In J.C. Ryle's exposition of Luke 13:6-9, the main theological topic addressed is the relationship between spiritual privilege and the expectation of fruitfulness in the lives of believers. Ryle argues that God, having bestowed rich spiritual blessings upon His people—as seen in Israel and the modern church—rightly anticipates a corresponding response of faith and obedience. He references Scripture such as Micah 7:18, emphasizing God's mercy and patience while simultaneously warning that unfruitfulness under these privileges could lead to severe consequences, including judgment and destruction. The article underscores the doctrinal significance of accountability among believers, reminding them that with great privilege comes great responsibility, thereby calling Christians to examine their lives for evidence of spiritual fruit.
Key Quotes
“Where God gives spiritual privileges He expects proportionate returns.”
“It is a most dangerous thing to be unfruitful under great religious privileges.”
“Never let us forget that to be content with sitting in the congregation and hearing sermons while we bear no fruit in our lives is conduct which is most offensive to God.”
“We have probably not the least conception how much we all owe to God's long-suffering.”
What does the Bible say about being unfruitful as a Christian?
The Bible warns that being unfruitful under great religious privileges can lead to judgment, as illustrated by the parable of the barren fig tree in Luke 13:6-9.
The broader context indicates that this message is not just applicable to the Jewish nation of Jesus’ time but extends to the Christian church today. With access to Scripture, sound doctrine, and the Gospel, Christians are held to a higher standard. Unfruitfulness is a grave danger, reflecting a failure to respond appropriately to God's gifts. Hence, churches filled with such members face the risk of being cut down, much like the fig tree, unless they genuinely seek to bear fruit for God’s glory.
Luke 13:6-9
How do we know God's mercy is important for Christians?
God's mercy is crucial for Christians, as it highlights His long-suffering and patience, especially evident in the parable of the fig tree.
God's mercy is not only a display of His goodness but also underscores the profound debt that all humanity owes to Him. It is what allows people to continue living and gaining opportunities for redemption even amidst unfruitfulness. Reflecting on the parable, we recognize that without God's mercy, many would be justly condemned. This grace is often overlooked, yet it serves as a vital motivation for Christians to live fruitfully in response to God's kindness and patience.
Micah 7:18, Luke 13:6-9
Why is fruitfulness important for Christians?
Fruitfulness is vital for Christians as it signifies true faith and obedience, essential for fulfilling God's expectations of His people.
The notion of being fruitful is not about achieving perfection but about demonstrating evidence of a changed life through faith in Christ. Such fruit can manifest in various forms, such as love, joy, peace, and good works that glorify God (Galatians 5:22-23). Christians who fail to bear fruit face severe consequences, much like the fig tree, which serves as a sobering reminder of the connection between privilege and responsibility. Thus, fruitfulness is not merely an option, but a paramount indicator of a vibrant Christian life.
Luke 13:6-9, Galatians 5:22-23
THE BARREN FIG TREE.
The parable we have now read is peculiarly humbling and heart-searching. The Christian who can hear it and not feel sorrow and shame as he looks at the state of Christendom, must be in a very unhealthy state of soul.
We learn first from this passage that where God gives spiritual privileges He expects proportionate returns.
Our Lord teaches this lesson by comparing the Jewish Church of His day to a "fig tree planted in a vineyard." This was exactly the position of Israel in the world. They were separated from other nations by the Mosaic laws and ordinances, no less than by the situation of their land. They were favored with revelations of God, which were granted to no other people. Things were done for them that were never done for Egypt, or Nineveh, or Babylon, or Greece, or Rome. It was only just and right that they should bear fruit to God's praise. It might reasonably be expected that there would be more faith, and penitence, and holiness, and godliness in Israel than among the heathen. This is what God looked for. The owner of the fig tree "came seeking fruit."
But we must look beyond the Jewish Church if we mean to get the full benefit of the parable before us. We must look to the Christian churches. They have light, and truth, and doctrines, and precepts, of which the heathen never hear. How great is their responsibility! Is it not just and right that God should expect from them "fruit?"
We must look to our own hearts. We live in a land of Bibles, and liberty, and Gospel preaching. How vast are the advantages we enjoy compared to the Chinese and Hindoo! Never let us forget that God expects from us "fruit."
