“Correcting Pride to Be Fruitful”
Prov. 3:12; John 15:1-8
SUBJECT: CORRECTIONS ADVERSITY COMPELS US TO MAKE
THEME: Understanding God’s design to develop and transform us encourages us to respond favorably toward our troubles. Clearly God desires that we humble ourselves to his will. When troubles come, we must examine our hearts for prideful attitudes and correct them to continue to bear spiritual fruit.
RELEVANCY:
Nothing compels us to take
inventory and make spiritual changes like troubles. When facing adversity, it is important to look inward to
see what corrections should be made to truly stay on course with the Lord’s will.
Certainly, we must move forward in growth, and trouble is God’s tool to encourage us along. Therefore, we need to understand HOW to respond to troubles for spiritual benefit.
INTRODUCTION:
The Lord Always Requires His Beloved Children
to Make Changes in at Least Four Areas.
The
Lord insists that we:
A) conquer pride and humble ourselves to His
will.
B) come to the place where we hate sin and
purge ourselves of evil.
C) sift our friendships so that they are in
keeping with His plan for our lives.
D) adjust our priorities so that we place highest value on the things of God and, in turn, adopt new habits of behavior based on right priorities.
Sometimes Pride, Sin, Harmful Relationships,
and Wrong Priorities Are So Deeply Embedded Within Us That We Can Hardly
Recognize Them in Ourselves. During such dangerous
blindness we need God’s help. Today let’s concentrate more on correcting our
attitude of pride to be more fruitful.
MESSAGE:
I.
WHAT MOTIVATES THE LORD TO CORRECT OUR PRIDE?
Proverbs 3:12, For whom the Lord loveth he correcteth; even as a father the son in whom he delighteth.
God out of love for us seeks to make us more like Christ using trouble. A prideful reaction to trouble would likely involve defensiveness, stubbornness, or even denial. Instead of accepting God’s help or acknowledging our mistake, our ego-driven response often leads to deflecting blame, dismissing constructive feedback, or masking vulnerability with anger and a false sense of superiority.
Some common
carnal and prideful behaviors may include:
- Blame Shifting: Refusing to take accountability by
shifting responsibility onto others or the situation.
- Rejecting God’s Help: Stubbornly refusing assistance from
the Lord out of a fear of appearing weak or needy.
- Antagonism and Defensiveness: Responding to God’s
correction with hostility, irritability, or sarcasm to protect one's
self-image.
- Doubling Down: Committing deeper to a flawed course of action just to prove oneself right.
We only prolong the trouble with such reactions and guarantee its reoccurrence! Even when we become complacent and due to His great love, the Lord may permit troubles to come our way to jostle us forward in our spiritual walk. If we begin to walk just one degree away from the truth—in pride we will soon find ourselves a long way from the path of righteousness the Lord intended.
OUR LORD IS MOTIVATED TO CORRECT US SO THAT
WE BEAR MORE FRUIT.
Another reason the Lord corrects us is that we may be fruitful. Jesus taught this point using the analogy of a vine and its branches:
John 15:1-8, I am the true vine, and my Father is the husbandman. [2] Every branch in me that beareth not fruit he taketh away: and every branch that beareth fruit, he purgeth it, that it may bring forth more fruit. [3] Now ye are clean through the word which I have spoken unto you. [4] Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine; no more can ye, except ye abide in me. [5] I am the vine, ye are the branches: He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit: for without me ye can do nothing. [6] If a man abide not in me, he is cast forth as a branch, and is withered; and men gather them, and cast them into the fire, and they are burned. [7] If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you. [8] Herein is my Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit; so shall ye be my disciples.
Our Lord taught that believers must stay intimately connected to Him to be spiritually productive. Christ is the true source of spiritual life, God the Father shapes and nurtures believers, and bearing “fruit” represents exhibiting holy character and beneficial activities. This brings ‘glory’ to God! Accordingly, what can we learn….
1. A Diligent Farmer Works Hard to
Prepare the Plants to Bear Fruit.
Vs 1-2
God, our heavenly Father, is the “husbandman” or vinedresser—farmer. As the Gardener, He cultivates the Vine and the branches to achieve their best productivity; a grapevine needs the attention of an insightful gardener. Wild vines are rather unproductive. God’s role of producing growth is somethings the Bible’s repeatedly portrayal. (1 Cor 3:6; Col 2:19).
A. The
Father Prunes Us.
John 15:2, Every branch in me that beareth not fruit he taketh away: and every branch that beareth fruit, he purgeth it, that it may bring forth more fruit.
1. Pruning
is a Continuous Matter.
He will continue to prune us—so that everything in our lives bears fruit or, in other words, is beneficial to his eternal purposes. Vs 2
2.
Pruning is a Painful Matter.
Whatever he cuts away from our lives, even though it may involve the pain of adversity or trial, is for our benefit. It's dead wood as far as the Lord is concerned, and dead wood occupies space—or in the case of our lives, our time and energy—that could be occupied by fruit-bearing activities.
I once played basketball religiously; my friends and I would play several “pick-up” games every evening after work. It was normal to play seven days a week for at least 2 hours each evening at the gym. I really loved the game and could play well! But when I was saved, I could not afford to spend as much time at the gym as I uses to. I could not be faithful to the Lord’s House and play Sunday morning B-Ball also. Further, I could not build a solid relationship with my wife if I were playing basketball every evening after work. I could not involve myself in church visitation activities and our own neighborhood German ministry if I continued to play basketball every evening. God ‘purged’ my life of many aspects of basketball so that my time and energies could be used to share the gospel, learn about the Lord Jesus, and to serve other believers. My life became more ‘fruitful’ for Christ because the Father as the farmer cut away excess—wasted time and energy—in my life to enable me to be more fruitful for His Kingdom.
