E.A. Johnston teaches that true spiritual usefulness and fruitfulness come only through complete surrender and brokenness before God, warning against partial yielding that leads to hardness and unfruitfulness.
In 'Unyielded Wild Grapes,' E.A. Johnston delivers a powerful expository sermon emphasizing the necessity of complete surrender and brokenness before God to bear lasting spiritual fruit. Using vivid illustrations like the story of Sam Jones and the biblical parable of the vineyard, Johnston warns against partial yielding that leads to hardness and spiritual stagnation. He calls listeners to humble themselves fully before God, assuring them of His loving care and faithfulness to those who yield all. This sermon challenges believers to examine their hearts and respond to God's call for total obedience.
Full Transcript
Apart from a pure gospel message, friends, I don't know of a more important message than I can preach other than this one. I've agonized over it and prayed over it with the hopes of it being real to someone who hears it. I know at one time I myself needed to hear it and have it applied to my life.
If you go to the doctor and he tells you we have a cancerous tumor and we refuse to submit to the surgery to remove it and instead we just go apply some topical ointments with the hope it will go away, the tumor will only grow more deadly. About a year ago I was lying in the ICU having been brought there in an ambulance. All four of my main arteries were 90% blocked and I was on the very verge of eternity for me to have a hope to live.
I had to agree to undergo open heart surgery where they removed my heart from my body and cleaned out the veils like an automobile carburetor. You have to first remove the carburetor to clean the parts. I know that's a simplification of open heart surgery but it gives you an idea of what I'm talking about.
I had to agree to the surgery and sign my name on a doctor's release form. God gives us opportunities to be worked on by him. He is the divine surgeon of our hearts.
If we recognize the need but refuse to undergo the process we can end up in a very dangerous place. I have a very important message for you today friends, for some of you. It may be one of the most important messages you'll ever hear in your life so please pay attention and lend me your ears.
I have a three-part sermon today. The first part is a story I want to share with you. Then I want to read an important passage of scripture to you.
Then I want to exhort you to follow God as I finish my message. Remember friends that Jesus had a few important truths. He needed to teach his disciples but he had to keep telling those same truths to them over and over again until they finally sunk into their thick skulls.
Well the first part of my message is a story and it's an interesting one about Sam Jones the evangelist who was so mightily used to God in revival in the late 19th century. Why in 1885 God used Sam Jones to literally shake the whole city of Nashville in revival. Well let me tell you this story about Sam Jones now friends.
Sam Jones was at home in Cornersville Georgia when he received a telegram from Texas inviting him to go preach to the cowboys of southwest Texas. Well he prayed about it and he got on a train and went to Texas and for two weeks he preached the gospel of Jesus Christ to the cowboys of Texas. When it was over as they came to the end of the campaign the cowboys wanted to give Sam Jones a love offering.
They felt the laborer was worthy of his hire and they had received wonderful blessings from his time among them but there was a problem. They had no money not a single dollar in any of their pockets and they didn't know what to do and they allowed Sam Jones to go back home to Cornersville Georgia with no compensation or love offering of any kind whatever. Well Sam Jones went back home and a number of weeks passed by then suddenly one day he received a telegram.
It was from the cowboys of Texas. It read like this. We are sending you a love offering and we are shipping you a carload of broncos and Sam Jones scratched his head as he looked in amazement at that telegram.
Well what am I going to do he said with a carload of wild horses in the small town of Cornersville. Well his friend was standing beside him and he said why it's very easy. Hold an auction sale sell the broncos and you'll get your money.
You can get your love offering then and put it in your pocket. Well Sam Jones thought it was a good suggestion so he held a auction sale. He sold the broncos all except one.
He kept the finest looking bronco for his son. He wanted to give the bronco to his son. He wanted to give that bronco to his son as a gift and that's what he did.
But the son had never in his life been on the back of a unbroken bronco and Sam Jones wondered what he could do. He called the cowboy to him who had brought the carload of broncos to Cornersville. He said will you take this bronco? Will you break them so that my son can ride them? Yes sir said the cowboy.
I'd be glad to. How much will you charge? Fifteen dollars said the cowboy. All right said Sam.
Take him away. The cowboy disappeared with the bronco. Two weeks later he came back.
Is he broken said Sam. Yes sir he's broken. Can my son ride him in perfect safety? Yes sir your son can ride him in perfect safety.
All right here's your fifteen dollars. The father thought that before allowing his son to ride the bronco he better mount himself and make sure that the cowboy had broken the bronco. He started toward the bronco.
The cowboy came up waving his hands in alarm. Why said Sam. What's the matter? What's gone wrong? Oh said the cowboy.
He's only broken on one side and you're mounting from the wrong side. Oh said Sam. That will never do.
My son might make a mistake and he might mount from the wrong side. How much will you charge to break him on the other side? Fifteen dollars said the cowboy. All right said Sam.
