Christ's Object Lessons
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 17: "Spare it this Year Also"
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God in His Son had been seeking fruit, and had found
none. Israel was a cumberer of the ground. Its very
existence was a curse; for it filled the place in the vineyard
that a fruitful tree might fill. It robbed the world of the
blessings that God designed to give. The Israelites had
misrepresented God among the nations. They were not
merely useless, but a decided hindrance. To a great degree
their religion was misleading, and wrought ruin instead of
salvation.
In the parable the dresser of the vineyard does not
question the sentence that the tree, if it remained fruitless,
should be cut down; but he knows and shares the owner's
interest in that barren tree. Nothing could give him
greater joy than to see its growth and fruitfulness. He
responds to the desire of the owner, saying, "Let it alone
this year also, till I shall dig about it and dung it; and if it
bear fruit, well."
The gardener does not refuse to minister to so unpromising
a plant. He stands ready to give it still greater care. [p. 216] He will make its surroundings most favorable, and will
lavish upon it every attention.
The owner and the dresser of the vineyard are one in
their interest in the fig tree. So the Father and the Son
were one in their love for the chosen people. Christ was
saying to His hearers that increased opportunities would be
given them. Every means that the love of God could devise
would be put in operation that they might become trees of
righteousness, bringing forth fruit for the blessing of the
world.
Jesus did not in the parable tell the result of the
gardener's work. At that point His story was cut short.
Its conclusion rested with the generation that heard His
words. To them the solemn warning was given. "If not,
then after that thou shalt cut it down." Upon them it
depended whether the irrevocable words should be spoken.
The day of wrath was near. In the calamities that had
already befallen Israel, the owner of the vineyard was
mercifully forewarning them of the destruction of the
unfruitful tree.
The warning sounds down along the line to us in this
generation. Are you, O careless heart, a fruitless tree in
the Lord's vineyard? Shall the words of doom erelong be
spoken of you? How long have you received His gifts?
How long has He watched and waited for a return of love?
Planted in His vineyard, under the watchful care of the
gardener, what privileges are yours! How often has the
tender gospel message thrilled your heart! You have taken
the name of Christ, you are outwardly a member of the
church which is His body, and yet you are conscious of no
living connection with the great heart of love. The tide of
His life does not flow through you. The sweet graces of
His character, "the fruits of the Spirit," are not seen in
your life. [p. 217]
The barren tree receives the rain and the sunshine and
the gardener's care. It draws nourishment from the soil.
But its unproductive boughs only darken the ground, so
that fruit-bearing plants cannot flourish in its shadow. So
God's gifts, lavished on you, convey no blessing to the
world. You are robbing others of privileges that, but
for you, might be theirs.
You realize, though it may be but dimly, that you are a
cumberer of the ground. Yet in His great mercy God has
not cut you down. He does not look coldly upon you.
He does not turn away with indifference, or leave you to
destruction. Looking upon you He cries, as He cried so [p. 218] many centuries ago concerning Israel, "How shall I give
thee up, Ephraim? How shall I deliver thee, Israel? . . .
I will not execute the fierceness of Mine anger. I will
not return to destroy Ephraim; for I am God, and not
man." Hosea 11:8, 9. The pitying Saviour is saying
concerning you, Spare it this year also, till I shall dig
about it and dress it.
With what unwearied love did Christ minister to Israel
during the period of added probation. Upon the cross He
prayed, "Father, forgive them; for they know not what
they do." Luke 23:24. After His ascension the gospel was
preached first at Jerusalem. There the Holy Spirit was
poured out. There the first gospel church revealed the
power of the risen Saviour. There Stephen—"his face as
it had been the face of an angel" (Acts 6:15)—bore his
testimony and laid down his life. All that heaven itself could
give was bestowed. "What could have been done more to
My vineyard," Christ said, "that I have not done in it?"
Isa. 5:4. So His care and labor for you are not lessened,
but increased. Still He says, "I the Lord do keep it; I
will water it every moment; lest any hurt it, I will keep it
night and day." Isa. 27:3.
"If it bear fruit, well; and if not, then after that"—
The heart that does not respond to divine agencies
becomes hardened until it is no longer susceptible to the
influence of the Holy Spirit. Then it is that the word is
spoken, "Cut it down; why cumbereth it the ground?"
Today He invites you: "O Israel, return unto the
Lord thy God. . . . I will heal their backsliding, I will
love them freely. . . . I will be as the dew unto Israel;
he shall grow as the lily, and cast forth his roots as
Lebanon. . . . They that dwell under his shadow shall return;
they shall revive as the corn, and grow as the vine.
. . . From Me is thy fruit found." Hosea 14:1-8.
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