Posts Tagged ‘bearing fruit’

Day 184: Acts 3:12-4:4 — Many who heard the message believed

Saturday, July 3rd, 2010

But many who heard the message believed, and the number of men grew to about five thousand. Acts 4:4

It’s not about you.

Have you ever made the most eloquent argument, based on Scripture, driving home all the finer points only to have your “mark” shrug and walk away? “I planted the seed.”

How about just striking up what started out to be a normal, casual conversation but quickly turned to matters of faith — and you don’t remember how it got there? “Apollos watered it.”

It’s about God.

Or have you seen someone study with a friend, then study with a different friend, then days later — perhaps weeks or months or even years — you find out from a brother in another city that this person has given her life to Christ, being baptized in His name, and is now living for Him? “But God made it grow.”

So neither he who plants is nor he who waters is anything, but only God, who makes things grow.1 Corinthians 3:6-7

In Acts chapter 3, Peter got the chance to heal a man who had been crippled from birth (Acts 3:1-10), and beginning with verse 11, the Rock gets a chance to address the crowd with the Gospel message. This is the man who just days ago was speaking in languages unknown to him, and 3,000 were baptized — the same guy who Jesus said He would use to build His church. So if there’s any man on earth short of Jesus Christ Himself who could deliver a message powerful enough to persuade everyone within earshot, certainly it would be Simon Peter.

But not all believed. We’re told “many” believed; we’re not told “all” believed. Indeed, the Word of God is living and active; it is sharper than any double-edged sword (Hebrews 4:12), but we’re called merely to plant and water the seed, which is what Peter did the day he healed the crippled beggar at the temple gate called Beautiful. Not even Peter was called to make the seed grow and produce fruit of the Spirit. Only God can do that.

That’s all we’re called to do — be the best light we can be (Matthew 5:16), produce fruit in keeping with the Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23). So the next time you don’t see immediate growth from a seed you just watered, remember — it’s not about you. And be thankful to the One it is about. Be patient and wait upon the Lord. (Isaiah 40:31)

Day 73: Mark 11:1-26 — A Closer Look…

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

Fig treeOpen your Bible with me to Mark Chapter 11. More specifically, I’d like to concentrate on Mark 11:12-26. The story about the fig tree is probably not new to you. For so many years I struggled with why Jesus was so angry at a tree. Doesn’t the scripture say that figs were not in season? Why would Jesus expect figs to be there? I wouldn’t go into a cotton field in May and expect there to be white bolls waiting to be picked. But if you read the passage a few times, and then look at the story sandwiched between the two encounters with the fig tree….it begins to make sense.

Beginning in verse 12, Jesus is hungry. He sees a fig tree from a distance “in leaf”. Expecting to find fruit, Jesus reaches out only to find that this tree, while appearing to be able to bear fruit, is nothing but leaves and no fruit. Let me stress two items: The purpose of this tree is to bear fruit. Secondly, from a distance, this tree appears to bear fruit. When the reality doesn’t match the purpose….Jesus is disappointed.

Jesus overthrowing the tables in the TempleStay with me here. Read on to Mark 11:15-17. Jesus enters the temple and drives out those that are buying and selling there. He overturns the money changer’s table and the benches of those selling doves. He says, “Is it not written: ’My house will be called a house of prayer for all nations’? But you have made it ‘a den of robbers.’” Let me stress two things: First, the purpose of the temple is to be a place of worship and prayer. Secondly, the reality of the temple doesn’t match purpose….Jesus is angry.

Coming back by the fig tree after leaving the temple, Peter points out that the fig tree has withered (Mark 11:20-21) Read on through Mark 11:22-26 and see that Jesus is telling us that our faith, obedience and action are our fruits to God.

A closer inspection by Jesus found that appearances can be deceiving. A leafy fig tree from a distance gave the false pretense that it would bear fruit. The temple appears to be a holy place but had, in fact, been turned into a “den of robbers”. You have a purpose. When you arose out of the water at your baptism your purpose changed. But does the reality of your life match your purpose? Does mine? Just as a fig tree bears fruit, you too are purposed with bearing fruit. The Master will take a closer look. What will he find?