Sweet or Bitter Fruit

Thus saith the Lord, I will liken thee, O house of Israel, like unto a tame olive tree, which a man took and nourished in his vineyard; and it grew, and waxed old, and began to decay. (Jacob 5:3)

It’s taken me a lot of years to feel like I really understand what the allegory of the olive tree is talking about. Maybe I’m slower than most, or maybe there’s just a lot there to be deciphered. So I thought I’d write down some of my understanding.

This post will only scratch the surface of what’s contained in Jacob 5, but hopefully it will be of use to someone.

A Summary

Jacob 5 tells the story of an olive tree, valued and cared for by the Lord of the vineyard and his servants.

This tame olive tree begins to wither, but because the roots are good, the Lord works to preserve the tree in any way he can. He cuts off the bad branches and grafts in new branches taken from a wild olive tree. He nourishes and prunes it, then when the tree produces new, tender branches, he takes some of those branches and plants them in different spots of ground. He takes other young branches and grafts them into the wild olive tree. Then he nourishes it more, hoping to preserve the tree and its fruit.

Time passes, and the Lord of the vineyard returns. The wild branches that were grafted into the tame tree have taken strength from the roots and brought forth good fruit. This gives the Lord joy, as he is able to lay up much fruit unto himself.

He checks on the trees that have grown from the tender branches of the tame olive tree and discovers that three have brought forth good fruit, but the one planted in the best ground only brought forth some good fruit and some bad.

A long time passes, and when they come to check on the tame tree again, it has produced all sorts of bad fruit. The Lord is grieved, knowing the roots were good, but that the bad branches have overrun the tree anyway.

The other trees he planted have also become corrupted and there is no good fruit to be found in his vineyard. He is sorely grieved, not knowing what more he could have done to preserve his trees and produce good fruit. But the trees are of no use to him, so he determines to cut them down and burn them. But his servant convinces him to spare them a little longer.

So they try again. They pluck off only the branches that produce the most bitter fruit, and the rest they nourish, returning the tame branches to the tame tree, hoping the branches and roots together will strengthen each other and produce good fruit.

He calls his servants to labor diligently one more time. The season is ending, this will be the last pruning and they must do everything in their power to nourish the trees. The servants obey, and the Lord labors with them to save the good fruit and clear away the bad.

There efforts pay off. The fruit produced is sweet, able to be laid up unto the Lord, who rejoices with his servants.

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What is the tame olive tree? The house of Israel.

When the Lord talks about the House of Israel, or about “my people,” he’s referring to those people who have received a covenant from him. Jacob was given the name “Israel” when he received a covenant from God, that by extension, was offered to all of his descendants. The blood lines of Israel are, by birthright, a covenant people.

So, imagine that tame olive tree as Jacob and all of his descendants. Jacob is at the roots. He received the covenant and both he and the Lord hope that this covenant will go forth to all the branches of the house of Israel and produce good fruit.

What is the fruit? The souls of mankind.

However, we can clearly see from the allegory that the fruit (or souls) produced by this tree are not guaranteed to be good, or to be partakers in the covenant, but some can be.

The entire purpose of the Lord laboring in the vineyard is to produce good fruit, to produce souls who can receive a covenant from the Lord and be saved. His work and His glory is the bring to pass the immortality and eternal life of men.

Good fruit=saved souls

Bad Fruit=unsaved souls

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What is the nourishment the Lord gives? The Word of the Lord.

And it came to pass that he pruned it, and digged about it, and nourished it according to his word. (Jacob 5:5)

The best way to nourish a people and produce souls worth saving is by the word of the Lord (scriptures). We need to be familiar with and understand His teachings, His expectation, and His covenants.

Having a covenant as a birthright isn’t enough. The allegory teaches us that many of the branches of the tree withered, just like there have been many children of Israel who have not been partakers of the covenant. But the Lord keeps trying. He removes the withered branches and commands his servant to:

“Go and pluck the branches from a wild olive tree…Take thou the branches of the wild olive tree, and graft them in.” (V. 7,9)

What is the wild olive tree? The gentiles.

Everyone not of the blood lines of Israel is a gentile. That’s me, and probably you. We are likely not direct descendants of Israel, so that makes us gentiles. We’re wild, without a covenant.

So when the covenant people no longer respect that covenant, the tree withers. And when the tree withers, the Lord brings wild branches (different groups of gentiles) and grafts them into the tame tree (offers them the covenant) in the hopes that they will take nourishment from the roots of the tame tree (accept the covenant) and thus produce good fruit.

But what about the few young and tender branches produced by the tame tree?

And it came to pass that after many days it began to put forth somewhat a little, young and tender branches; but behold, the main top thereof began to perish. (Jacob 5:6)

The Lord hedges his bets and transplants some of those branches to other parts of the vineyard.

