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Andrew Murray

The Cleansing

Andrew Murray emphasizes the necessity of spiritual cleansing and pruning to enhance our fruitfulness in Christ.
Andrew Murray emphasizes the necessity of divine pruning in the life of a believer, using the metaphor of a vine that requires careful cutting to produce abundant fruit. He explains that this cleansing process involves removing not only sin but also the excesses of our own religious activities and self-reliance that can hinder spiritual growth. The more vigorous the growth, the greater the need for pruning, as it allows the believer to focus solely on receiving the life-giving power of the Holy Spirit. Murray encourages believers to embrace this process of cleansing, trusting that it will lead to greater fruitfulness in their lives. He concludes with a prayer for God to remove all that hinders true devotion to Christ.

Text

Every Branch That Beareth Fruit, He Cleanseth It, That It May Bear More Fruit--John 15.2

There are two remarkable things about the vine. There is not a plant of which the fruit has so much spirit in it, of which spirit can be so abundantly distilled as the vine. And there is not a plant which so soon runs into wild wood, that hinders its fruit, and therefore needs the most merciless pruning. I look out of my window here on large vineyards: the chief care of the vinedresser is the pruning. You may have a trellis vine rooting so deep in good soil that it needs neither digging, nor manuring, nor watering: pruning it cannot dispense with, if it is to bear good fruit. Some tree needs occasional pruning; others bear perfect fruit without any: the vine must have it. And so our Lord tells us, here at the very outset of the parable, that the one work the Father does to the branch that bears fruit is: He cleanseth it, that it may bear more fruit.

Consider a moment what this pruning or cleansing is. It is not the removal of weeds or thorns, or anything from without that may hinder the growth. No; it is the cutting off of the long shoots of the previous year, the removal of something that comes from within, that has been produced by the life of the vine itself. It is the removal of something that is a proof of the vigor of its life; the more vigorous the growth has been, the greater the need for the pruning. It is the honest, healthy wood of the vine that has to be cut away. And why? Because it would consume too much of the sap to fill all the long shoots of last year's growth: the sap must be saved up and used for fruit alone. The branches, sometimes eight and ten feet long, are cut down close to the stem, and nothing is left but just one or two inches of wood, enough to bear the grapes. It is when everything that is not needful for fruit-bearing has been relentlessly cut down, and just as little of the branches as possible has been left, that full, rich fruit may be expected.

What a solemn, precious lesson! It is not to sin only that the cleansing of the Husbandman here refers. It is to our own religious activity, as it is developed in the very act of bearing fruit. It is this that must be cut down and cleansed away. We have, in working for God, to use our natural gifts of wisdom, or eloquence, or influence, or zeal. And yet they are ever in danger of being unduly developed, and then trusted in. And so, after each season of work, God has to bring us to the end of ourselves, to the consciousness of the helplessness and the danger of all that is of man, to feel that we are nothing. All that is to be left of us is just enough to receive the power of the life-giving sap of the Holy Spirit. What is of man must be reduced to its very lowest measure. All that is inconsistent with the most entire devotion to Christ's service must be removed. The more perfect the cleansing and cutting away of all that is of self, the less of surface over which the Holy Spirit is to be spread, so much the more intense can be the concentration of our whole being, to be entirely at the disposal of the Spirit. This is the true circumcision of the heart, the circumcision of Christ. This is the true crucifixion with Christ, bearing about the dying of the Lord Jesus in the body.

Blessed cleansing, God's own cleansing! How we may rejoice in the assurance that we shall bring forth more fruit.

O our holy Husbandman, cleanse and cut away all that there is in us that would make a fair show, or could become a source of self-confidence and glorying. Lord, keep us very low, that no flesh may glory in Thy presence. We do trust Thee to do Thy work.

Sermon Outline

  1. I
    • Introduction to the vine and its significance
    • The necessity of pruning for fruitfulness
    • The role of the vinedresser
  2. II
    • Understanding the nature of cleansing
    • Distinction between external and internal cleansing
    • The importance of cutting away excess growth
  3. III
    • The relationship between pruning and spiritual fruitfulness
    • The danger of relying on our own abilities
    • The call to humility and dependence on the Holy Spirit
  4. IV
    • The process of spiritual cleansing
    • The significance of being reduced to our lowest measure
    • The outcome of true cleansing: more fruit
  5. V
    • The role of self-examination in spiritual growth
    • The importance of yielding to God's work
    • Conclusion: rejoicing in God's cleansing

Key Quotes

“Every Branch That Beareth Fruit, He Cleanseth It, That It May Bear More Fruit.” — Andrew Murray
“The more perfect the cleansing and cutting away of all that is of self, the less of surface over which the Holy Spirit is to be spread.” — Andrew Murray
“Blessed cleansing, God's own cleansing! How we may rejoice in the assurance that we shall bring forth more fruit.” — Andrew Murray

Application Points

  • Reflect on areas in your life where God may be calling for cleansing and pruning.
  • Embrace humility by recognizing the limitations of your own abilities in bearing fruit.
  • Trust in God's process of cleansing as a means to deepen your relationship with Him.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does pruning symbolize in the sermon?
Pruning symbolizes the necessary cleansing and cutting away of excess growth to enhance spiritual fruitfulness.
How does the speaker define cleansing?
Cleansing is defined as the removal of internal growth that hinders our relationship with God, not just the removal of sin.
What is the ultimate goal of God's cleansing?
The ultimate goal is to enable us to bear more fruit by reducing reliance on our own abilities.
What should we do to prepare for God's cleansing?
We should engage in self-examination and be willing to yield to God's work in our lives.

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