Have you ever noticed how easy it is to go through the motions? We wake up, follow our routines, check off our spiritual to-do lists, and convince ourselves we’re doing just fine. But somewhere along the way, without even realizing it, we’ve drifted from what truly matters.
There’s a powerful image that captures this perfectly: imagine cutting a branch from a desert rose plant. At first, the branch still looks vibrant and alive. The colors remain brilliant, the leaves appear healthy, and to any casual observer, nothing seems wrong. But without connection to the root system, without access to nutrients and water, that branch is slowly dying. It might look good on the outside for days or even weeks, but eventually, it will dry up completely.
This is what happens when we lose our connection to the source of life itself.
The Danger of Spiritual Autopilot
Many of us have fallen into what could be called “maintenance ministry”—doing spiritual activities not because we’re genuinely connected to God, but because we’re skilled enough to pull it off. Maybe you can quote Scripture from memory, lead a Bible study, or serve in various capacities at church. These are good things, but they can become dangerous when they’re powered by our own abilities rather than by the Holy Spirit.
The truth is, we can coast for a while on yesterday’s connection. We can operate on overflow, drawing from past experiences with God rather than present intimacy. But here’s the problem: overflow eventually runs out. And if we’re already cracked vessels—which we all are because of sin—that overflow drains even faster.
When we start thinking we’re the source rather than recognizing that God is the source, pressure begins to build in our lives. We carry burdens we were never meant to bear. We stress about outcomes we can’t control. We exhaust ourselves trying to produce fruit through sheer effort.
“I Am the True Vine”
In John 15:1, Jesus makes a profound declaration: “I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener.” Notice that phrase—”I am.” It’s the same name God gave Moses at the burning bush. Jesus wasn’t just offering a helpful agricultural metaphor; He was declaring His divinity and establishing Himself as the ultimate source of spiritual life.
He continues: “Every branch in me that does not produce fruit, he removes, and he prunes every branch that produces fruit so that it will produce more fruit” (John 15:2).
This is a sobering reality. God would rather remove an unproductive branch than allow it to remain and create a poor witness to His character. If we’re truly His but refuse to produce fruit because we’re too self-absorbed or disconnected, He may choose to take us home rather than let us damage His reputation here.
But there’s also grace in this passage. Sometimes God doesn’t immediately remove struggling branches. Like a skilled gardener, He props them up, giving them another chance to flourish. Many of us have been “propped up” by God’s mercy when we should have been cut off.
The Call to Remain
Here’s where the message gets personal: “Remain in me, and I in you. Just as a branch is unable to produce fruit by itself unless it remains on the vine, neither can you unless you remain in me” (John 15:4).
Notice that Jesus doesn’t say “reconnect” or “rededicate.” He says “remain.” This is crucial. When we drift from God and then feel convicted to return, we often talk about “rededicating our lives” or “getting reconnected.” But the biblical language is different—it’s about remaining, about never fully severing the connection in the first place.
Think about it: once you break a branch completely off from its source, you can never truly reconnect it the same way. You can try to glue a broken coffee cup back together, but it will never be quite the same—there will always be chips missing, crooked pieces, and weaknesses. That’s why Jesus emphasizes remaining rather than reconnecting.
The further we drift, the quieter God’s voice becomes. Not because He stops speaking, but because we’ve moved so far from the source that we can barely hear Him anymore. Sin is like that—it starts out sounding pretty and attractive, but the further you follow it, the meaner and more destructive it becomes.
Yet even in our drifting, if we’re truly His, the connection remains. That’s why some of you who wandered far from God still heard that persistent voice calling you back. It wasn’t the people around you—they were often heading in the same destructive direction. It was the Holy Spirit within you, bearing witness, pulling you back toward the Father.
You Can Do Nothing Without Him
“I am the vine; you are the branches. The one who remains in me and I in him produces much fruit, because you can do nothing without me” (John 15:5).
This statement demolishes our self-sufficiency. We live in a culture that celebrates independence and self-made success, but Jesus flatly declares that apart from Him, we can do nothing of eternal value.
Sure, you might produce some fruit for a season even after being cut off—just like grapes on a severed vine might ripen—but you’ll never produce again. Your ministry, your witness, your spiritual life will slowly wither without the sustaining power of Christ.
God doesn’t need you. That’s hard to hear, but it’s liberating when you truly grasp it. Before you, He had others serving Him. After you, He’ll have others. You’re not the source; He is. He chooses to use you, which is an incredible privilege, but He doesn’t depend on you.
When the prophet Elijah thought he was the only faithful one left, God reminded him that there were thousands who hadn’t bowed to false gods. The work of God doesn’t rise and fall on any single person—it rests on God Himself.
Recharging Your Connection
Consider your cell phone. It’s a powerful device with incredible capabilities, but if you never plug it in, it becomes nothing more than an expensive paperweight. The same is true spiritually. You might have tremendous gifts, abilities, and potential, but without staying connected to the power source, you’ll run out of battery.
How do you know if you’ve drifted? Ask yourself these questions:
- Has your spiritual life become routine rather than relational?
- Are you serving out of obligation rather than overflow?
- Do you find yourself relying more on your abilities than on God’s Spirit?
- Has prayer become a checklist item rather than a conversation with your Father?
- Are you reading Scripture out of duty rather than hunger?
If you answered yes to any of these, you may have drifted. The good news is that you can return. You can stop the drift right now.
The Father Is Calling You Back
Imagine a father singing to his son, a beautiful lullaby that the child recognizes and runs toward. But then a stranger appears with a prettier voice, a louder call, and the son begins following that voice instead. The father’s voice becomes quieter as the distance grows, but it never stops. And one day, when the son sits down exhausted from following the stranger’s voice—which has now turned harsh and cruel—he hears it again. Faint at first, but unmistakable. His father’s voice. And as he gets up and walks toward it, it grows louder and louder.
That’s what God is doing right now. He’s calling you back. Not to reconnect, but to remain. To stop drifting. To remember that He is the source of everything you need.
Your marriage won’t thrive on routine. Your parenting won’t succeed on autopilot. Your ministry won’t flourish on maintenance mode. You need to stay plugged in, day by day, moment by moment, remaining in the vine so that His life flows through you.
The invitation today is simple but profound: fall on your face before God and ask Him to help you remain connected. Acknowledge that you’ve been trying to do things in your own strength. Confess that you’ve drifted. And then rest in the truth that He is the vine, you are the branch, and apart from Him, you can do nothing—but in Him, you can bear much fruit.
Stay connected to the Source. Everything else flows from there.