B. The
Father Focuses Us. John 15:2
The act of pruning appears harsh at times, but so necessary. The farmer cuts back the lush, growing branches just as they are about to flower. But all of this is done for the ultimate good and benefit of all involved.
1. From
Good to Better.
The wise gardener knows that good must sometimes be sacrificed for better. Grape branches can grow very fast and very long (twelve to twenty feet). But as they develop length and size, they use resources that could be channeled into making fruit. Pruning focuses the growth and energy of the plant. A lush vine with little fruit has failed its purpose.
Our Heavenly Father is never nearer to you than when He is pruning you. Sometimes He cuts away the dead wood that might cause trouble; but often He cuts off the living tissue that is robbing you of spiritual vigor. Pruning does not simply mean spiritual surgery that removes what is bad. It can also mean cutting away the good and the better so that we might enjoy the best. Yes, pruning hurts, but it also helps. We may not enjoy it, but we need it.
2. From
Believers to Disciples. Jn. 15:7-8
God’s pruning of our lives can be painful. He may limit or
remove achievements, objects, and abilities. These may not be wrong in
themselves, but God knows they will detract from our fruitfulness. We must not
resent God's pruning. Instead, God's discipline should cause us to turn to him
with renewed desire to be productive.
Furthermore, the Lord says that in abiding in him and his word, and in bearing fruit, we are his disciples.
2. Our Diligent Father Invests Real
Energy to Prepare Believers to Bear Fruit.
Just as the pruning of vines is important to their fruitfulness, so the Lord's correction is necessary for us to accomplish our God-given purpose in life and to find deep inner fulfillment.
A.
Rejoice in the Father’s Thoughtful Pruning. Jn. 15:11
Rather than shudder at the thought of the Lord's pruning, we should rejoice. We are about to be liberated of all dead weight and falsehood that may keep us from blessings.
ARE YOU ATTACHED?
Many people try to be good, honest people who do what is right. But Jesus says that the only way to live a truly good life is to stay close to him, like a branch attached to a vine. Apart from Christ our efforts are unfruitful. Are you receiving the nourishment and life offered by Christ, the Vine? If not, you are missing the key to living the Christian life.
The greatest judgment God could bring to a believer would be to leave him alone, let him have his own way. Because God loves us, He “prunes” us and encourages us to bear more fruit for His glory (Jn. 15:8). If the branches could speak, they would confess that the pruning process hurts; but they would also rejoice that they will be able to produce more and better fruit.
B.
Respond Complicitly to the Father’s Purging.
How does the Father prune us?
1.
The Word Cleanses Us.
Sometimes He simply uses the Word to convict and cleanse us. (The word translated “purge” in John 15:2 is the same as “clean” in John 13:10. See also Eph 5:26-27. So, the original Greek word for “purgeth” means pruning or cleansing. Even when a branch is producing fruit, God will trim and shape it so it can produce more fruit. Getting into the Word and allowing it to cleanse our thoughts, priorities, goals, motivations, dreams, skills, ideals, and values, is behaving with alignment with God.
Beloved, God's refining process in the life of a true believer, while it can involve the Bible, trials, discipline, and challenges, this pruning removes distractions, bad habits, and parasitic extensions that drain spiritual energy. Though the process can be painful, it is an act of divine love intended to build spiritual maturity and character.
2.
The Father Corrects Us.
Sometimes He must chasten us (Heb 12:1-11). At the time, it hurts when He removes something precious from us; but as the “spiritual crop” is produced, we see that the Father knew what He was doing all along.
The more we abide in Christ, the more fruit we bear; and the more fruit we bear, the more the Father has to prune us so that the quality keeps up with the quantity. Left to itself, the branch might produce many clusters, but they will be inferior in quality. God is glorified by a bigger crop that is also a better crop.
CONCLUSION:
Realizing God desires to correct our attitude of pride, focuses our self-examinations and identifies changes we need to make to be fruitful and more fruitful. We can really live for God’s glory by being more fruitful!
Remember, if we begin to walk just one degree away from the
truth—in pride, we will soon find ourselves a long way from the path of
righteousness the Lord desires us. Are you dealing with troubles? Isn’t it time
to take a look inward to see what you may need to correct? Are you still on
course with what the Lord has for you? I know from personal experience this
requires humbling ourselves to embrace God’s will more completely. Though I am
ashamed of it, I have even had brief periods of anger with God because of the
level of pain and difficulty…. Still, we must insist on moving forward in the
Lord trusting Him to guide us to greater fruitfulness. The goal is always growth
in Christ. Trouble is God’s tool to encourage us along. Therefore, respond to
Him with cooperation, submission, and compliance to realize God’s intended
fruitfulness.

Understanding God’s design to develop and transform us encourages us to respond favorably toward our troubles. Clearly God desires that we humble ourselves to his will. When troubles come, we must examine our hearts for prideful attitudes and correct them to continue to bear spiritual fruit. https://maxevangel.blogspot.com/2026/06/correcting-pride-to-be-fruitful.html #Abiding #Correction #Pride #Fruit #Stubborn #MaxEvangel
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