Where's The
Fruit?
By
Wayne Greeson
Every
few years a commercial comes along that is priceless. It
strikes a chord with Americans everywhere. Soon, the jingle
or slogan is heard not only from television but from the
lips of senior citizens to babes -- the commercial becomes
a bit of true Americana.
One such commercial was Wendy's Hamburgers, "Where's the
Beef?" commercial. Who hasn't entered a fast food place,
ordered a hamburger, sat down to eat and, in the words of
Wendy's commercial, wondered: "Where's the Beef?"
Many will chuckle as they dig through their hamburger bun
in an attempt to find "the beef" in their 98 cent
hamburger. Yet, how many will go through their lives
looking for the insignificant beef in their hamburger and
fail to ever search for the more weightier spiritual fruit
in their lives? Instead of asking "Where's the Beef?" a
person needs to examine himself and ask:
Where's
The Fruit?
Just as a good hamburger contains plenty of beef, a person
acceptable to God bears much fruit. To be "fruitful" means
to be productive. A fruitful garden produces much fruit; a
fruitful worker is a worker productive in his work. To
produce fruit for God means one is working and serving God
in the works God would have him do. Paul wrote that we must
"walk in a manner worthy of the Lord to please Him in all
respects, bearing fruit in every good work..." (Col. 1:10).
The fruit that God expects of men "consists in all goodness
and righteousness and truth" (Eph. 5:9).
Relationship
with Christ
The New Testament uses the phrase "in Christ" to describe
those who have a spiritual relationship with Christ. To get
"into Christ" one must first be obedient to Christ by being
"baptized into Christ" (Rom. 6:3-4; Gal. 3:26-27; Col.
2:12-13).
Those outside of Christ cannot bear fruit for Christ. It
does not matter how pious, humble or sincere one becomes
there is no producing for the Lord outside of the Lord.
Jesus said, "As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself,
unless it abides in the vine, so neither can you unless you
abide in Me ... for apart from me you can do nothing" (John
15:4-5).
Relationship
And Service
Christians must recognize that the Christian life does not
mean "being" a Christian but rather doing what a Christian
does. Jesus spoke of the vine and branches in John 15 to
illustrate the Christian life as a relationship to Christ
(abiding in Christ) and a service to Christ (bearing
fruit). Jesus warned His followers, "Every branch in Me
that does not bear fruit, He takes away" (John 15:2). Those
branches taken away are cast "into the fire, and they are
burned" (John 15:6). Jesus explained the twofold purpose of
His disciples bearing fruit, "By this My Father is
glorified, that you bear much fruit, and so prove to be My
disciples" (John 15:8). This brings up once again a
question every Christian must ask and examine their lives
with, "Where's the Fruit?" The Christian life is to be one
of labor not loafing, fruit not foliage. Is your life
producing for the Lord or are you just putting off the
Lord?
Christians who would walk out of a restaurant that cheats
its customers of the meat in their hamburger, will short
change the Lord's service. If you set out tomato plants in
the Spring, you expect tomatoes come summer. If all you
received was sucker vines, its doubtful you would leave
those plants taking up space in your garden for the rest of
the year.
Jesus cursed a fruitless fig tree. "And seeing a lone fig
tree by the road, He came to it, and found nothing on it
except leaves only; and He said to it 'No longer shall
there ever be any fruit from you' and at once the fig tree
withered" (Matt. 21:19). If Jesus would not tolerate a
fruitless fig tree, will He tolerate a fruitless
Christian?