These are solemn truths. Few things are so much forgotten by men as the close connection between privilege and responsibility. We are all ready enough to eat the fat and drink the sweet, and bask in the sunshine of our position both as Christians and Englishmen—and even to spare a few pitying thoughts for the half naked savage who bows down to stocks and stones. But we are very slow to remember that we are accountable to God for all we enjoy; and that to whomsoever much is given, of them much will be required. Let us awake to a sense of these things. We are the most favored nation upon earth. We are in the truest sense "a fig tree planted in a vineyard." Let us not forget that the great Master looks for "fruit."
We learn, secondly, from this passage, that it is a most dangerous thing to be unfruitful under great religious privileges.
The manner in which our Lord conveys this lesson to us is deeply impressive. He shows us the owner of the barren fig tree complaining that it bore no fruit—"These three years I come seeking fruit and find none." He describes him as even ordering the destruction of the tree as a useless cumberer of the ground—"Cut it down; why cumbers it the ground?" He brings in the dresser of the vineyard pleading for the fig tree, that it may be spared a little longer— "Lord, let it alone this year also." And He concludes the parable by putting these dreadful words into the vinedresser's mouth—"If it bears fruit, well— and if not, then after that you shall cut it down."
There is a plain warning here to all professing churches of Christ. If their ministers do not teach sound doctrine, and their members do not live holy lives, they are in imminent peril of destruction. God is every year observing them, and taking account of all their ways. They may abound in ceremonial religion. They may be covered with the leaves of forms, and services, and ordinances. But if they are destitute of the fruits of the Spirit, they are reckoned useless cumberers of the ground. Except they repent, they will be cut down. It was so with the Jewish Church forty years after our Lord's ascension. It has been so since with the African Churches. It will be so yet with many others, it may be feared, before the end comes. The axe is lying near the root of many an unfruitful Church. The sentence will yet go forth, "Cut it down."
There is a plainer warning still in the passage for all 'unconverted professing Christians'. There are many in every congregation who hear the Gospel, who are literally hanging over the brink of the pit. They have lived for years in the best part of God's vineyard, and yet borne no fruit. They have heard the Gospel preached faithfully for hundreds of Sundays, and yet have never embraced it, and taken up the cross, and followed Christ. They do not perhaps run into open sin. But they do nothing for God's glory. There is nothing positive about their religion. Of each of these the Lord of the vineyard might say with truth, "I come these many years seeking fruit on this tree and find none. Cut it down. It cumbers the ground."
There are myriads of respectable professing Christians in this plight. They have not the least idea how near they are to destruction. Never let us forget that to be content with sitting in the congregation and hearing sermons, while we bear no fruit in our lives, is conduct which is most offensive to God. It provokes Him to cut us off suddenly, and that without remedy.
We learn, lastly, from this parable, what an infinite debt we all owe to God's mercy and Christ's intercession. It seems impossible to draw any other lesson from the earnest pleading of the dresser of the vineyard—"Lord, let it alone this year also." Surely we see here, as in a glass, the loving kindness of God, and the mediation of Christ.
Mercy has been truly called the darling attribute of God. Power, justice, purity, holiness, wisdom, unchangeableness, are all parts of God's character, and have all been manifested to the world in a thousand ways, both in His works and in His word. But if there is one part of His perfections which He is pleased to exhibit to man more clearly than another, beyond doubt that part is mercy. He is a God that "delights in mercy." (Micah 7:18.)
Mercy founded on the mediation of a coming Savior, was the cause why Adam and Eve were not cast down to hell, in the day that they fell. Mercy has been the cause why God has borne so long with this sin-laden world, and not come down to judgment. Mercy is even now the cause why unconverted sinners are so long spared, and not cut off in their sins. We have probably not the least conception how much we all owe to God's long-suffering. The last day will prove that all mankind were debtors to God's mercy, and Christ's mediation. Even those who are finally lost will discover to their shame, that it was "of the Lord's mercies they were not consumed" long before they died. As for those who are saved, covenant-mercy will be all their plea.
And now are we fruitful or unfruitful? This, after all, is the question that concerns us most. What does God see in us year after year? Let us take heed so to live that He may see in us fruit.
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