J.R. Miller D.D.

Come Ye Apart

October 29


The Pruning-Knife

 

“Every branch in me that beareth not fruit he taketh away: and every branch that beareth fruit, he purgeth it, that it may bring forth more fruit.”

John 15:2

Christ taught many lessons on the sin and doom of uselessness. One of His parables told of a tree that bore no fruit. The soil was good, and the tree was carefully planted and well tended; still, when the mater came at the proper season, expecting to find fruit, he found none. Fruitlessness is cursed. The tree with nothing but leaves is made to wither. There is no place in the Lord’s kingdom for uselessness.

We must notice here that it is the fruitful branch that is pruned. The husbandman does not prune the unfruitful branch; it would do it no good. It is the true Christian that the Father chastens and causes sometimes to suffer under sore discipline. The wicked are let alone; but in their luxuriance there is no spiritual fruit.

Another thing to be noticed here is, that the object of the Father’s pruning is that the branch may be made to bear more fruit. It seems sometimes as if the pruning were destructive; but He who holds the knife knows that what He is doing will make the vine far more luxuriant in the end, and its fruit sweeter and more luscious. The aim of God in all His pruning is greater fruitfulness.

Now the pruning, sharp, unsparing,
  Scattered blossom, bleeding shoot;
Afterward the plenteous bearing
  Of the Master’s pleasant fruit.

If we would but remember this when we find ourselves suffering under God’s chastening hand, it would help us to bear the pain with patience, and also to co-operate with God in His design of blessing for us. Earthly prosperity often is to the Christian like the luxuriance which the vine-dresser must cut away to save the vine’s life.

 

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