John 14:15-31 · Jesus Promises the Holy Spirit
One to Take the Place of Jesus
John 14:15-31
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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Introduction to Scripture: In Chapters 14, 15, and 16 of John’s Gospel, there are telling and descriptive words of Jesus about the Holy Spirit. Since this is Pentecost Sunday, the occasion on our Christian calendar when we celebrate the gift of the Holy Spirit and the birth of the Church, I’m again leaping ahead in my preaching through this Gospel to consider these power-packed words of John concerning the nature and ministry of the Holy Spirit. In the Sermon, I’ll refer to a number of these words, but for now, let’s read from chapter 14, verses 15-24. Remember that everything that Jesus says about the Spirit, He says in the context of his announcement to his disciples that he is going to leave them. He is preparing them for his crucifixion and resurrection.

(READ SCRIPTURE LESSON)

Somewhere I read about a church in Boston which had a “committee on water levels”. Now we have all sorts of committees in this church, but not a committee like that. The reason for this committee is that the church stands in the Back Bay district of Boston, which 150 years ago was entirely under water. When they built the church, they drove 4500 wooden pilings into the wet, spongy ground for the foundation. The wooden pilings will not rot as long as they are under water, but if the air gets to them, they will begin to decay and the church would fall in. So, every week a member of the “Committee on Water Levels” goes down into the basement, looks into the well and checks to see how high the water is.

When I read that, my impish mind began to play about in the meadow of my imagination. If someone was visiting that church one Sunday, and saw an announcement in the bulletin or heard the minister say that the “Committee on Water Levels” was going to meet, what would the visitor think? Now, if the visitor was a Baptist, he might think that it had something to do with the baptistery, where people were immersed. It would strain a Methodist, Presbyterian, or Episcopalian to think that there would be any need for such a committee in relation to baptism so little water is needed. Yet, if the visitor was a cantankerous theologian, he might want to go and argue about how much water was essential for an efficacious baptism. As my mind was having a good time frolicking with thoughts that might come to a person in church, hearing an announcement about “a committee on water levels”, the Spirit moved in to do his work. The Spirit asked me two questions: One, what committees are at work in this church, and what are they doing? Could a cynic have a good time with questions about the priorities we project by the committees we establish? Two, what are some of the things you talk about in church all the time, assuming that people know what you are talking about — when, at most, their understanding is limited and vague, and at best, they don’t have the faintest notion of what you’re talking about.

I didn’t deal with the first question but the sermon today deals in part with the second question. The Holy Spirit is a common term in the church. We use the term as though everyone knew precisely what we were talking about. Now and then we need to stop and take a sounding — affirm some basic tenets of beliefs and see if we are all together. More than that, on an issue like the Holy Spirit, we need to go beyond questions and theological affirmations, to an invitation — an invitation to Christians to claim their baptismal birthright — that birthright being the presence and power of the Holy Spirit.

So, on this Pentecost Sunday, let’s do that. Let’s concentrate on the third person of the Trinity. Let’s forget all the theological arguments. Let’s not occupy ourselves with the mystery of the “Trinitarian formula” which, apart from the Incarnation, is Christianity’s most unique doctrinal statement. Let’s try to transcend baffling questions by focusing on what Jesus promised about the Holy Spirit. Let’s focus particularly on what Jesus said the Holy Spirit would do for us.

Again, remember the setting. It is Jesus’ last week with his disciples. He knows the cross is coming. He knows that he must physically leave the earth, accomplishing God’s great mission of redemption through the cross and resurrection. So, he promises his presence beyond the grave in another form than Jesus of Nazareth. He promises the Holy Spirit will come to take the place of Jesus as:

First, as companion and comforter;

Second, as counselor; and

Third, as convictor and convincer.

Let’s look at these.

I

COMPANION AND COMFORTER

First, the Holy Spirit as companion and comforter.

The disciples were bewildered and grief-stricken. Their minds were caught on the paralyzing thought that they were going to lose Jesus. It was hard, almost impossible, for them to even hear Jesus when He told them that he was going away physically, but that that was going to be the best for them because he was going to send someone to take his place.

“When he was in the body, they could not take him everywhere with them; it was always a case of greetings and farewells; when He was in the body, He could not reach the minds and hearts and consciences of men everywhere; He was confined by the human limitations of place and time. But there were no limitations in the Spirit. Everywhere a man goes, the Spirit is with him; everywhere throughout the world, the Spirit appeals to men. The coming of the Spirit would be the fulfillment of the promise: ‘Lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world.’ (Matthew 28:29). The Spirit would bring to men an uninterrupted fellowship forever.”

(William Barclay, The Daily Study Bible, The Gospel of John, Volume 2, p. 224).

The King James Version translates John 14:16 in this fashion: “And I will pray to the Father, and He will give you another comforter, that He may abide with you forever.”

In terms of current use of the word comfort, that is not a good translation. We think of comfort only in terms of sorrow and sadness. The Greek word is parakletos, and it literally means “someone who is called in to help.” So Phillips provides a very good translation: “I shall ask the Father to give you someone else to stand by you, to be with you always.” Underline the meaning of that: One, we need never be alone God has given us the Holy Spirit to be our companion. Two, when in trouble and distress, or doubt or bewilderment, we have someone to call upon for help.

Let’s focus for a moment on Jesus’ word preceding his promise of the Spirit: “If you love me, keep my commandments.”

