John 14:15-31 · Jesus Promises the Holy Spirit
Learning to Listen
John 14:15-31
Sermon
by Mike Ripski
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Mary Ann Bird has writes this story from her childhood. It’s entitled, “The Whisper Test.”

I grew up knowing I was different, and I hated it. I was born with a cleft palate, and when I started school, my classmates made it clear to me how I must look to others: a girl with a misshapen lip, crooked nose, lopsided teeth and garbled speech.

“When schoolmates would ask, ‘What happened to your lip?’ I’d tell them I’d fallen and cut it on a piece of glass. Somehow it seemed more acceptable to have suffered an accident than to have been born different. I was convinced that no one outside my family could love me.

“There was, however, a teacher in the second grade that we all adored – Mrs. Leonard by name. She was short, round, happy – a sparkling lady. Annually, we would take a hearing test. I was virtually deaf in one of my ears; but when I had taken the test in past years, I discovered that if I did not press my hand as tightly upon my ears as I was instructed to do, I could pass the test.

“Mrs. Leonard gave the test to everyone in the class, and finally it was my turn. I knew from past years that as we stood at the door and covered one ear, the teacher at the desk would whisper something and we would have to repeat it back…things like, ‘The sky is blue’ or Do you have new shoes?’ I waited there for those words which God must have put into her mouth, those seven words which changed my life. Mrs. Leonard said, in her whisper, ‘I wish you were my little girl.’” (Homiletics, May 8, 1994, p. 25)

A few Sundays ago we heard Jesus refer to himself as a shepherd and those who follow him as sheep. He said the shepherd calls his sheep by name. They recognize his voice and follow him. The sheep can tell the difference between their shepherd’s voice and the voices of strangers.

Deb White, your adult mentors, your parents, extended family, Sunday school teachers, and pastors over the years, have sought to help you recognize the voice of the Shepherd. We have tried to convince you that what his voice has said to you about you is the truth: “You are my child, my beloved; I am very pleased with you.” It is the voice of your baptism. The voice is similar to Mrs. Leonard’s. It has the power to change your life.

In today’s reading from John 14, we hear Jesus tell his disciples that he’s not going to leave them desolate, when he dies. When he dies and returns to the Father, he’ll send them the Paraclete, the Holy Spirit, the Helper, the Counselor, the Advocate.

An Advocate in Jesus’ day was one who spoke on your behalf in court. They represented you. We’ve usually understood the Advocate who Jesus sends as our Advocate, the one who speaks on our behalf. Now Jesus does tell his followers not to worry about what to say when they are brought before the authorities. He says the Holy Spirit will give them the words to say.

Here, however, the Advocate is not ours but God’s. Jesus has been speaking on God’s behalf. When he’s gone, the Holy Spirit will do the same. Jesus says the Advocate will help them remember what Jesus taught, will help them understand it, and will lead them into all truth.

Today you join those who confirm the Advocate’s authority to teach us the truth about life and our lives. You join the great company of witnesses who over the millennia have found abundant and eternal life in the revelation of Jesus. We recognize God’s voice in Jesus’ voice.

Today you join those who are committed to a way of life that many will not understand. There are things Christians must do and things we refuse to do. You join those who have been willing to pay the price of such living.

The reporter interviewed the old man, a grandfather who was obviously in intense grief over the shooting death of his teenage grandson. The grandson had been shot in a robbery of the family’s little neighborhood grocery store.

“Do you want revenge on those who did this?” asked the reporter. “Wouldn’t you like to shoot the person who shot your grandson?”

The old man’s face showed he was troubled by the reporter’s question. “No, that’s not possible,” said the grandfather.

“I guess you don’t even know for sure who did this,” the reporter responded.

“No, that’s not it,” replied the grandfather. “It’s that we are Christians. And Christ gave us the commandment to love one another – not seek revenge against each other. By loving us he turned us from being God’s enemies into being God’s friends. He commanded us to love our enemies and turn them into God friends too (Pulpit Resource, “Commanded to Love, May 4, 1997, pp. 19-20).

You know who a “whistleblower” is. A whistleblower is someone who is willing to suffer the loss of their job, their income, their security, their reputation, and even their life for the sake of the exposing what is wrong.

Doing the right thing can cost you. But not doing the right thing can cost you too.

An article on Levittown, PA, appeared in the New York Times Magazine on April 6. Levittown is the hometown of our son, Michael’s girlfriend. The author of the article had grown up there. He returned to interview persons about the town’s history and to see what kind of town it is today. Among those he interviewed was his own father, who had become a judge and subsequently moved away.

In talking with his father the subject of race came up. He recalled when the first black family moved into the town 50 years ago. The Meyers had rocks thrown through their windows and suffered other forms of harassment.

His father, now 82, confessed, “Looking back on that is very sensitive to me. I think it represented a show of cowardice on my part. A group of Levittowners got together and stood vigil in front of the Meyer’s home to protect the family. I wanted to join them, but at the time I was running for city council. My friends very easily talked me out of joining them. They said it would be a disaster for my prospects of getting elected. They were probably right. But I took the easy way out and sat back.”

When we live contrary to Jesus’ way we will hear his voice judge us. He called it “gaining the whole world but losing our life.”

In your Confirmation Class you learned about how we United Methodists understand salvation as a life-long transformation into holiness by God’s grace working within us. It begins with Prevenient Grace, which brings us to an awareness of Justifying grace that puts us in right relationship with God, that then leads us into Christ-likeness through the work in us of sanctifying or perfecting grace. That’s what we who know ourselves as the beloved children of God do: we seek to glorify God with all we are and do. We seek to listen to God’s voice, the voice of the Good Shepherd, follow, and obey.

A soldier tells of having been recently discharged from Ft. Benning, GA. He took a job near the base. One day as he was walking by the base, he heard the drill sergeant shout: Attent! Hut! About Face! Forward March!” And the former soldier, now a civilian, heard that voice, stiffened, wheeled around and march 10 steps before he realized what he was doing.

Today the church joins you in confirming that this is our hope and prayer: That we will become so close to Jesus, so under the influence of the Holy Spirit, that when, we hear God’s voice, we will obey it. It will become “second nature” to us. It will be our sanctified nature.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Mike Ripski