Remain

  • The Effect of Love

    Jesus says “If you keep my commands, you will remain in my love.” The moment we hear the word commands, we think of rules — of performance, of things to prove. But John Calvin saw it clearly: obedience is not the cause of His love toward us. It is the effect. We do not obey to earn His love. We obey because we are already living in it. The love always comes first — and a life rooted in that love produces obedience the way a branch produces fruit: not by straining, but by staying.

  • He Shapes the Asker

    Jesus says “ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you” — but the condition comes first: remain in me, and let my words remain in you. This is not a blank cheque. It is something better. The longer His word lives in you, the more it does what it was always designed to do: quietly reshape what you wish for. The genie gives you what you ask for and disappears. Jesus shapes the asker.

  • The Weight of Choice

    Jesus is not threatening in John 15:6. He is stating a consequence. The fire He describes is not hellfire — in a first-century vineyard, dead grapevine branches had one use: kindling. The warning is not about damnation. It is about uselessness. A branch that stops remaining in the vine stops producing anything it was made for. The question is quiet, and it is daily: am I drawing life from the vine — or running on my own reserves?

  • You Are the Branches

    Jesus says “I am the vine; you are the branches” — and underneath it, I hear something else: I am God. And you are not. That heart posture is not just for crisis moments. It is meant to be the ground we walk on every single day. A branch does not struggle to produce fruit. It simply stays — and fruit is the natural result of remaining in Him.

  • Made to Stay

    The Greek word for “remain” is menō — to stay, to dwell, to make your home somewhere. Jesus uses it four times in one verse. He is not filling space. He is pressing a point. And here is the thing: we were not made to drift. God walked with Adam in the garden every day — that was the original design. Jesus is not asking us to do something new. He is calling us back to what we were always made for.