“To John there is only one test of love, and that test is obedience. It was by his obedience that Jesus showed his love of God; and it is by our obedience that we must show our love to Jesus. C.K. Barrett says: ‘John never allowed love to devolve into a sentiment or emotion. Its expression is always moral and is revealed in obedience.’ We know all too well how in life there are those who protest their love in words, and who use the outward actions of love, but who, at the same time, bring pain and heartbreak to those whom they claim to love. There are children and young people who would say that they love their parents, and who yet cause grief an anxiety to them. There are husbands who say that they love their wives, and wives who say that they love their husbands, and who yet, by their inconsiderateness and their irritability and their thoughtless unkindness bring pain to the other. To Jesus, real love is not an easy thing.” (Barclay, Ibid., p. 194).

So what is Jesus saying? I will not leave you to struggle with the Christian life alone; I will not abandon you to your own strengths and skills to love as parents and children the way you are called to love. I will give you a helper, the parakletos, the one who will stand by you!

Later in our scripture lesson, in verse 18, Jesus used a family word. “I will not leave you desolate, or forlorn — I will come to you.” The Greek word here is orphanos and means without a Father. It was a word used of disciples and students who had lost the presence and teaching of their master. Plato said that, when Socrates died, his disciples “thought that they would have to spend the rest of their lives forlorn, as children bereft of a father, and they did not know what to do about it.”

Not so with us who are Christians. Jesus told his disciples that that would not be the case with him and them — he was going away, but He was going to send another to take His place. He was going to send the Spirit who would be our companion and our comforter.

II

COUNSELOR

Now, the Holy Spirit as counselor. Listen again to John 15:25-26: “But this cometh to pass, that the word might be fulfilled that is written in their law. They hated me without a cause. But when the counselor is come, whom I will send unto you from the Father, even the Spirit of truth, which proceedeth from the Father, he shall testify of me.”

As you see, the Revised Standard Version uses “counselor” as the word for parakletos. This version uses that translation throughout these chapters 14, 15, and 16 of John. It’s a descriptive word in this passage because of what Jesus says the Holy Spirit will do. He will teach, and He will remind us of what Jesus has said.

Fred Morris was one of our United Methodist missionaries who was seized and tortured by the Brazilian military two or three years ago. He was shocked into unconsciousness time after time, and yet, his faith brought him through. And a very personal faith it was. He said: “I did not realize how deep my faith is. I felt that I was a person of faith for a long time, but I had never had it tested. I felt very strongly the presence of the Holy Spirit when I was in the midst of torture…every time I was put with the cover on my head and dragged off to a new session; I found my self repeating a psalm.”

What a desperately needed ministry. If the Holy Spirit is the Counselor for a Christian in the midst of torture, what about everyday life. Sure, there are the great decisions in life — vocation, marriage, career movement, crisis situation — when our need for guidance is vividly pronounced. But what plagues us most and drains us of so much energy are the intersections upon which we come everyday, when we have to choose which way to go. To be sure, we need guidance at the major intersections of our lives, but we need it also at the little crossings and turnings of which our lives primarily consist.

Take heart, the Holy Spirit can be your daily guide. If you will allow, he will teach you./ I challenge you. As we are preaching through this Gospel of John, sit down with your Bible, invite the Holy Spirit to teach you through the Word, then read attentively from this Gospel, beginning at the beginning — until you come to some word that grabs your attention. Stay with that word in prayer until the Holy Spirit teaches you what God is saying.

Another challenge: As you begin your day, invite the Holy Spirit to call to your remembrance words of Jesus as you need them throughout that day. Of course, for the Holy Spirit to re mind you, you have to already have stored up a reservoir of what Jesus has said. That’s the reason living with scripture is so important

If we immerse ourselves in Scripture, if we discipline ourselves in prayer, if we tune our souls through worship, we can live in the Spirit, and the Spirit will be our daily counselor, teaching us, and keeping us sensitive to the Mind of Christ!

III

CONVICTOR AND CONVINCER

Then there is this final function of the Spirit according to Jesus. The Spirit is convictor and convincer. Listen to verses 8-11 of Chapter 16. The New English Bible and Barclay use two words in this translation: convict of sin, and convince of righteousness and judgment.

Whatever the verbs used, the key is in the fact that righteousness, and judgment are listed. There is a story from the earlier days of World Missions of a missionary telling the story of Christ by means of lantern slides, projected on whitewashed wall of a village house. When the picture of Jesus on the cross was shown, and Indian stepped forward, as if he couldn’t help it: “Come down” he cried. “I should be hanging there not you.” Until that is true of us until we know we are the guilty ones that Christ doesn’t deserve the cross, we do until we have a sense of sin, we will not know our need for a Savior.

The Holy Spirit does that work within us - convicts us of our sin and he convinces us of righteousness and judgment. Jesus is talking about the work he will do on the cross. Here the sin of man is exposed before the sheer righteousness of God in the gift of His Son for our salvation. And here in the Cross sin is condemned, judged and defeated. The Holy Spirit converts us of sin and convinces us that only Christ can save us.

IV

Let me close now by trying to tie all of this together.

The Holy Spirit is Companion and Comforter, Counselor, Convictor and Convincer. But one word must be added - the word of Jesus himself is Chapter 16, verse 14:

“He will glorify me, for he will take what is mine and declare it to you.” (John 16:14 RSV)

Everything the Spirit does in our lives is to bring us to Christ and glorify him. Christ is central always and evermore.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Maxie Dunnam