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Thursday, September 08, 2011

The Purifying Work of Trials in the Life of a Christian — J.C. Ryle


“…every branch that bears fruit He prunes, that it may bear more fruit.” — John 15:2b

J.C. Ryle,

God will often increase the holiness of true Christians by His providential dealings with them. “Every branch,” it is written, “that bears fruit, He prunes, that it may bear more fruit.”

The meaning of this language is clear and plain. Just as the gardener prunes and cuts back the branches of a fruitful vine, in order to make them more fruitful, so does God purify and sanctify believers by the circumstances of life in which He places them.

Trial, to speak plainly, is the instrument by which our Father in heaven makes Christians more holy. By trial He calls out their passive graces, and proves whether they can suffer His will as well as do it. By trial He weans them from the world, draws them to Christ, drives them to the Bible and prayer, shows them their own hearts, and makes them humble. This is the process by which He “prunes” them, and makes them more fruitful. The lives of the saints in every age, are the best and truest comment on the text. Never, hardly, do we find an eminent saint, either in the Old Testament or the New, who was not purified by suffering, and, like His Master, a “man of sorrows.”


Let us learn to be patient in the days of darkness, if we know anything of vital union with Christ. Let us remember the doctrine of the passage before us, and not murmur and complain because of trials. Our trials are not meant to do us harm, but good. God chastens us “for our profit, that we may be partakers of His holiness.” (Heb. 12:10.) Fruit is the thing that our Master desires to see in us, and He will not spare the pruning knife if He sees we need it. In the last day we shall see that all was well done. (excerpted from: commentary on John 15:1-6 in Expository Thoughts on the Gospels: St. John by J.C. Ryle)

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