TRUE VINE
"I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener." ~ John 15.1
Jesus often used agricultural metaphors to help His disciples and others He taught understand the truths He was proclaiming. In John 15, Jesus makes use of the vine as a metaphor. Jesus proclaims Himself to be the True Vine. How important were grape vines? How significant was this claim?
Grapes were a common fruit consumed in the Mediterranean world. Grapes from vines were pressed to harvest the juice which in turn was fermented to produce wine. Wine and grapes were used at the table for consumption at meals. Wine was used medicinally. It was highly prized as gifts for kings. It was brought to the Temple as offerings to God and used for religious rituals. Grapes and wine were thus incredibly important in the religious, social, economic milieu of the 1st century.
Grapes and wine were only as good as the branches and the vine it had come from. It is from the vine that the branches receive their nourishment from the soil. It is from the vine that the branches gain their strength and stability in order to produce high quality fruit. Without the vine, the branches are nothing and incapable of producing fruit. But, through the vine, its branches produce large, sweet bunches of grapes that sustain life and provide joy for all who consume.
Jesus referred to Himself as the True Vine and His followers as branches. It is through Him that we are capable of producing fruit. It is through Him that we receive grace, faith, forgiveness, restoration, rest, and joy. It is through the True Vine that we produce fruit and share it with the world, sustaining life and joy for all who would consume.
Are you abiding in the True Vine? Are you living in the True Vine? Are you walking with Jesus daily, allowing the True Vine to provide you with the faith and grace you need to sustain you? Are you allowing the True Vine to produce the fruit of the Spirit in you? (Galatians 5.22-23)
Prayer
Jesus, thank You for being my True Vine. I acknowledge that without You, I am incapable of faith. I am incapable of restoration with the Father. I am incapable of finding true rest, contentment, and joy. Help me to abide in You. Help me to walk with You, in the hard, in the joyous, and in the mundane. Amen.
Mystical Winepress (21st century)
by Adriana Vasile
(reverse glass painting)
Fr Zosim Oancea Museum at Sibiel, Romania
This artwork is an example of a unique local form of sacred folk art called reverse glass icon painting. Painting on glass was brought to Transylvania after it was annexed into the Habsburg Empire late in the 17th century. It was quickly adopted by the local populace to continue their Orthodox church iconographic traditions.
“This piece was produced in the time-honored way. The image is painted behind a glass panel and thus the usual methods of composition are reversed. The outlines, the lettering, and finishing details have to be brushed onto the glass first before background coloring and sections of gold leaf can be applied, a process allowing for no mistakes! The image is, then, sealed with a coating of varnish, covered with a sheet of paper, and fixed in a wood frame with a protective backing” (http://t.ly/Q4Rk1).
The artist shows a vine coming from the wound in Jesus’ side. The vine is supported by a cross-shaped trellis. Jesus is harvesting into a challis the juice from a bunch of grapes. The grape juice is thus the wine that as believers we drink at communion/the Lord’s Supper that represents the very blood of Jesus, shed on our behalf.
Jesus is the True Vine in which all those who partake of Him (1 Corinthians 11:23-26) and abide in Him (John 15.1-8) find life.
Mystical Winepress (21st century)
by Adriana Vasile
(reverse glass painting)
Fr Zosim Oancea Museum at Sibiel, Romania
This artwork is an example of a unique local form of sacred folk art called reverse glass icon painting. Painting on glass was brought to Transylvania after it was annexed into the Habsburg Empire late in the 17th century. It was quickly adopted by the local populace to continue their Orthodox church iconographic traditions.
“This piece was produced in the time-honored way. The image is painted behind a glass panel and thus the usual methods of composition are reversed. The outlines, the lettering, and finishing details have to be brushed onto the glass first before background coloring and sections of gold leaf can be applied, a process allowing for no mistakes! The image is, then, sealed with a coating of varnish, covered with a sheet of paper, and fixed in a wood frame with a protective backing” (http://t.ly/Q4Rk1).
The artist shows a vine coming from the wound in Jesus’ side. The vine is supported by a cross-shaped trellis. Jesus is harvesting into a challis the juice from a bunch of grapes. The grape juice is thus the wine that as believers we drink at communion/the Lord’s Supper that represents the very blood of Jesus, shed on our behalf.
Jesus is the True Vine in which all those who partake of Him (1 Corinthians 11.23-26) and abide in Him (John 15.1-8) find life.
Playlist Daily Highlight
Take the time to listen . . . really listen to the words of this song. Reflect on them. Let God’s spirit speak to you in this moment.