John 14:15-31 · Jesus Promises the Holy Spirit
Becoming What You Are
John 14:15-31
Sermon
by Carl Jech
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But the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, he will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I have said to you. (John 14:26)

If you have visited the Kremlin in Moscow, one of the things that probably sticks in your memory is the tomb of Lenin. I have heard visitors comment that the emphasis on tombs and monuments in the Soviet Union almost makes it seem as if the Soviet people worship cemeteries.

In contrast to being entombed and put on display like a specimen in a museum, Jesus tells his followers over and over again that he is going away. In John 14:28 he says, "I go away, and I will come to you." Jesus is pictured as deliberately going away and instructing his disciples to rejoice at his departure, because his physical absence will force them to focus on the new and changing ways in which he will continue to be a living presence among them. It is actually fortunate that to this day the exact sites of Jesus' birth, baptism, crucifixion and tomb remain a matter of conjecture. The sites shown to tourists in Bethlehem and Jerusalem simply cannot be authoritatively verified as authentic. Although some churches - especially famous cathedrals - have become as much museums (and in some cases even mausoleums) as churches, Christians do not think of their church buildings as monuments to "the late, departed Jesus." The real church consists of the people who love what Jesus stands for. To use Saint Paul's imagery, the people who create the church buildings are themselves the real body of Christ. The real Jesus Christ is the Jesus whose story comes alive as it is retold in countless creative ways - through preaching and the Sacraments, through the arts, through active involvement in social issues where the true meaning of love is acted out by those who love the world and its people as much as God does.

If you have noticed that pastors often seem to dislike funeral chapels, you should know that the cause of the apparent anomosity is not professional jealousy. The mortuary funeral chapel is used for only one purpose and is associated with nothing but death. The church building, on the other hand, is associated with all aspects of life. All kinds of things go on at churches - baptisms, weddings, potlucks, many types of meetings, day care, choir rehearsals, funerals, worship services, confirmations. Churches are associated with life in all its variety and splendor, in all its sorrow and pain. The church reminds us that the story of Jesus is more about life than about death.

John's Gospel tells us that Jesus will continue to be a living presence among us as a "Counselor" and as "the Holy Spirit." This counseling Spirit has two primary roles: (1) to remind us of what Jesus has already said about abiding in his love, and (2) to teach us everything that we need to know as we move into the future (in the words of John 16:12, to "lead us into all the truth.") The clear implication of this twofold role is that while our own positive self-esteem is already established through the knowledge that we are unconditionally loved and valued by God, that while we already have that peace which the world cannot give, that while we already are saved and justified, or, to put it more dramatically, that while we already are saints - we are still in the process of becoming righteous, of becoming people who love as much as God loves, of becoming saints. In traditional theological terms the work of the Holy Spirit is called Sanctification and the work of Jesus is called Justification. Through justification by grace, God sees us as already restored to the image that we were meant to have - God sees us as already saints. Yet the doctrine of Sanctification reminds us that much remains to be done. Sanctification is the process of "becoming what we already are." The Holy Spirit is, among other things, a Symbol for moving ahead, a Symbol of becoming, a Symbol for the process of moving into the future.

It's not hard to understand why a lot of us are uncomfortable with the label "saint." The term earns some negative connotations - such as holier-than-thou, or goody-two-shoes, or fanatic. But to insist that we are neither saints nor sinners, that we are "only human," is to miss the wonderful paradox in the idea that we are to become what we already are. To be a saint in the Christian sense is to be humble and human "to the max," but at the same time it is to have the wonderfully reassuring confidence that God does much more than simply reward or punish us according to our deserts. God makes it possible for us, as we have often repeated, to combine a sense of urgency about being all that we can be, with a sense of humor that doesn't take our efforts at perfection too seriously. The mathematician and philosopher Blaise Pascal expressed this marvelously humble sense of confidence and trust in God's ability to make us into the saints that we could never become on our own, when he said, "I would not be searching for God unless God had already found me."

In the last few years we have all had to get used to the more accurate transliteration of the name for God in the Hebrew Scriptures. That name, Yahweh, is based on the same letters that form the basic verb "to be" in the Hebrew language. In the familiar story of the burning bush, Moses is pictured as asking what God's name is, and the voice from the bush answers with a booming "I am." Scholars have been intently studying this interesting name for God, and many are convinced that a more accurate translation of its meaning would be "I will become who I will become." This forward-moving, future-oriented name fits in remarkably well with the description of the Holy Spirit as the one who leads us forward into all the truth. It suggests that all of life is a process of becoming, of creating, of growing in grace and love.

Another famous mathematician and philosopher, Alfred North Whitehead, developed his entire philosophical system around this concept of becoming. His "Process Philosophy" has inspired the development of a process theology that begins by defining God as "the never-ending source of novelty." While in a sense this is just a fancy way of describing God as Creator, it does bring in more clearly the element of forward motion, of ongoing development, change and growth. Life is seen as a process of becoming! The controversial French Jesuit priest and scientist, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, liked to observe that in addition to describing God as beyond and above us, we should also think of God as being ahead of us!

