Pruning with Purpose   

by Candy Arrington @CandyArrington

This is to my Father’s glory, that you bear much fruit, showing yourselves to be my disciples.                                                                                                                 John 15:8 NIV

Several years ago, a Master Gardner friend gave me two tomato plants. She’d given me some in the past, but I always managed to kill them before they bore fruit. This time, I decided to tend the vines. Novel idea! I watered and fertilized and watched. The vines grew lush and verdant. Although small green orbs appeared, well into the summer, I still had no ripe tomatoes.

One day, as I pondered the reason for non-ripening fruit, I heard my father’s words echo through the years, “You’ll never have ripe tomatoes if you don’t prune the suckers.”

When I was a child, my father planted tomato vines every summer in our backyard, and we harvested and ate delicious tomatoes well into the fall. Now, as I looked at my vines, I saw many non-producing shoots. I began pruning and soon discovered many more tomatoes than I realized hidden by the foliage. Although full and green, those branches were preventing the sun from reaching the tomatoes. And the nutrients in the vines were being used up by new growth rather than going toward enlarging and ripening the fruit.

As I snipped away the excess, I heard the words of my heavenly Father, too:

“I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener. He cuts off every branch of mine that doesn’t bear fruit, and he prunes the branches that do bear fruit so they will produce even more fruit” (John 15:1-2 NIV).

When I finished pruning, the vines were not as pleasing to the eye. In fact, they looked a little scraggly and sparse, but now, the sunlight was able to reach the tomatoes. Within days, we were enjoying delicious, ripe tomatoes.

Sometimes, we have so many things cluttering our lives the Son can’t get to us. We’re oblivious to the things that suck time and attention from spiritual growth, yet wonder why our prayers are ineffective and we feel far from God. Our activities may seem good, and our lives full and productive, but underneath, our spiritual fruit is dying on the vine.

We glorify the Father when we bear fruit, and in order to produce fruit, pruning has to take place.   Perhaps today is a good day to begin a self-pruning process. Is social media, or some other time-waster, sucking valuable hours from relationships with your family or your time with the Lord? Are unnecessary activities robbing you of spiritual growth and the ability to hear God’s voice? Is a cherished sin keeping your from deeper intimacy with the Father, or a negative attitude preventing you from recognizing and thanking God for your blessings?

Ask God to help you identify and prune the suckers in your life. It may take some time and effort, but soon you’ll enjoy a closer relationship with the Father and begin bearing spiritual fruit.

TWEETABLE
Pruning with Purpose – insight from @CandyArrington on @AriseDailyDevo (Click to Tweet)

Candy ArringtonAbout the author: Candy Arrington has written hundreds of articles and devotionals, often on tough topics. Her books include AFTERSHOCK: Help, Hope, and Healing in the Wake of Suicide (B & H) and When Your Aging Parent Needs Care: Practical Help for This Season of Life (Harvest House). Candy is a native South Carolinian, who gains writing inspiration from historic architecture, vintage photographs, nature, and the application of Biblical principles to everyday life. Learn more about Candy at www.CandyArrington.com, where you can also read her blog, Forward Motion: Moving Beyond What Holds You Back.

Candy’s book, When Your Aging Parent Needs Care, is a help to those who face the special effort of caring for a parent. It provides support and direction to enable the caregiver to be spiritually, physically, and emotionally prepared for the day to day challenges they face.

Join the conversation: What is it in your life that could use a purposeful pruning?

3 thoughts on “Pruning with Purpose   

  1. I love this metaphor so much. There are so many good things in my life that are keeping me from writing what I want to write–need to write–and it’s hard to cut them out. I’m praying today that God will give me wisdom to know which things are the “suckers” and then help me to give them less of a priority in my life. Thanks for this, Candy!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Oh such a good reminder. We have to be intentional in choosing what we allow to fill our time. Sometimes even good things need to be cut if they are keeping us from the time needed in devoted fellowship with God for us to produce much fruit.

    Liked by 1 person

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