John 16:5-16 · The Work of the Holy Spirit
Guided by the Spirit
John 16:12-15
Sermon
by David R. Cartwright
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There are two main ways to go about teaching someone something. You can teach them what you think they need to know, or may need to know sometime later on. Or you can teach them what you think they're ready to understand at the moment. These two approaches are the basic ways of going about teaching.

But sometimes these two methods can come into conflict. I began my ministry as an associate minister in charge of youth and education. It was the typical associate position. It did not take me long to learn that youth and education is a big job all by itself. It was during this time that these two basic educational approaches became one live issue in the congregation.

The discussion centered around how much Bible could or should be taught to young children. There were those who felt that the Bible was basically an adult book. In their view, young children were not up to understanding much of what was going on in the Bible. This was certainly true with concerns such as Old Testament history. But more than this, these dedicated Christians felt that there were parts of the Bible that were not even appropriate for young children. They were referring to all that R-rated stuff, all the blood and gore, war and rumors of wars, that jump out at you page after page. "Tell them the stories of Jesus, and leave it at that," summed up the feelings of this approach to teaching the scriptures. These students of the Bible were quick to point out that even things like the Ten Commandments can be a little embarrassing when you try to explain them to four- and five-year-olds. How do you explain what not committing adultery means? Even in this modern world, children of this age are not ready for that lesson. How do you teach the Ten Commandments and leave one out? No easy task.

On the other hand, there was the other school of thought who felt that you needed to teach children not just what they were ready to learn, but what they might need to know later on that would prepare them for what they would surely encounter in this complex world of ours. Granted, children may not understand all that they were being taught, but later on with a little help, they may be able to piece it all together so that it makes sense to them.

A surgeon kidded his patient about the list of questions he brought in for the doctor to answer. After going through the list, the surgeon said, "Your questions are fine, but there are some things you need to know that you don't know enough to ask about." Then he went on to tell him some very valuable information that he did need to know, but because of his lack of expertise, he had no way of even knowing that he needed to know it. It's hard to ask a question about something that you know nothing about.

An experienced math and physics teacher once said that she has to deal with this all the time. She constantly tells her students that some of the things she's trying to teach them will not make sense until they know other things. When they get to those topics, it will all become clear why they needed to know them now. If you don't understand the basics of algebra, you will have no idea of what calculus is all about. A freshman student in an experimental physics course in college concurred when he took the course and then realized that it depended on a knowledge of calculus. But many in the class had not had calculus by that time. So the professor set up a lab to teach what was needed, but he was always getting ahead of the lab, so the students never had the information needed to do the problems until after it was needed. It was very frustrating indeed.

Scouting is based on the same basic teaching assumptions. All those skills and merit badges may be questionable to some scouts when they take them, at least to those scouts who are not in the mood to collect all those awards. But one day they might be called upon to use one of those skills, and then the skill would come in very handy. After all, the Boy Scouts' motto is "Be prepared." Being able to swim some day might not only save your own life, but perhaps the life of someone dear to you. It's too late to learn to swim when the boat has capsized.

A young adult in the church bragged to me not long ago that he had cooked pancakes at a church breakfast. When he was a teenager, he never showed the slightest interest in cooking anything. I said to him, "I didn't even know you knew how to make pancakes." He laughed, and replied, "I learned how on scout campouts." At the time, he felt he would never use that skill again. But you never know. You may be the very one the church needs to do that.

In this morning's Gospel Lesson, we see Jesus using a combination of both of these educational approaches, and maybe even another one in addition. Jesus tells his disciples, "I still have many things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now." Up to this point in his ministry, Jesus has told them a lot of things. He has taught them all kinds of things about who he is and how much God loves them and how they are to love one another and, eventually, extend that love beyond their little circle of friends. But there was simply not enough time to teach them everything he might have wanted to teach them. Besides, they were not yet ready for all that. One day they might be, but not now.

We can debate all day and into the night what these "many things" might be. They surely must have included a deeper understanding of some of the things that Jesus had already taught them. Whatever these "many things" were, there was no time to teach fully about them, and the disciples were simply not ready.

Jesus does not leave it at that. He goes on to tell them something else, something which must have been very intriguing the moment he said it, and is still intriguing today. Jesus says, "When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth" (John 16:12). There was so much more that the disciples needed to know, and Jesus knew it. There was simply not enough time to teach them all that they would need to know in the future, but now that time is about to come. The Spirit will teach them. More to the point, the Spirit will guide them into these deeper meanings. "... for he will not speak on his own, but will speak whatever he hears, and he will declare to you the things that are to come" (John 16:13b).

For one thing, right now, as Jesus is speaking to them, there's the matter of his upcoming death and resurrection. Obviously, as he's speaking, his death and resurrection have not yet happened. It will only be later that the disciples will be faced with coming to terms with what it means; what it means for them, and what responsibility they bear in it. As our African-American brothers and sisters have taught us, "They may be able to talk the talk, but can they also walk the walk?" After Jesus leaves them, the disciples will be called on the carpet and put on the hot seat for their association with him. Guilt by association, or accomplices in the crime, is the way we speak of it. But right now, as Jesus is talking to them, they do not yet know that. They will need the Spirit to give them the knowledge they will need when they need it. For them, the Christian life will become a way of life, and not just a nice Sunday school lesson or a soothing sermon.

