The Effect of Love
John 15 Series — Day 10 | John 15:10
📖 TODAY’S SCRIPTURE
John 15:10 (NIV) “If you keep my commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commands and remain in his love.”
REFLECTION
“If.”
We have seen this word before in John 15. Jesus keeps returning to it — and every time, it carries the same weight. This is still a choice. The result of what follows depends on what I decide.
But this time, Jesus adds something we have not seen yet: keep my commands.
And I want to be honest about what happens in me when I read that. The moment I hear the word commands, something in me shifts. I think of rules. I think of a list. I think of performance — of things I need to do, boxes I need to tick, standards I need to meet. Because that is how commands work in the world. Someone with authority gives an instruction. You obey it. Or you don’t.
But that is not what Jesus is doing here.
Q1: When you hear the word “commands,” what is your first instinct — rules to follow, or a relationship to grow in? Where did that instinct come from?
Not authority, but pattern
Jesus is not standing over His disciples saying: I am the one with all the power — you had better obey me. That is not the posture of this passage. He is not commanding obedience as a show of authority. He is inviting His disciples into a pattern — the same pattern He Himself lives by.
Look at the structure of the verse. If you keep my commands, you will remain in my love — just as I have kept my Father’s commands and remain in his love. Jesus is not asking His disciples to do something He has not already done. The Son’s relationship with the Father is the model. And in that relationship, Jesus keeps His Father’s commands and remains — stays home — in His Father’s love. He is not pointing down at His disciples from a place of power. He is saying: come into the same thing I have.
The effect, not the cause
Here is the question this verse raises: is Jesus saying that obedience is the price of remaining in His love? Keep the rules and I will keep loving you?
John Calvin answered this clearly. He wrote that “the obedience which believers render to him is not the cause why he continues his love toward us, but is rather the effect of his love.”
Read that again. Obedience is not the cause. It is the effect.
We do not obey in order to earn His love. We obey because we are already living in it. The love comes first — it always has. “We love because he first loved us” (1 John 4:19). And when that love begins to take root in us, our lives begin to look like it. Obedience is not the entry fee into His love. It is the fruit of staying close to the vine.
Q2: Is the obedience in your life right now coming from a place of love and security — or from duty, fear, or trying to prove something?
Love is not a feeling — it is a way of life
We live in a world that has reduced love to a feeling. Something that comes and goes. Something you either have or you don’t. And when the feeling fades, the culture says, you are free to walk away.
But in Scripture, love is not primarily a feeling. It is an action. A direction. A way of living. When Jesus says keep my commands, He is describing what love actually looks like in practice. He is not adding conditions to His affection — He is showing us what a life that is genuinely rooted in His love produces.
And throughout John’s writings — his Gospel, his letters — love and obedience are not two separate things. They are the same reality, seen from different angles. You cannot have genuine love for Jesus without it shaping the way you live. And rule-following without love is just religion. Jesus is inviting us into something altogether different: a life so rooted in His love that obedience flows naturally, the way fruit grows from a branch that stays connected to the vine.
Q3: Where in your life is obedience feeling like a burden rather than a natural overflow? What does that reveal about how close you currently are to the vine?
The next verse
It is worth noting where Jesus goes from here. Verse 11: “I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be full.” Obedience, in Jesus’s mind, does not lead to joylessness. It leads to fullness. The path of remaining — staying connected, living in His love, obeying from that place — is the path of deepest joy.
🌿 REMAIN IN HIM
Take a moment before you move on. This isn’t a to-do. It’s an invitation to stay.
Reflect honestly: Has obedience felt more like a burden or a natural overflow lately? Be honest — not about what you think it should feel like, but what it actually feels like. That answer will tell you something about where you currently are in relation to the vine.
Bring it to Jesus: Sit quietly and say: “Lord, I want to obey You from a place of love — not duty, not fear, not trying to earn what You have already given me. Help me stay so close to You that obedience stops feeling like effort and starts feeling like home.”
Trust the Gardener: A branch does not strain to produce fruit. It simply stays. In the same way, obedience that flows from remaining in His love does not feel like a grinding duty — it feels like the most natural thing in the world. Stay connected. Let the roots go deeper.
🙏 PRAYER
Father, I confess that I have often treated Your commands like a list — something to get through, something to prove I am serious about You. But today I want to understand what Jesus is showing me here. Obedience is not the door into Your love. It is the life that grows from already being in it. Help me to remain so close to You that what You love, I love — and what You call me to, I want. Let my obedience be the effect of Your love in me. Amen.
💡 MEMORY VERSE
1 John 5:3 (NIV) “In fact, this is love for God: to keep his commands. And his commands are not burdensome.”
