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We hear often from John’s Gospel during the Easter season, and Jesus’ message to us includes many invitations to abide, rest, and remain in him. The other Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke have Jesus giving us many directions for the actions we should be taking as his followers: feed the hungry, clothe the naked, love your enemies, forgive others repeatedly, turn the other cheek, etc. They are Gospels for “human doings.” John’s Gospel, on the other hand, is a Gospel for “human beings.”
In John, Jesus repeatedly invites his followers to express their discipleship by how they carry themselves-how they are in the world, not what they do in the world. How are we to be in the world? Like a branch on a grape vine, Jesus says. The branch doesn’t do anything to make the grapes; it simply remains connected to the vine and allows itself to be pruned. If the branch stays connected, all it has to do in order to bear fruit is to be open while God works the miracle of creating the grapes.
Jesus is calling us to trust that if we do our primary “work” of remaining in him and allowing him to remain in us, then God’s works will automatically flow through us. If we can be human beings first, then our “doings” will be natural outcomes of that. The invitation for us is to relax into that sense of being and abiding with Jesus.
Questions of the week
• Which do you more naturally gravitate toward in your sense of discipleship: “doing” things or “being” a particular way? Put another way, are you naturally more active or contemplative?
• When you consider abiding with/ remaining with/resting in Jesus, what comes to mind for you? How might you build more time for that into your life?