Isaiah
used the vine as a type of Israel, planted and tended by the Almighty as
the husbandman.
(Isa. 5:1.) Israel was not the true vine. Christ is the true
vine. (Jn 15:1)
In John 14
the Lord had just said to the disciples, "Arise, let us go
hence." He had just eaten the last supper with the apostles. He said
that he would not drink of the fruit of the vine again on this earth.
Likely on the table from which they had just risen was the fruit of the
vine. And now he says, "I am the true vine."
In the
first eight verses of
John 15 we
find the following outstanding lessons about the vine and the branches.
1. That
morality alone cannot save.
2. That
there is but one true church.
3. That
we should get in Christ, stay in Christ, and stay out of everything else
or be lost.
Jesus
said, "Apart from me you can do nothing." Morality alone cannot save.
Men can be morally good apart from Christ. Yet apart from Christ they
can do nothing. There is no spiritual life apart from Christ. Cornelius
was a moral man apart from Christ but he was unsaved.
(Acts 11:14.)
If morality alone can save then Jesus died in vain. There were just as
good men morally to be found in the Mosaic age as there are now. If a
man can be saved by his own goodness then Jesus died for no purpose at
all. Why did he die if they could be saved by their own goodness? Let
the moral man remember these words, "Apart from me you can do nothing."
There is no spiritual life apart from Jesus Christ, the true vine.
Thus we
see that one must get into Christ to be saved. Paul says that we are
baptized into Christ. That makes baptism necessary to salvation in
Christ Jesus. You cannot do anything apart from Christ but you can't get
into Christ unless you are baptized.
(Gal. 3:27.)
This
"true vine" is the true church. The vine is the spiritual body of
Christ. The church is His body.
(Col. 1:18.)
There is one body.
(Eph. 4:4.) There is but one body.
(1 Cor. 12:20.)
Paul does not say "churches" but "the church." If one desires to
be united with Christ let him obey the gospel and thus be added to the
"one body," the church, the "true vine."
The
objector says that Christ is the true vine and all the denominations are
branches. Christ said, "I" am the vine and 'lye" are the branches. "He"
that abideth in me. Note the use of the personal pronoun. Do men refer
to churches as "he" and "ye? Is that the way they talk where you live?
Is that the way your preacher talks? Would you say about the Baptist
Church—he is a large church? The use of the personal pronoun shows that
Christ was talking to his disciples and not to "churches." Individuals
are the branches and not organizations. But just suppose for a minute
that the branches are churches. In what branch are you? You say that I
am in the Baptist branch. Yes, but wait, Christ said abide in "me." You
should not abide in a branch but in the vine. If you are in a branch you
ought to get out of it and get in the vine. Get out of the branch and
get in the vine. "If a man abide not in me, he is cast forth as a branch
and is withered; and they gather them and cast them into the fire, and
they are burned." Abide in the vine or be burned. Do not abide in a
branch. You cannot abide in a branch. A branch is a disciple or a
Christian. Individuals are the branches and not denominations.
Did God
set denominations in the vine? If so, which ones did He put in? If God
set denominations in the vine it is strange that He never said anything
about it. If He did mention them will someone please tell where?
For one
to claim that denominations are the branches is an apology for something
they know that is not mentioned in the Bible and a rank perversion of
the fifteenth chapter of John. Denominations came into existence
hundreds of years after Christ. They are of human origin and no one has
a Bible right to belong to any of them.
The
"true vine," the church, was established by Christ and all Christians
are members of it.
(Jn 3:5.) The church is God's house. God's house is His family.
(1 Tim. 3:15.)
God has no children outside of His family.
From
this chapter we learn that we must bear fruit to please God. "Herein is
my Father glorified that ye bear much fruit; and so shall ye be my
disciples." You cannot bear fruit apart from the vine. To bear fruit you
must be in the vine. How does one get in the vine? He must believe.
(Mk. 16:15-16.)
He must repent.
(Acts 2:38.) He must be baptized.
(Gal. 3:27.)
These steps put one into Christ. Yet it is not enough to get into
Christ. In Christ the branch must bear good fruit. The fruitless branch
(disciple) will be lost. He will be cast forth and be burned.
(Jn 15:6.)
Our duty in regard to this is clear. We must get in Christ, stay in
Christ, and stay out of everything else.
Someone
may ask, "Can a man be saved and go to heaven and stay out of the vine?"
No, for Christ says, "Apart from me you can do nothing." It is Christ or
nothing. It is the true vine or no vine. It is the true church or no
church. Christ here teaches that you cannot be saved out of the church
and you cannot be saved unless you stay in the church.—Bible
Banner, 1942
Other Articles by G. K. Wallace
Accepting Christ