walk right through that stone that
sealed the tomb? Nothing is gonna stop him. But
when you stop and think about it, wow. Resurrection. That purging then brought forth
more fruit. When he walked about after his
resurrection, who saw him? More than 500 people. And they
could all say, yeah, I saw him. He was there. In fact, he cooked
fish. He ate like we eat. This is someone
who came out of the grave, and he's eating food like we eat
food. Ah. This is the power of God. To be sure this helps us understand
more fruit and fruit that remains Remember in John 15 that you
might have fruit that remains Just take a look around you We
are hundreds thousands of years beyond that event There are Christians
in just about every nation you want to name. I've traveled to
many here in Asia. There are Christians in Malaysia. There are Christians in Taiwan. There are Christians in Korea,
many. There are Christians in Singapore.
There are Christians in the communist countries. In fact, the record
is out. And it's no secret. Some of these
communist countries are sending forth missionaries into Arabia. Think about it. Those Christians are going from
communism into the nations of Islam. We will carry the gospel. Is the gospel bound? No. Not one bit. In fact, even as
Christ walked right through That stone that was supposed to seal
the tomb so he couldn't get out? The gospel is free like that.
Unbound, no matter what. They cannot stop it. And so we
have fruit that remains to this day. Churches all over the place. Here in Korea, we can walk, and
we don't have to walk very far at all. And we see a steeple
there, a cross there, another steeple, another steeple, church,
church, church, church in our neighborhood. And Koreans, what about your
neighborhood? You could probably do the same. Walk around, see
church houses all throughout. And we're in Seoul, the capital
city. How many of these are also in
the countryside? How many Christians are out there
worshiping God today? By the thousands. I don't know
that we can count them all. And we're here at this moment
in time. But we recognize, as you head
west, people are still in bed at some places. But they're going
to get up this morning. They're going to get dressed
and ready, and they're going to go to church. Eastern Europe, Western Europe,
Eastern US, the Greenbelt, the Western part, Canada as well. All these places, fruit that
remains. We have the record, we have the
testimony now of what he said. We can look at it and see, yeah,
it's there. In fact, we also have this kind of record in 2
Corinthians 11. I won't go there to say, but
the record of Paul, the things that he went through. So you
read 2 Corinthians 11, and you see what Paul went through. And
he has fruit that remains. Timothy, Timothy was a preacher
of the gospel. He put forth the traditions that
Christ put forth, the teachings, the doctrine, all the things
that Christ had said. And there's fruit, there's fruit
that remains. And so we have it. Not only Christ, not only Paul, And so we have glory to the Father,
John 17, one and four. Glory to the Son, John 17, again,
five and 10. Praying for us, verse nine. Having
Christ's joy. Now remember, these things I
said, it's you and I have my joy, and that your joy might
be full. And in John 17, he prays for us. Verse 13, that his joy
might remain in us. that we should be kept from the
evil. Think about the corruption influence in this world. It would
be easy to fall prey, but Christ prayed for you. Christ prayed
for me. John 17, 15, to be kept from
the evil. John 17, 17, a well-known verse,
sanctify them through thy truth, thy word is truth. So the truth
is setting us free. The truth is setting us apart. Sanctify them. So we're sanctified. And verse 20 of John 17, that
we should bear more fruit. Verse 24, that we should be with
Christ, loved by the Father. So John 17 has a lot of the same
elements that John 15 has. And when we come to bearing fruit,
don't forget about the parable of the sower and the seeds. I'll end with this right here.
You go to verse four of Matthew 13. Matthew 13 has that parable. Matthew 13. And we take a look at that and see
what is said. Matthew 13. So are sows. Well, of course.
That's what he does. He puts seed in his bag, and
he starts throwing it around. Well, what happens? Some of it
falls on hard ground. Some of it falls by the wayside. Some of it gets plucked off by
the birds. It just falls on the ground.
The birds come and eat it. It's not going to bear fruit, of course. If it falls on rocks, it doesn't
have a chance to really form roots on rocks like that. So
it dies, doesn't bear fruit. Thorns? Yeah, this good ground
will produce thorns. Anybody that has a garden can
tell you this, right? What do you have that you don't
even have to work for? Weeds. Thorns. Thorns and thistles. Oh, we used
to have an abundance of those things. And we'd have to pull
them out by the root. Not always pleasant and easy.
You wear those big thick gloves. But what is it? Some of these
seeds fall by the thorns, and the thorns grow up and choke
them out, and they don't have a chance to bear fruit either. But there's this one last category
Verse 8 of Matthew 13. Matthew 13, 8. But other fell
into good ground and brought forth fruit, some 100 fold, some
60 fold, some 30 fold. Good ground. The seeds fall,
they germinate, the root structure grows, they grow up, and they
can bear fruit. And this is what we look for.
And this is the power of God and the gospel that goes forward.
Let us consider this well, and as we study this going forward,
we have one more week in this month right here. Abide in Christ. And we have all these things
to look at, and the blessing of God and his joy. Let's pray. Lord, we praise you for today.
We thank you for your kindness, we ask now that you would help
us, remind us, Build us, grow your word in us. And may the
gospel have free course, not just in this little church, this
country, but all through every country. We know it is unstoppable. Your power is greater than any.
You are the King of kings, Lord of lords. We depend on you for
the answer. that your glory might be filled
in us, and we ask it in Jesus' name, amen.
Abide in Christ
Series Abiding in Christ
The benefits and blessings of abiding in Christ are expounded from John 15 by Al Hendrickson.
| Sermon ID | 11925058552019 |
| Duration | 44:39 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday School |
| Bible Text | John 15 |
| Language | English |
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