Take him away and break him on the other side. Well another two weeks passed by and again the cowboy came back leading the bronco. Is he broken said Sam.
Yes sir he's broken. Both sides? Yes sir both sides. Your son can mount him with perfect safety from either side.
All right here's your fifteen dollars. Well I like that story friend because it's so true. You know the average Christian is only broken on one side.
He'll do this but he won't do that. He'll go here but he won't go there. He'll give God just so much of himself but still hold something back.
He's like the bronco. He's only broken on one side and then he wonders why God doesn't use him more. Why the years have passed by and he's not used of God.
He may have been highly educated. Perhaps he's been well trained. He may have even gone to seminary and he sees God using other men who've got very little education, very little training, who've never been to seminary and they're being used to God but he can't understand why God doesn't use him more.
He doesn't realize he's only been broken on one side that God can't trust him. He'll do this but he won't do that. He'll go there but he won't go here.
He's only broken on one side and God cannot rely upon him. God cannot trust him. The man God uses is the man who's been broken on both sides.
The man who's been totally surrendered and totally yielded to the Lord Jesus Christ. But some broncos don't break so easily. They're more stubborn, more hard-headed, more self-willed.
People are like that too. A lot of our stubborn will is rooted in either pride or self-preservation. But to recognize a need and fight against it is a very dangerous place to be, friend.
God hardened Pharaoh's heart within him and instead of submission to God he strove against him to his ultimate ruin. I've known individuals in church meetings where I've physically seen God deal with them by his spirit. I sat near a woman in church who God was dealing with and her broken hearted sobs of anguish wracked her entire body and disturbed all those seated near her.
I saw her respond to the evangelist's appeal for commitment by going into a room for prayer. She emerged not broken but more hardened than ever. I saw a deacon in a Baptist church harden himself against God because of his pride.
God was obviously dealing with him during revival meetings but he refused to respond to the evangelist's appeals to come rededicate one's life to God at his altar. He just sat there while others received a blessing and he hardened himself from being moved next time. His pride was the obstacle that stood between him and God.
He didn't want others to see his weakness. I've seen it in myself when I've been wrought upon by God's spirit and conviction where I saw clearly my need to be broken on both sides and I waffled. I gave up this sin but I held on to that one.
I budged a little here but refused to budge there. I was willing to give God almost all but not entirely all and for years I stood on the sidelines for God as I struggled in a battle with my will against God's will and God didn't use me. I did a lot in the flesh.
There was flesh but God wasn't working through me. There's a difference friends. Oh I made my excuses here and there.
I saw God finally pulling away from me to leave me to my own devices. I could almost hear him say Ephraim is joined to his idols. Let him alone.
Finally a day came where I surrendered to his claims on my life and I said Lord I can no longer resist you. Surrender all I am and all I have to you. Give you undisputed reign and rule in my life from this point on.
Then God started using me and he's still using me. If God's been dealing with you friend it is presumptuous on your part to assume he will continue to strive with you. It's a perilous place to be for God has declared in his word that he is no respecter of persons and he says my spirit will not always strive with man.
Now we come to the second part of my message today friends and that is our Bible passage. You can turn in your Bibles to the book of Isaiah. We will be in chapter 5. This striking passage of scripture in Isaiah chapter 5 is where we find the parable of the vineyard where God declares now will I sing to my well beloved a song of my beloved touching his vineyard my well beloved hath a vineyard in a very fruitful hill and he fenced it and gathered out the stones thereof and planted it with the choicest vine and built a tower in the midst of it and also made a wine press therein and he looked that it should bring forth grapes and it brought forth wild grapes.
Here God exercises great care over his people. He has great expectations for them but they turn out being a great disappointment to him and in their obstinate rebellion end up under a great judgment from him. He looked for grapes but all he found was wild grapes.
God the Father has carefully cultivated you digging here and watering there picking you up here when you fell and strengthening you so not to sin against him willfully again. He has carefully cultivated you by his grace and by his spirit in the hopes of your entire submission to him so that you can be broken on both sides and be useful to him and he laments over you what could I have been done more to my vineyard that I have not done. God only uses those who are broken on both sides.
All else is what we drum up and manufacture in the name of God and religion by self-effort but Cain's offering was no good. It had no blood in it. Our self-preservation will only harden our hearts more and more like an adamant stone until one day we turn so far away from God and rebellion to him that the devil will be there waiting in the shadows.
This is what happened to prideful King Saul. He ended up going to the devil. I've seen this happen to church people I've personally known.
God deals with them. God extends his grace to them. God strives with them by his spirit but it was all for naught.
All that was left was wild grapes. Grapes have to be stepped on and pressed on and crushed on to be made into fine wine. Now we come to the last part of my message today friends.
If God has been dealing with you through the sermon friend it may very well be your last call for response and obedience to him. If a father warned his child time and time again about the danger of playing with knives and if the child was old enough to obey and refused to obey then that knife could cut them all to pieces. God loves you like a father and as a father he desires entire submission to him for your own good.