And it came to pass that the Lord of the vineyard went his way, and hid the natural branches of the tame olive tree in the nethermost parts of the vineyard. (V.14)

What are the young and tender branches? Family lines in the house of Israel.

Like Lehi and his family. Though Lehi grew up in the traditions of the Jews, he had gone to the Lord, conversed with Him and obeyed His directions. Lehi honored and accepted the covenant with God. He was a young and tender branch who was separated from the majority of the house of Israel and transplanted to the americas with his family.

The Lord saw the iniquity and unbelief in Jerusalem and he took those few willing to hear and obey his voice, and he planted them elsewhere to give them a chance to keep the covenant. By doing so, Lehi and his family avoided the takeover of Babylon and the corruption of all their religious traditions.

But what about the dying branches?

We will pluck off those main branches which are beginning to wither away, and we will cast them into the fire that they may be burned. (V.7)

Agency. The Lord honors agency. The house of Israel was given a covenant. They had an opportunity, but it was up to each individual to accept or reject it. Will they be sweet fruit or bitter? If a group of people (or branch) is so lost in wickedness and unbelief that they cannot be recovered, then the Lord will remove them and destroy them. That branch will be burned in order to preserve the rest of the tree. This pruning will likely be offensive to the tree, but is necessary for the Lord’s purposes.

The Lord of the vineyard knows that not all the fruit will be good. God knows that not all will accept the covenant, but He gives endless opportunities for us to do so. He wants us to take strength from the roots and accept the covenant, to come to Him. He doesn’t care if the branch originated from the tame tree or the wild tree, he doesn’t care if the fruit grows from the tame tree, from the wild tree, or from one of the tender branches planted afar off.

All he cares about is what we little pieces of fruit make of ourselves.

We can’t rely on the fact that we originated from the tame tree, or that the branch we come from produced good fruit several harvests ago. That’s irrelevant to whether we’ll be sweet or bitter.

However, if branches (a person, or a group of people) spring forth, young and tender though they may be, he’s going to give them the best chance he can think of to bear good fruit. He will provide all the nourishment he can, but in the end, he cannot force a tree to bear good fruit. The Lord cannot force a people to accept the covenant he offers.

So the bad branches are cast off. The Lord of the vineyard plants the young branches elsewhere, he grafts the wild branches into the tame tree, and he nourishes. His labors pay off. Both the tame tree and the branches produce fruit worthy of preserving.

But, behold the tree. I have nourished it this long time, and it hath brought forth much fruit; therefore, gather it, and lay it up against the season, that I may preserve it unto mine own self. (V. 23)

The Lord and servant rejoice, but not all the fruit is good, and they know their labors must continue. More time passes, and when they next go to harvest, they are met with disappointment.

The Lord of the vineyard said: Behold, this long time have we nourished this tree, and I have laid up unto myself against the season much fruit. But behold, this time it hath brought forth much fruit, and there is none of it which is good. And behold, there are all kinds of bad fruit; and it profiteth me nothing, notwithstanding all our labor; and now it grieveth me that I should lose this tree. (V.31-32)

It grieves Him to think that he’ll have to give up on the tree entirely, because he cares about the fruit, every single piece. He knows the roots are good, the covenant is good. If the fruit would just takes nourishment from the roots instead of from the other branches, the fruit would be good. Yet the tree produces “all kinds of bad fruit,” and later it produces “evil fruit.”

And it came to pass that the Lord of the vineyard said unto the servant: Let us go to and hew down the trees of the vineyard and cast them into the fire, that they shall not cumber the ground of my vineyard, for I have done all. What could I have done more for my vineyard? (V. 49)

How frustrating to be the Lord of the vineyard, to pour his everything into saving this tree, these pieces of fruit, and to have it fail time and time again. He reaches the point where he is ready to throw in the towel and burn the trees entirely.

But, behold, the servant said unto the Lord of the vineyard: Spare it a little longer. (V. 50)

The servant intercedes on behalf of the tree, and because the Lord of the vineyard values the tree, and the fruit, he agrees. He labors with all diligence. He tries every trick in the book. He nourishes, digs about, dungs, grafts, prunes, transplants. He takes the natural branches that he had removed and he grafts them back into the tame tree.

Yea, I will graft in unto them the branches of their mother tree, that I may preserve the roots also unto mine own self, that when they shall be sufficiently strong perhaps they may bring forth good fruit unto me, and I may yet have glory in the fruit of my vineyard. (V. 54)

He calls more servants to labor with him. He directs them to prune and graft and nourish, clearing away the bad fruit and branches to prepare a way that perhaps the trees might bring forth good fruit.

And you know what? It works.

