Seventeen Days in the Vine
John 15 Series — Day 18 · A Series in Review
We didn’t plan to spend seventeen days here.
But John 15 has a way of doing that.
When we started on Day 1, it felt like the beginning of a metaphor — Jesus as the Vine, His Father as the Gardener, us as the branches. Simple. Familiar, even, if you’ve grown up around this passage.
It turned out to be a whole theology of life with God.
Seventeen verses. Seventeen days. And somewhere along the way, the passage stopped being something we were studying and started being something we were living inside.
Here’s what those seventeen days covered — and why it matters for everything that comes after.
The Vine and the branches (Days 1–8 · John 15:1–8)
The first eight days were the architecture.
God is the Gardener — not distant, not watching from a distance, but actively working in every life connected to the Vine (Day 1 · Day 2). He prunes — and we learned that the instrument of pruning is often the Word itself, not pain alone, but truth that cuts close (Day 3). To remain in Him isn’t a religious obligation — it’s coming home to what you were always made for (Day 4). We are the branches — not the Vine, not the Gardener (Day 5). That matters. The branch doesn’t generate the fruit. It bears it because it stays connected.
Choosing to drift is real, and the consequences are real (Day 6). But prayer changes when His Word is living in you — it starts to sound less like a wish list and more like an echo of what He’s already doing (Day 7). And the fruit of a life lived close to Him becomes visible — not as performance, but as evidence of where you’ve been spending your time (Day 8).
The fruit of abiding is love (Days 9–17 · John 15:9–17)
The second half of the passage asked the harder question: what does a life of abiding actually produce?
The answer is love. But not a soft, generalised love. A specific, costly love that Jesus redefined entirely.
He said He loves us with the same love the Father has for Him (Day 9). That remaining in His love isn’t a condition to earn — it’s a description of what staying close actually looks like (Day 10). And the goal of all of this is joy — not relief, not success, but a joy so complete it holds even in the Upper Room, hours before the arrest (Day 11).
Then He showed us what love looks like in practice: laying down your life for another (Day 12 · Day 13). He called us friends — not servants kept at arm’s length, but friends who have been let in on everything (Day 14 · Day 15). And He reminded us that this friendship was His initiative before it was ever ours — He chose us, appointed us, set us in place to bear fruit that lasts (Day 16).
Then He closed with the same words He opened with. “This is my command — love one another.” The scholars call that an inclusio — a literary bracket that signals everything between was building toward this one thing (Day 17).
The mark He chose wasn’t doctrine. Wasn’t gifts. Wasn’t ministry output.
It was the love you have for each other.
What this means for everything that follows
From tomorrow, this blog begins moving through the rest of Scripture — Genesis to Revelation. Some days we’ll sit with a single verse. Other days we’ll follow a story, a person, a moment that deserves more room than a chapter boundary allows.
But John 15 doesn’t end. It becomes the lens.
Every person in Scripture is either abiding or drifting. Every promise is for the branch that stays connected to the Vine. Every warning is about what happens when it doesn’t. Abraham, Moses, David, Ruth, Paul — they’re all in this same story. The same Gardener. The same Vine. The same invitation that has never changed.
That’s what the “John 15 thread” is at the bottom of each post from here. Not a forced overlay. Not a formula. Just the most honest framework I know for reading what a life with God actually looks like — from the very first garden to the very last page.
You know the framework now. You’ve walked through it slowly, day by day.
Now we take it everywhere.
Stay close to the Vine. Trust the Gardener.
— Prasad
This post is part of the John 15 Series — seventeen devotionals through John 15:1–17, the passage Jesus gave us on abiding. From Day 19, the blog moves through all of Scripture with the same lens.
