A WINE OF DELIGHT TO OTHERS
I
enjoy listening to my friend’s stories every time I visit him at his
vineyard in Australia. I am always amazed at his passion for good and
well-maintained vines. He understands the need to prune well and to
destroy the vines that are of no use for the produce. You can see
sadness in his eyes at the waste of dead vines that produce nothing.
Jesus is knowledgeable about His heavenly Father. The Father is the
Vinedresser, the one who takes care of the vineyards, and Jesus Himself
is the true vine. Any branch that bears no fruit, He cuts away. This is
very important for the vinedresser because a fruitless branch can easily
spread disease and spoil the goodness of the vine. The pruning bears
more fruit. If a good branch remains on the vine, good fruit is produced
— luscious and juicy, sweet, full grapes! Using this analogy, Jesus
goes further to say that you and I are the branches. If we remain
connected to the vine, we produce good fruit, in plenty to the extent we
remain in the
vine. A diseased branch is collected and thrown into the fire.
See how Jesus desires to connect with us through an intimate
relationship. Our oneness with Him produces fruit. Jesus is the one who
produces the fruit within if we obey Him. The fruit He talks about is a
life of goodness, righteousness and justice. Healthy, good and tasty
fruit comes from abiding in Him and listening to His words and doing His
will. The grapes are then removed from the branches, harvested and
crushed so as to produce tasty wine served for the pleasure of all. We
are to be like those grapes, harvested and crushed through our trials
and triumphs so as to produce the wine of our lives, spreading joy and
love to those we meet. As someone once said, what
can one lousy grape do? Imagine, as a lousy grape, you can produce cheer
and delight in many lives around you. Fr. Brian Steele, MGL
REFLECTION
QUESTIONS: Are you connected to the Lord? Do you need cleansing from
the disease of sinfulness, bad habits and evil intent?
Lord, may I abide in You and ask of You the grace to bear good fruit in plenty. Amen.
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DIDACHE (dee-da-ke), the Greek word for teaching. It wishes to encourage the use of Sacred Scriptures among Catholics. It also wishes to reach the entire Christian people.
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