Your kingdom come, O God ... Where is your reign of peace And purity and love? When shall all hatred cease, As in the realms above? (Lewis Hensley)

This hymn expresses an almost impertinent impatience over the apparent slowness of the process whereby the world is becoming what God intends it to be. Instead of the phrase "as slow as molasses in January," some folks use the expression "as slow as the second coming of Christ." Let's look at some of the ramifications of this emphasis on the theology of becoming, the theology of process, the theology of the Spirit. Is the Kingdom coming too slowly, or are we looking for the wrong things?

Let's return to the doctrine of Sanctification as expressed in the statement "You are a saint ... now become what you are." The great Russian author Dostoevsky wrote, "One can love one's neighbor in the abstract or even at a distance. But at close quarters, it's almost impossible!" To say that we already are saints and that now our job is to become what we are, is to say that we should put abstract notions of perfection behind us, relax, and concentrate on simply becoming as fully human as possible. God will take care of the big picture. The ultimate, "abstract," questions having to do with justice, salvation, perfection and the like can only be answered or solved by God. We are freed to concentrate on the concrete, everyday, down-to-earth, often nitty-gritty job of loving our neighbors "at close quarters."

To say that we are saints in the process of becoming what we are is in part just another way of making the traditional point that Christians see themselves to be both sinners and saints at the same time. Of course, we have all heard people make fun of this image of sinner-saints by saying that Christians go to church and get forgiveness and then go right out and do the same sins all over again ... and again ... and again. Saint Paul himself had to deal with this issue in his letter to the Romans. He asked the rhetorical question, "Are we to sin all the more so that grace may abound?" The question came up because the anti-legalistic tone of the Christian faith did indeed sometimes make it seem as if Christians were rather lax in their attitude toward the law - and, in fact, some followers of "The Way," as members of the early church were called, didespouse a cavalier disregard for ethics. It has been necessary for Christians to be constantly on guard against misunderstandings that can arise over the meaning of their new attitude toward the law and ethics.

As important as laws and ethical principles are, the basic Christian insights are that (1) laws must never become straight-jackets for us, and (2) we do not achieve perfection by a slavish obedience to law. The purpose of law is to remind us that an abstract notion of perfection is unattainable by one's own efforts, but at the same time to remind us that we should keep moving in the right direction!

By expressing our sense of longing for the time when peace and love will reign, when hatred and wars shall cease, the hymn makes it crystal clear that life is a process of moving toward goals. Ethical standards and utopian visions help us to move in the right direction, but if we take them too seriously and too literally they can do more harm than good. Our goal is not some static and abstract notion of perfection or peace. That is the kind of peace that the world may give, but it is not the kind of peace offered by Jesus. Our goal is to continue the process of living. The peace offered by Jesus has to do with life, with the never-ending process of becoming.

In a sermon titled "A New Vision," Dr. E. Howard Satterwhite of Trinity United Methodist Church in Alexandria, Virginia, compared the ideal of a Christian community of love, with a marriage in which the romance has faded, the honeymoon is over, and the relationship has become a labor of love requiring simple tenacity, "hanging in there." Describing his vision of Christian love at close quarters he said, "We should lose the illusions of perfection ... if we are looking for perfection here, we had better go somewhere else. But no one else has it either. We need to deal with the fact that we are imperfect and yet are in love as community. The community cannot save us from anything and we cannot save anyone else, not on our own skills and not on our charms. But trusting in God we become more trustworthy to each other, and more available for the authentic community that is grounded in God's power and not our own."

We are not perfect. We are not know-it-alls. We are merely becoming. But our hearts are not troubled by this "not yet" aspect of faith in Jesus. Dr. Leslie Weatherhead, prolific author and for close to 30 years minister at the famous Methodist City Temple of London, wrote that "any minister, standing in the pulpit, who is not an agnostic, is dangerous." His point was that healthy religion encourages us to foster our inquisitive spirit, to avoid giving the impression that we have final and absolute answers, and to leave salvation and perfection in God's hands. I would add that Weatherhead's notion of "the Christian agnostic" is a simple reminder to us to be always humble about our God-talk! To some degree, whether one uses the label atheist, agnostic or theist is not all that important. God-talk should always be a humble attempt to carry on the most profound discussion of life possible in the broadest possible context. It is the attempt to talk about "the un-talk-about-able." Just as I always want to discuss what it means to believe in Jesus, I would rather take the time to discuss with someone what it means to believe in God than to simply answer the question of whether or not I believe in God with a flat yes or no. God will be what God will be regardless of our doctrines and pet notions. To believe in God is perhaps above all to be humble - and human.

The book of Genesis tells us that as human beings we are made in the divine image. God's name means "I will become who I will become." To believe in God, to see oneself as made in God's image and as one of God's beloved saints, is not in the least bit arrogant or self-agrandizing. It is simply to embrace with confidence (with faith) the exciting process of becoming what you are!

C.S.S. Publishing Company, Channeling Grace, by Carl Jech