He wants to keep you from the things that can harm you. You will either surrender your stubborn will to him and be broken on both sides or you won't. But if you'll do you'll be crossing over your own Rubicon and there's no turning back.
But remember this it was the loaves that were broken in the master's hands that fed the five thousand. It was the broken vase that released the sweet smelling fragrance to anoint Jesus. Being yielded to God friend simply means getting low.
It's getting low enough to give it all to him. Let me give you an example of this in the life of Adrian Rogers. Adrian Rogers was a man broken on both sides and that's why God used him so.
As a young man Adrian Rogers was crossing a field one day when he felt a sudden urge to pray and give himself entirely to God. He got down on his knees and said Lord Lord Jesus I want to go low enough for you to use me. But he realized just kneeling wasn't low enough so he lay on the ground on his stomach in the grass of that field and he prayed again that God would let him get low enough so he could be used.
But he realized that wasn't getting the job done either. So Adrian Rogers took his index finger and dug a hole in the dirt big enough for his nose and in complete humility and utter surrender he laid back down again and stuck his nose in the dirt the earth filling his nostrils and he prayed once more Lord Jesus this is as low as I can go. And God honored that and began to use Adrian Rogers to where he eventually his name was known all over the world as a preacher of the gospel.
God may be speaking to you friend right now by showing you you are not low enough. You're still holding something back. He's gently telling you it's time for the wild grapes to go that old stubborn will must be yielded to him.
For a long time I couldn't grasp the significance of John chapter 15 where Jesus tells his disciples 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. For years I applied that truth only to the daily devotional time where we are abiding in Christ when we are praying to him.
I miss the central thought which is this a branch has no source of life on its own. It must be yielded to the vine to participate in fruit production. When I try to go my own stubborn way I'm in a place of self-rule and I have no power from above and I can do nothing for God from his perspective that is impacting and lasting for eternity.
I must be broken on both sides. I must be yielded continually to the vine if I ever can do anything worthwhile for God. Obedience is yieldedness and the only way to get there is by brokenness.
Obey God and yield it all to him friend. Get low enough in your heart friend and ask him to take complete control and give him his rightful place to let the Lord Jesus have undisputed reign and rule in your life. Give it all to him friend.
He's not a cruel taskmaster but a loving father who has your best interests at heart. Come to him now. Get low before him and get your nose in the dirt so to speak and come lay it all on Jesus.
I have a promise from the word of God to you friend that if you get serious with God he will get serious with you. He promises to meet you where the desire of your heart is. Psalm 18 says so with the merciful thou wilt show thyself merciful.
With an upright man thou wilt show thyself upright. With the pure thou wilt show thyself pure. And with the froward thou wilt show thyself froward.
Ask God to meet you now friend and ask God to break you on both sides. He can make your life a sweet fragrance that reminds this perishing world of this Jesus who gave his all at Calvary where he willingly submitted to the father on that bloody cross and held nothing back. Let us take this time now to get along with God and yield it all to him.
You may wish to slip out of your chair and get quiet with God where you are. Let us pray. Oh great God let someone here today say bend me, break me, change me, use me.
Heavenly Father bless someone here with the riches of your pungent presence and grace. Pour out your spirit's blessings upon them as they turn to you now. Bring change to this person here Lord and bring change to that person there Lord and make them the individuals you want them to be for your glory.
I pray these things in the strong name of Jesus. Amen.
Sermon Outline
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I. The Story of Sam Jones and the Bronco
- Sam Jones receives a carload of wild horses as a love offering
- The importance of being 'broken on both sides' for usefulness
- The danger of partial surrender and stubbornness
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II. The Biblical Parable of the Vineyard (Isaiah 5)
- God's care and expectations for His people
- The disappointment of wild grapes representing rebellion
- The consequences of refusing full submission
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III. The Call to Complete Surrender
- The example of Adrian Rogers' humility and surrender
- The necessity of abiding in Christ as the true vine
- The promise of God's faithfulness to those who yield fully
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IV. Practical Exhortation and Prayer
- Invitation to get low and yield all to God
- God as a loving Father desiring our good
- Encouragement to respond now before it is too late
Key Quotes
“God cannot trust him. He'll do this but he won't do that. He'll go there but he won't go here. He's only broken on one side.” — E.A. Johnston
“It was the loaves that were broken in the master's hands that fed the five thousand. It was the broken vase that released the sweet smelling fragrance to anoint Jesus.” — E.A. Johnston
“If you get serious with God he will get serious with you. He promises to meet you where the desire of your heart is.” — E.A. Johnston
Application Points
- Examine your heart to identify areas where you have not fully surrendered to God and commit to yielding those parts to Him.
- Recognize that true spiritual fruitfulness requires complete dependence on Christ, not partial or selective obedience.
- Respond promptly to God's conviction and allow Him to break your stubborn will for His glory and your good.
