The Fruitfulness of Staying Connected – A Sermon on John 15:1-8, Easter 5B

Published by

on

The collect and readings for the Fifth Sunday of Easter may be found here. The following sermon is based on John 15:1-8.

Some branches produce fruit and are pruned, cared for and nurtured. Some branches do not produce fruit and are removed, thrown away and burned.

We are a people of productivity. It is, for the most part, the standard by how we live and the measure of our success. It is built into our lives everywhere. Productivity is the basis of our economic system. Those who produce are rewarded and get more. Those who do not produce are thrown out. Within our educational system the students who do well and produce are recognized and supported while those who do not produce get lost in the system. Professors know well the mantra, “Publish or perish.” Careers and promotions are based on productivity. Productivity at some level is at the core of the debates around poverty, welfare, healthcare, and the elderly. “They” do not produce and our care of and for them often reflects what we think of that.

We have been convinced that productivity is the goal and only the fittest survive. I wonder if that isn’t how many of us live our spiritual lives. How many of us have been told, in some form or fashion, or come to believe that pruned branches go to heaven and removed branches go to hell? Pruned branches produced so they are rewarded while non-productive branches are punished.

In that (mis)understanding fruit is God’s demand upon our life and the means by which we appease God. If we are not careful we’ll get stuck categorizing ourselves and one another into fruit bearing or non-fruit bearing branches. There is, however, a deeper issue than the production of fruit. Productivity does not usually create deep abiding and intimate relationships. It creates transactions. Jesus is not talking about or demanding productivity. He wants and offers connectivity, relationship, and intimacy.

Fruit or the lack thereof is a manifestation of our interior life and health. It describes and reveals whether we are living connected or disconnected lives. Fruit production is the natural consequence of staying connected. You can see that in long-term friendships, marriages, community loyalty. We do not choose whether or not we produce fruit. We do, however, choose where we abide and how we stay connected.

You know how that is. Sometimes we lose touch with a particular person. We no longer know where he or she is, what she is doing, or what is happening in her life. One day we run into him or her. It’s a bit awkward. No one is sure what to say. There’s not much to talk about. There was no deep abiding presence, the connection is lost, and it seems as if what was has been thrown away. Other people we run into after five or ten years and the conversation immediately picks up where we left off those many years ago. Even though we were apart we never left each other. There was and remains a connection and mutual abiding that time, distance, and the circumstances of life cannot sever.

“What fruit am I producing?” “How much?” “Is it an acceptable quality?” Those are good questions if we understand and ask them diagnostically, as questions not about the quantity of our lives but the quality of our lives. That’s what Jesus is after. That is the deeper question he is asking. It is the invitation to join the conversation, jump into the game, to participate, and to live fully alive. That only happens when the life, the love, and the goodness and holiness of Christ flow in us. We become an extension of and manifest his life, love, and holiness.

It is a relationship of union even as a branch is united to the vine. We live our lives as one. This is not just about relationship with Jesus; it affects and is the basis for our relationships with one another. Love for Jesus, one another, and ourselves become one love. We soon discover we are living one life and the fruit of that life and love is abundant, overflowing, and Father glorifying.

© Michael K. Marsh and Interrupting the Silence, 2009-2024, all rights reserved.

11 responses to “The Fruitfulness of Staying Connected – A Sermon on John 15:1-8, Easter 5B”

  1. Stephen Cherry Avatar

    Many thanks for this. An important challege to the dominon of the quantitative.
    I think your words, ‘We do not choose whether or not we produce fruit. We do, however, choose where we abide and how we stay connected.’ is a great summary of what the lesson was about. My version of this was to say’ its the fruit that count but the roots that matter’. http://stephencherry1.wordpress.com/2012/05/06/sermon-preached-durham-cathedral-eucharist-5th-sunday-of-easter-6th-may-2012/

    Like

    1. marshmk Avatar

      Stephen, I like your prioritization of the roots and fruit. It reminds me that we are to live from the inside out. Thanks for the link to your sermon and blog. I look forward to following your posts.

      Peace,
      Mike+

      Like

  2. […] The Fruitfulness of Staying Connected – A Sermon on John 15:1-8, Easter 5B (interruptingthesilence.com) Rate this: Spread the word:EmailPrintFacebookTwitterStumbleUponLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. […]

    Like

  3. Candy Wrappers and the Love of Christ – A Sermon on John 15:9-17; Easter 6B | Interrupting the Silence Avatar

    […] answers to those questions: You are my friends. Abiding love, laying down life kind of love, is the connection that will sustain you. I am your place in this […]

    Like

  4. Craig Seidling Avatar
    Craig Seidling

    In a spiritual reality, nothing can be lost and therefore, nothing can be taken, but while we perceive this physical reality, the idea of losing when you give or gaining when you take, are inbred into the worlds thinking.

    Like

  5. Fr Michael Smith SJ Avatar

    This is one of the best reflections on the vine and the branches I have read. You have helped me. Thank you.

    Like

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Thank you, Fr. Smith, for your very kind and encouraging words, and for reading my blog. I read some of your antarctic adventures. What an experience that must have been. It makes my parish experience look pretty tame.

      Christ is risen. Alleluia.
      Mike+

      Like

  6. Rev. Bernard Amsterdam Avatar
    Rev. Bernard Amsterdam

    I have never looked at the parable of the vine from this perspective. Excellent breakdown. Looking forward for more from your blog. Fr. Bernard Amsterdam
    Diocese of Guyana.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Thank you Fr. Bernard. God’s blessing be with you and your ministry.

      Peace,
      Mike+

      Like

  7. Rev Edward Ward. Avatar
    Rev Edward Ward.

    Dear Fr. Mike, Thank yo so very much for your words and thoughts. Everytime I read one of your blogs they lead me to think afresh, just as this one does.
    Fr. Edward

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Rev. Edward, thanks so much fro reading my blog and for your encouraging words to me.

      God’s peace and blessings be upon you and your ministry.
      Mike+

      Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.