Is the Christian life really about production? If you read
my last post, I hope you agree that the answer is a resounding "yes". Jesus said that producing fruit brings glory to the Father and proves the
reality of discipleship (see John 15:7-8). He also taught that we would know
the quality of people by the fruit of their lives. Fruit is the metric by
which a follower of Christ can differentiate a good leader from a bad one (Matthew
7:16-20).
If producing is Jesus’ idea, why are we so afraid of it? I
think instinctively we are afraid of the unhealthy counterfeits of the
production mindset. Production can turn toxic when
either one of two attitudes is present. When that happens we end up far from the production that Jesus was looking for.
First comes when we see the production of fruit as a means to earn favor
with God or with man. When that attitude exists it undermines the very nature
of grace. Dallas Willard once said, “Grace is not opposed to effort, it is
opposed to earning. Earning is an attitude. Effort is an action. Grace, you
know, does not just have to do with forgiveness of sins alone”. God loves us as
much as he ever will. Our production does not impact his love for us in any
way. Production may earn greater favor with man, but if that is your motivating
factor, you may want to ask yourself how much you are in touch with God’s love
for you.
The second problem comes when we attempt to produce fruit by
our own effort. In the great passage about bearing fruit, Jesus says, “apart
from me, you can do nothing”. (See John 15:5). Self-effort to produce fruit
often leads to a lack of transparency. It is like buying
plastic fruit and taping them to a tree in order to make it look good.
According to Jesus, our self-effort ought to be in our focus to abide in Him as
a branch abides in the vine. Fruit comes as a result of a dynamic, abiding
relationship with Jesus. I’ll write more about that next time.