And there began to be the natural fruit again in the vineyard; and the natural branches began to grow and thrive exceedingly. (V. 73)

The Lord is able to preserve much fruit, and he has joy because of the fruit of his vineyard, and shares that joy with the servants that labored with him. The work is done, and the Lord is able to declare:

I will lay up unto mine own self of the fruit, for a long time, according to that which I have spoken. (V. 76)

What does it mean when the Lord says, “I will lay up unto mine own self of the fruit?”

When the Lord gathers fruit unto Himself, that fruit no longer belongs to the tame tree or the wild tree. That fruit belongs to Him. Those saved souls are now part of His family, and He will protect them. The Lord does this work himself. It’s not a servant who lays up the fruit, it’s the Lord of the vineyard that does the gathering into His family.

That’s the end goal—to be part of the Lord’s family, to be called by His name, to have Him give us a new identity.

We don’t want to stay on the tree. We want to be gathered up unto the Lord, because only then can we be safe from the burning.

And when the time cometh that evil fruit shall again come into my vineyard, then will I cause the good and the bad to be gathered; and the good will I preserve unto myself, and the bad will I cast away into its own place. And then cometh the season and the end; and my vineyard will I cause to be burned with fire. (V. 77)

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When the season ends, it’s not just the bad branches that are going to be burned. It will be the entire vineyard—every piece of fruit left on every branch of every tree. Nothing that we have built here on this earth—no earthly family we have claim to, no organization we’re a part of—is going to be preserved.

I don’t know about you, but I’ve got a lot of work to do to sweeten my soul.

Quicken

For no man has seen God at any time in the flesh, except quickened by the Spirit of God. (D&C 67:11)

What does it mean to be quickened?

I’ve always known that it had something to do with our bodies being changed into a better, or higher, state. But I’d never really considered the logistics of that until recently. So what if we can put it into scientific sorts of terms?

In D&C 131:7-8 There is no such thing as immaterial matter. All spirit is matter, but it is more fine or pure, and can only be discerned by purer eyes; We cannot see it; but when our bodies are purified we shall see that it is all matter.

If all spirit is matter, then it should follow the known rules of matter. So, just for fun, let’s compare spirit to water.

What happens when you change the temperature of water? If you cool it down, the molecules move slower. If you heat it up, the molecules move faster, or quicker.

Say you live in the telestial world, like earth, and your spirit is at the telestial level of progression as well. A telestial spirit would be rather slow moving, perhaps like ice. The Terrestrial world and spirits would be like water, and the Celestial world and its spirits world be like vapor.

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Your spirit will always be made up of the same spiritual matter, but as we draw closer to God who lives in everlasting burnings, we have to be brought up to snuff so that we can survive the temperature (glory) where he dwells.

The Lord spoke to moses out of a burning bush. A pillar of fire was used for Him to speak with Joseph Smith. Alma the younger, when he fell asleep for three days, gave this account:

Nevertheless, after wading through much tribulation, repenting nigh unto death, the Lord in mercy hath seen fit to snatch me out of an everlasting burning, and I am born of God. (Mosaic 27:28)

Was he truly removed from the burning? Or was the matter of his spirit quickened by his repentance and the Lord’s mercy so that he could bear the heat? I can’t say for sure, but I think the question is certainly worth asking.

Therefore, O Lord, deliver thy people from the calamity of the wicked; enable thy servants to seal up the law, and bind up the testimony, that they may be prepared against the day of burning. (D&C 109:46)

The Lord isn’t going to burn the world because he’s vengeful and mean. It’s not a punishment, it’s a natural consequence. When the Lord returns, so too will his glory. His glory is very fast-moving. Of all the quickened beings, he’s the quickenedest. 🙂 Or to use scientific terms, his temperature is the highest.

JSH 1:37 For behold, the day cometh that shall burn as an oven, and all the proud, yea, and all that do wickedly shall burn as stubble; for they that come shall burn them, saith the Lord of Hosts, that it shall leave them neither root nor branch.

The righteous will survive the day of burning and the wicked won’t. But that’s not because the Lord has laser precision aim and only strikes the wicked, it’s because the righteous will have spirits that have been quickened to the point where they are the same state of matter as those that the Lord sends to do the burning.

Now, I think that when JSH refers to “they that come shall burn them,” the “they” is likely the seraphim, which (as I understand it) is the highest level of angel. They’re also known as the fiery ones. There’s a description of the seraphim at the beginning of Isaiah 6 when Isaiah sees the Lord sitting on His thrown, with the seraphim behind him. It’s interesting what happens next.