Father Raymond Brown has described it this way: "The best Christian preparation for what is coming to pass is not an exact foreknowledge of the future but a deep understanding of what Jesus means for one's own time."1 Living up to what you do know about the teachings of Jesus is the best way to know what to do with them tomorrow. I believe it was Mark Twain who remarked, "It's not the parts of the Bible that I don't understand that give me trouble, but the ones I do."

That little word, "guide," is an interesting word. The word as it's used in John's Gospel recalls how God led the children of Israel in the wilderness: a pillar of fire by night and a cloud by day. The children of Israel knew just what they needed to know, but only that. God filled in the details when they needed them. That's the third way that Jesus is talking about when he says the Spirit will guide them into all truth. In addition to teaching them when they are ready, or teaching them things they might need to know in advance, Jesus tells his disciples that they can depend on the Holy Spirit to give them the information they need when they need it.

One writer on this passage from John has an interesting take on the Spirit's role as guide. This writer says that the Spirit is "the executor of Jesus' will."2 Now, I've never been an executor of a will, but I have listened patiently to others who have been given this responsibility. And many times, as far as I can see, the job is a mixed blessing. At all times, it seems to be a difficult task. But it's a necessary task that has to be done if the family inheritance is to be passed on to the next generation.

The comparison is an apt one. This was the critical moment in the transfer of power from Jesus to his disciples. This is the decisive question. How will they know what to do after he leaves them? The Spirit will set out before them all that the inheritance means. He will spell out the legacy they are to live up to and to carry on.

Some of the disciples did not get it. Some of them resembled that television commercial where one of the relatives has the remote and is fast forwarding the video of their loved one's will to get to the part that's coming to him/her. We know for a fact that at least on two occasions a couple of the disciples were ambitious beyond belief. They couldn't wait to see what their position in Jesus' kingdom would be. They were ambitious beyond what was even respectable.

Not too long after Jesus' death, the early church found that they had some big problems on their hands. Could Jews be Christians without first being circumcised? Could Greek Christians eat meat sacrificed to pagan gods? Could Greek and Jewish Christians sit down and eat together? All of these issues were thrashed out under the guidance of the Spirit. Some of these issues were worked out better than others, and some were left for future generations to resolve. The problem was that Jesus had not given specific directions on any of these. Under the guidance of the Spirit, the church had to arrive at the truth.

We, ourselves, have some big issues that are equally difficult to resolve: the place of gays in the church, women's ordination, and married priests in some circles, stem-cell research, and beginning of life issues on the one hand and end-of-life issues on the other. These are some of the pressing issues that divide good Christians. This does not even speak of ongoing concerns such as war and capital punishment. As Christians, we need all the guidance of the Spirit we can receive! Jesus did not speak specifically and directly on any of these issues, or at least, not all Christians agree that he did, or on what he may have implied by what he did say.

Yes, we still desperately need the Spirit to execute Jesus' will for our day and time.

On the church calendar, today is Trinity Sunday. Some denominations make more of this Sunday than others. Many have not always known what to do with the Trinity. One lesson on the Trinity that I see in today's Gospel Lesson is that the triune God — Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — is capable of doing what we call these days "multitasking." The Trinity tells me that this God of ours is a multitasking God. That's why God can give us the guidance we need with how to deal with these uncharted areas of ministry that Jesus left for us to decide. We will know what to do, when the Spirit tells us. Better still, we will know what to do, for the Spirit will guide us along the way. The one thing the Spirit will not do for us is to decide for us. As Christians, we still have a job to do. We have to let the Spirit guide us in executing Jesus' will. We can take comfort in knowing that the Spirit will be guiding us all the way.

And it all has to do with the multitasking way the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit goes about working out things. The Spirit extends the ministry of Jesus, allowing us to go beyond what he had to say when he was here on earth. In due time, the Spirit will unfold for us what it all means. Equally important, the Spirit will prevent us from going off the deep end, and coming up with all kinds of wild things that might capture our fancy.

This is the test. Wherever the Spirit leads, it is always consistent with what Jesus taught about God the Father when he was here on this earth. That's the standard and the measuring stick. "All that the Father has is mine. For this reason I said that he will take what is mine and declare it to you" (John 16:15).

As for us, on this Trinity Sunday, we can rejoice in knowing that the Holy Spirit not only gets the message onto the page for us to read, but also gets it off the page and into our minds and hearts. That's how we experience this multitasking, triune God when we're guided by the Spirit.


1. Raymond E. Brown, S.S., The Gospel According to John (xiii-xxi) (Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1978), p. 716.

2. Ernst Haenchen, John 2, (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Fortress Press, 1984), p. 144.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (First Third): Guided by the Spirit, by David R. Cartwright