John 14:15-31 · Jesus Promises the Holy Spirit
Getting at the Truth
John 14:16-17
Sermon
by Maurice A. Fetty
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And I will pray the Father, and he will give you another counselor, to be with you forever, even the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it neither sees him nor knows him; you know him, for he dwells with you, and will be in you. — John 14:16-17

The truth is hard to find these days. Perhaps it has been hard to find in any day. Do you remember ancient Diogenes who walked about with a lamp, shining it in men's faces, saying he was looking for an honest man? Diogenes felt he could never find a truthful person.

A little later in history Pontius Pilate reflected a similar skepticism, when at the trial of Jesus he asked cynically, "What is truth?" Anyone who has ever taken a few courses in philosophy will sympathize with Pilate.

If our Declaration of Independence begins by saying, "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal and are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights," we who live under the Declaration 200 years later are not so sure all those truths are self-evident to everyone.

Truth is hard to find these days. Do you remember when President Jimmy Carter promised the American people he would never lie to us? We all knew, of course, that Nixon lied to us in the Watergate scandal. We had come to expect that most politicians, including presidents, lied to us regularly. So Carter's promise was met with sneering disbelief. If "read-my-lips-no-new-taxes" George H.W. Bush broke his promise, Bill Clinton, only four and one-half months into his presidency, broke at least three major campaign promises. Subsequent American presidents have been accused of deception and broken promises.

Truth is hard to find these days. We struggle with truth in advertising, truth in labeling, truth in packaging, as well as truth in medicine, law, business, and even religion. With such charlatans as Jimmy Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart, who deceived millions, even clergy men and women are more suspect than ever before. Truth is hard to find these days.

Even in families, truth is hard to find. Parents and children regularly deceive each other. Husbands and wives not only cheat on each other, they deceive each other with respect to true feelings. More than that, we often deceive ourselves. If Plato advised "know thyself," and if his teacher, Socrates, said the "unexamined life is not worth living," many of us are afraid really to examine ourselves too closely, or to come to know who we really are.

So truth is hard to find these days, partly because we do not want to find it. Yet it was Jesus who said, "I am the way, the truth, and the life." He said, "You will know the truth, and the truth will make you free." The Psalmist prayed, "Send out thy light and thy truth; let them lead me." In our text, Jesus promised he would send his Spirit of truth to teach and to comfort his people. It is the Holy Spirit that helps us get at the truth about ourselves and about our world.

I.

The Holy Spirit helps us get at the truth by teaching us the truth about reality.

At first, this must sound like another of the preposterous and propagandistic claims that are foisted on us today. More than that, many of us are more or less children of the enlightenment. Like our American founding fathers, we believe that truth is self-evident to the reasonable, rational mind. Along with philosopher John Locke, we think of truth as based on objective facts to be believed.

Yet, underlying these convictions is a deeper conviction that at the bottom of things, the world is orderly. The late Harvard mathematician and philosopher, Alfred North Whitehead, maintained that the whole scientific enterprise of the western world rested upon the belief that at the bottom of things science would find order rather than chaos. If animists were afraid to probe a world enchanted with demons and spirits, western scientists dissected, investigated, explored, and probed into the depths of the atom believing order and organization would be found rather than disorder and disarray.

What was at the bottom of the conviction? asked Whitehead. It was the theological concept of the Logos, the word or reason or mind of God, which held everything together. Why do things cohere and hold together? It is because the mind or Logos of God holds them together.

The early Christians, especially as represented in John's gospel, believed that the Logos or reason or mind of God became manifest in Jesus. Indeed, in his famous prologue to his gospel, John says that in Jesus, "the word (the Logos or reason of God) became flesh and dwelled among us, and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth" (1:14).

Earlier, John maintained this word (or Logos) was with God, was God, and was God's agent of creation. Thus, the Jesus of John's gospel can logically say, "Have I been so long with you Philip, and you did not know me? If you have seen me, you have seen the Father." So if Christ is a manifestation of the very word or reason or mind of God, Christ and his Spirit can lead us to the truth about reality.

