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Lessons from the Garden pt. 4
Lessons from the Garden pt. 4
This past week, I was once again perched upon my porch as I periodically do in the wee hours of the pre-dawn, pondering and praying, wondering how to precisely bring our Lessons from the Garden to a perfect and permanent pause.
As I prayed, I poured over the passage in and pondered the purpose of pruning.
Previous pastors have often preached that our heavenly Pater often prunes His people only to pluck from them that which is paltry and pestilential, painting the picture of God’s process of pruning in a negative pigmentation.
And being that we are a pugnacious people, we often pullback, impeding or preventing God’s plan of perfecting our souls.
But I would present to you that we need to praise God for His persistent pruning, for in this perpetual process we find the positive love and nurture of our Father, who only plans what is best for His people.
So, without prolonging the preaching any further, let us proceed with The Perspective of Pruning and then 7 Principles of Pruning.
The Perspective of Pruning
Some of you may be wondering what the heck did I just say.
I have no idea, but I do know this – the idea of pruning often focuses on the removal or cutting away things from our lives.
Technically, that is precisely what pruning is – it is the cutting away of that which is dead, diseased or unproductive.
But, we must keep pruning in proper perspective.
Practically speaking,
We need to look at the pruning process in terms of relationship more than we do in terms of religion.
It’s all about the relationship.
When God desires to cut off that which is sinful, that which is potentially harmful and that which is simply unproductive, which sometimes might be something good, it is all centered on our relationship with Jesus Christ.
Pruning is not just dos and don’ts, but it’s dos and don’ts with a purpose.
Furthermore,
We need to look at the pruning process holistically.
Think body, soul, spirit.
Think physical, mental and spiritual.
It’s in those areas, that God desires to prune that which is sinful, harmful and unproductive.
He desires to cut off anything that prevents us from becoming all that He created us to be and do.
For example, physically there might be a harmful habit or substance that is unhealthy for your body.
If you are not taking care of your body, it will effect what God desires to do in you and through you.
Mentally, you might be holding onto and feeding negative thoughts about yourself or others or even God.
Spiritually, God might be dealing with you on a particular sin, or He might want you to rearrange your schedule for a greater work He has planned.
– because, what happens in one effects the whole.
It’s in those areas, that God desires to prune that which is sinful, harmful and unproductive.
He desires to cut off anything that prevents us from becoming all that He created us to be and do.
For example, physically there might be a harmful habit or substance that is unhealthy for your body.
If you are not taking care of your body, it will effect what God desires to do in you and through you.
Mentally, you might be holding onto and feeding negative thoughts about yourself or others or even God.
Spiritually, God might be dealing with you on a particular sin, or He might want you to rearrange your schedule for a greater work He has planned.
Lastly,
We need to look at the pruning process in terms of lesser / greater.
As we look at pruning relationally and holistically, understand that as God prunes, He will either take away the lesser and replace it with something greater.
In other words, put that down so you can pick that up.
Or, He will take away the lesser so you can dedicate more time and energy to the greater.
You’re carrying 3 items, God says put one down.
Again, perspective is imperative - we must look at pruning relationally, holistically and in terms or lesser/greater.
Now, as we keep those perspectives in mind, I believe there are
7 Principles of Pruning
that I believe God wants us to understand.
I’m not going to spend a lot of time explaining these, but just enough to give us something to consider during the week.
Principle 1) Pruning can be Pricey
Look at verse
- 12 My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you.
13 Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.
Then he said to them all: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.
For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it.
Then he said to them all: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.
For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it.
As we daily surrender our lives to Jesus Christ - and as God prunes, if we allow Him, we will become, as Scripture says, a peculiar people.
We will live as aliens and strangers in this world.
We will look different, behave different, we will talk different.
As we live by faith, God will ask us to do things that do not make sense.
As we daily surrender our lives to Jesus Christ - and as God prunes, if we allow Him, we will become, as Scripture says, a peculiar people.
We will live as aliens and strangers in this world.
We will look different, behave different, we will talk different.
As we live by faith, God will ask us to do things that do not make sense.
Ultimately, being a disciple of Jesus Christ is pricey.
It will cost us our lives, our money, our resources, our time, our energy, our calendars - sometimes it will cost us our family, our friends, our jobs, our comforts etc.
…. to love people in general is difficult.
But as God prunes and calls us to love Him and others unconditionally; to love as Jesus loves; to love the unlovable often comes with a price and we can often get hurt in the process.
Principle 2) Pruning can be Painful
Remember, the goal of pruning is to bear more fruit.
We know that as God prunes, He often cuts away things that we have become accustomed to or perhaps want to hold onto.
And even things that we know are bad for us, can be difficult to let go.
We know that as God prunes, He often cuts away things that we have become accustomed to or perhaps want to hold onto.
And even things that we know are bad for us, can be difficult to let go.
But there are times, when God must cut deep to remove that which is deadly or harmful, that hinder us from reaching our full potential in Christ.
And that deep pruning process can take years and be incredibly painful.
E.G. after I surrendered my first District License in 2000, Susan and I knew that if we were going to have a healthy godly marriage, we would have to talk openly.
We agreed that we could ask each other any question and we would have to answer completely and truthfully.
That is painful.
On top of that, during my 6-year ordination process, the credentials board, every year would ask a question about that event and it would reopen the wound, and bring back the shame and guilt and pain.
Every year I had to relive this and I’m thinking, when will this end?
And I even considered dropping out.
Over time, we realized that God was pruning; He had a plan.
He was stripping away my defenses, exposing things I was trying to hide - not only to heal our marriage and our souls, but so that we could bear fruit.
Pruning can be very painful, but if you keep it in perspective of relationship with a Savior who only wants what is best, you will understand that God is attempting to get rid of the lesser for the greater.
Principle 3) Pruning requires Perception
To truly understand God’s pruning of His people, we must think spiritually.
We must look at events in our lives, good and bad, through a spiritual lens.
If we truly believe in the sovereignty of God, and that He is working with us in every situation for our good, then we cannot live with blinders on.
We must be spiritually perceptive of what is happening in our lives and in the lives of others.
Principle 4) Pruning requires Patience
Principle 4) Pruning requires Patience
- … being confident of this, that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.
Pruning is a lifelong journey of transforming the disciple into Christlikeness, and it calls for a tremendous amount of patience.
tells us to be patient with everyone - that’s patience toward others and toward self.
Pruning is a lifelong journey of transforming the disciple into Christlikeness, and it calls for a tremendous amount of patience.
tells us to be patient with everyone - that’s patience toward others and toward self.
Principle 5) Pruning has a Prize
But whatever were gains to me I now consider loss for the sake of Christ.
What is more, I consider everything a loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things.
I consider them garbage, that I may gain Christ and be found in him ….
Phil.
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