Then said I, Woe is me! for I am undone; because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips: for mine eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts. Then flew one of the seraphims unto me, having a live coal in his handwhich he had taken with the tongs from off the altar: And he laid it upon my mouth, and said, Lo, this hath touched thy lips; and thine iniquity is taken away, and thy sin purged. Also I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, Whom shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, Here am I; send me. (Isaiah 6:5-8)

When he encounters this vision of God, he’s undone, horrified by his own uncleanness before the Lord and His glory. Then one of the Seraphim takes a live coal in his hand (he can hold a red-hot coal without hurting himself because he’s obtained that level of glory) and touches Isaiah’s lips with it as a sort of purifying ordinance. This is so affective that when the Lord asks “whom shall I sent?” Isaiah, who had previously been cowering before the Lord because of all his iniquity, speaks up and says, “send me.” That’s quite the turn-around, but that’s what the Lord can do if we repent and allow our spiritual matter to be purified. Often, we see examples in the scriptures of those who are quickened for a short time in order to bear the presence of the Lord. Whether or not that purification lasts, I don’t know. I would imagine it is dependent on the person and situation.

What about us? What can we do to repent of our iniquity like Isaiah, repent nigh unto death like Alma, or overcome the darkness like the one that seized Joseph when he first attempted to pray? Everyone’s answer will be different because we all have our own iniquities and unbelief to shed. We have to approach the Lord asking, “What lack I yet?” and we must be willing to act when He answers. Then perhaps our spiritual matter will be quickened just a bit.

My soul cleaveth unto the dust: quicken thou me according to thy word. (Psalm 119:25)

Thy Faith Hath Made Thee Whole

“I will tell you of the wrestle I had before God, before I received a remission of my sins.” (Enos 1:2)

I was reading in Enos (short, but packed full of the pathway leading back to God), and one phrase jumped out at me. The Lord has just forgiven Enos of his sins. His guilt is lifted and he asks the Lord how it was done. In response, the Lord tells him:

“Because of thy faith in Christ, whom thou hast never before heard nor seen. And many years pass away before he shall manifest himself in the flesh; wherefore, go to, thy faith hath made thee whole.” (Enos 1:8)

Thy faith hath made thee whole. These are the exact words that Jesus uses during three separate encounters in his mortal ministry.

Mark 5, Luke 8, and Matthew 9 all tell the story of the woman who was plagued with the issue of blood. She is healed when she touches the hem of Christ’s garment, and each account agrees that the Lord 1) addressed her as “daughter” and 2) said the words “thy faith hath made thee whole.”

“And he said unto her, Daughter, thy faith hath made thee whole; go in peace and be whole of thy plague.” (Mark 5:34)

The second instance of this phrase being used is in Mark 10. A blind beggar hears that Christ is near and calls out to Him. People try to shush him, but he persists. Christ asks what he would have Him do, and when the man asks that his sight be restored, Christ answers:

“Go thy way; thy faith hath made thee whole. And immediately he received his sight, and followed Jesus in the way.” (Mark 10:52)

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The third is in Luke 17. Ten lepers ask to be cleansed. The Lord tells them to go show themselves to the priests. On their way, they are all healed, but only one returns to thank Christ. Christ responds:

“Arise, go thy way: thy faith hath made thee whole.” (Luke 17:19)

What does it mean to be made whole? On the surface, when looking at the examples from the bible, it seems to refer to being physically whole. So then why use the same words in Enos?

While the healing of the leper, the blind man, and the woman were wonderful example of mercy and the miracles that Christ can perform, I don’t think that’s the most important part. The nine lepers who were healed but did not return were made just as physically fit as the one who did return. So then, what is the significance of the Lord’s words to that one leper?

What is the significance of the woman being called ‘daughter?’

What is the significance of the blind man using his sight to follow Jesus in the way?

The faith of these people didn’t just allow their infirmities to be healed. Their faith resulted in purification, because they saw beyond what Christ could do for them physically, and saw the value of following in his path.

They didn’t wait for Christ to come and offer them a miracle. They cried out to Him, touched His garment, thanked Him. Just as Enos cried out to the Lord in mighty prayer and received forgiveness, these others took action. They acted in faith.

It’s one thing to say we have faith, but acting on our faith brings power.

I believe the Lord recognized the sincerity of their faith. He knew their hearts, and in telling them that their faith had made them whole, he was forgiving their sins, offering purification, and pointing them in the direction they needed to go.

Our Lord is always there, eager to forgive us, to teach us, to bless us. But it will be a struggle. Enos tells us of the ‘wrestle’ he has before receiving a remission of his sins. In verse 11, he “prayed unto Him with many long strugglings.” The woman, the blind man, and the leper all struggled with serious physical ailments. What is your struggle? And how will you use it to cry out to the Lord in mighty prayer so that he can help you overcome it?

May our souls hunger, and may we cry out to Him who can save us so that we will one day be called blessed and be able to say, like Enos, “I soon go to the place of my rest, which is with my Redeemer; for I know that in him I shall rest.”