What is that truth about ultimate reality Christ and his Spirit would have us know? It is that God is ultimate reality and that God is order, not chaos, and that God is love, not vindictive destructiveness. It is this conviction about ultimate reality that helps us probe the physical world as Harvard's Alfred North Whitehead maintained. It helps us believe that at bottom this world makes sense. There is purpose and life is not futile. Christ's Holy Spirit helps us get at the truth about ultimate reality.

II.

Christ's Holy Spirit also helps us get at the truth about our mental, spiritual, and psychological reality. We can probe the depths about ourselves believing order will prevail over chaos.

However, it is precisely here many of us get cold feet. Sometimes we are afraid to probe or to reveal ourselves fearing it will bring us harm. Men and women in competitive situations rarely confide in each other fearing the confidential information will be used against them to win the competitive edge. One married man told me he rarely confides in his wife or confesses to her any of his failings or weaknesses, because during arguments she uses that very information to berate him and tear him down.

However, other people have experienced something different. The twelve-step groups such as AA know that when they entrust their lives to a higher power and bare their souls to that power, they sense they are beginning to get in touch not only with themselves but with ultimate reality.

One young man told me about a small group of men from his church who meet once a week to share whatever is on their minds and hearts. They must agree to hold nothing back and to tell no one else what they have heard and shared. The young man said it has been a powerful, rewarding experience, helping him and others to come to the truth about themselves and reality.

Many of us, like Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, hide from God and from ourselves. We are fearful and defensive: fearful of too much self-knowledge that might require change, and defensive of our immature or immoral behavior that if known, might bring judgment and destruction.

The ultimate reality that Christ, the Logos, the reason or word of God, reveals is this: God is love and uses his judgment not to destroy but to purge, purify, and bring spiritual health. If we let him, the Holy Spirit will bring us to the truth about ourselves and ultimate reality.

III.

Lastly, the Holy Spirit of Christ helps us get the truths about ourselves to God.

When John's gospel speaks of the Holy Spirit, it speaks of the comforter, counselor, or advocate. The Greek word used by John is paraclete, which comes from a word meaning "to call alongside." A paraclete is one we call alongside us, to be with us, to be our advocate when we seem powerless to advocate for ourselves.

One of my church members told of an extended stay in a hospital. She was lamenting the rather poor service and considerable inattention to detail. Thankfully, she was able to afford a private duty nurse to be her advocate. Otherwise, many of her needs would have been neglected. Most all of us feel we need an advocate or counselor at law. The ombudsman has come into popularity to represent people who are powerless with businesses or bureaucracies. Many of us belong to various kinds of advocacy groups which aid us in the presence of complex issues and powerful forces.

The Holy Spirit of Christ is just such an advocate. Jesus has called him to our side to be our counselor and comforter. When we approach almighty God, we have an advocate, because as Paul says, "The Spirit helps us in our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as we ought, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with sighs too deep for words. And he who searches the hearts of men knows what is the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the will of the Father" (Romans 8:26-27).

In other words, not only does the Spirit help us get at the truth about ourselves, it helps God understand the truth or reality about our situation. If the Spirit is a channel of God's reality to humanity, it is also a channel of humanity's reality to God. The Spirit pleads our case before the almighty, and Christ himself, says the epistle to the Hebrews, sits at the right hand of the Father, making eternal intercession for all humanity (Hebrews 7:25).

If the world in its darkness and immorality is afraid to come to the light, to the truth, because its deeds are evil, we need not be afraid to do so. We are brave enough to explore and probe the world, believing order prevails over chaos.

We are brave enough to try to get at the elusive truth about ourselves, believing if we confess our sins, God is willing to forgive our wrongs and hurtful words and actions.

Perhaps most encouraging of all is the assurance that the Spirit represents our truth before God — the truth of our disease and pain, the truth of our tragedy and despair, the truth of injustice and exploitation, the truth of depression and death. The Spirit of Christ is our paraclete, our advocate and counselor, assuring us that God is not chaos and destruction, but order and love. We give thanks that the Holy Spirit helps us get at these essential truths. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Adventuring into the New Age : cycle C sermons for Pentecost 1, Pentecost Day through Proper 12, based on the Gospel texts, by Maurice A. Fetty