John 16:5-16 · The Work of the Holy Spirit
The Divine Advocacy
John 16:5-16
Sermon
by Maurice A. Fetty
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The Festival of Pentecost long has been neglected within American Protestantism. Often coinciding with Memorial Day weekend, it tends to be overshadowed by parades and visits to cemeteries and memories of those loved long since and lost a while. Even more than that, it is overshadowed by the official opening of summer for those of us in northern states. Memorial weekend is for opening cottages, launching boats and for getting a good start on a summer tan.

But the Festival of Pentecost has been around about 19 centuries longer than Memorial Day (which was begun in 1868) and no doubt will be observed long after Memorial Day is itself dead and forgotten. Pentecost means 50, and refers to the 50th day following Easter. According to the Gospels and Book of Acts, for 40 days the resurrected Jesus appeared to his disciples and then ascended into heaven. But on the Jewish festival day of Pentecost, 50 days after Easter, we are told the Holy Spirit of God came upon the disciples in the city of Jerusalem.

Unusual phenomena accompanied this occurrence. There was the sound of a mighty rushing wind. Strange phenomena which appeared to be tongues of fire rested upon the disciples' heads. And they were given the ability to understand one another even though they spoke a variety of languages. Peter and the apostles said that this event was in fulfillment of the prophecies of Joel, the prophet, who said that in the latter days God would pour out his Spirit upon his people. Moreover, it was also the fulfillment of the promise of Jesus that after he departed from them, he would send his Spirit to them to be their helper or advocate.

As a result of the coming of the Holy Spirit of God on Pentecost, the Christian church was brought into being. It was the early part of June, about 30 A.D., in the city of Jerusalem. Peter was inspired to preach the first Gospel sermon about the divine significance of Jesus' death and resurrection. This one whom a sinful age had crucified, God had made both Lord and Christ by his resurrection from the dead.

Now, said Peter, God was beginning a new humanity with Jesus Christ at the head. If the first Adam had disobeyed God to be subject to the powers of death, Jesus had obeyed God to become subject to the powers of life eternal. Thus the coming of his Spirit is the assurance that God has not given up on humankind. Instead, by his Spirit, he intends to be man's advocate, his counselor and helper. This was in keeping with what Jesus earlier had told them, as recorded by John's gospel. Physically, he was going away. But their movement would not be stopped by his death. Instead, by his resurrected and living Spirit, he would convict the world of sin and lead them into all truth. Just as the Incarnation had been evidence of God's forbearing love for the world, so would the coming of the Spirit be a sign of God's continuing advocacy for the development of our full humanity under the headship of Christ. God was not giving up on mankind. Instead, by his Spirit, he would continue to manifest his presence and power in the world to convict of sin and to lead into truth.

Therefore, on this Pentecost Sunday, this birthday of the Christian Church, we celebrate two aspects of the divine advocacy -- the conviction of sin and the leading into all truth.

Consider the Spirit's power to convict of sin. In his Pentecost sermon, Peter was intent to show how wrong the rulers in Jerusalem had been in convicting and crucifying Jesus. Both political and religious leaders had conspired to put Jesus to death because he was an unsettling challenge to their basis of power. They had determined that reality was to be defined by cynical religion and the politics of brute power. Among other things, the contest at the cross had to do with definitions of ultimate reality and authority. Jesus bet his life on sincere obedience to God and the eschewing of violence. He laid his life on the line for the cause of righteousness, justice and truth. And although the crucifixion appeared to be a defeat, the resurrection, said Peter, was God's vindication of Jesus. The principalities and powers were wrong and Jesus was right. And by his resurrection and Spirit, God was convicting the world of sin.

And the Spirit still is convicting the principalities and powers of sin. It was the confessing Christians of Germany who stood up against Naziism and all its atrocities. If Jesus stood against the holocaust theology learned from the Old Testament where "pure religion" was thought best protected by eliminating "impure people," Christians of conscience have called for resistance to the brutal and blatant holocaust powers. Rather than obliterate a total people with all their children and cattle as part of the Old Testament and Naziism taught, Jesus advocated willing the good for the enemy and conversion by gentle persuasion and the sincere witness of the life of faith.

Or consider the witness of the Spirit with respect to Ethiopia, Somalia and other starving countries. The conscience of the Christian world was moved to raise millions of dollars to send millions of tons of food to these countries. The outpouring of love and compassion has indeed been overwhelming. However, the Marxist Ethiopian government, headed by Colonel Mengista, charged exorbitant port entry fees to the very ships delivering millions of tons of free foodstuffs to his starving peoples. Not only did he profiteer off the Christian heart of compassion, he blocked shipment of free food to his dying people, especially those in the rebel territories of Eritrea. Let us be assured of this, the living Spirit of Christ works to convict corrupt and inhuman government. The principalities and powers will not prevail forever.

However, the Spirit of God exposes sin not only in society and the corrupt systems of government. It penetrates to the innermost reaches of our own hearts to expose the evil and to bring the self to the divine light. It is by the gentle nudging of Christ's Spirit that we are saved from the suffocation of obsessive materialism and the exhaustion of compulsive achieving. Many Americans are so caught up in the obsession with success at any cost that they want to make their mark, even if it is only as brief as a Roman candle on the Fourth of July. Many Americans are typified by drama critic Walter Kerr's friend who said that he was afraid that if he did not hurry up he would not achieve his goals before he had his heart attack, but that if he did not slow down, he was going to have his heart attack before he achieved his goals. The living Spirit of Christ reminded us of the sin of presumption wherein we think we must build a paradise of our own, rather than receive it as a gift from God. The Spirit of the humble, self-sacrificing Christ convicts us of our pride wherein we must declare our self-worth in God's eyes by overwhelming achievement and success. It is this Spirit which stands over against brazen, selfish sensuality. It is this Spirit which witnesses to our worth as total human beings, rather than just as sex objects controlled by eros. It is this Spirit which releases us from the grip of hedonism and the suffocation of narcissism. As on Pentecost, so today, the Spirit of God continues to bring judgment upon the world in its corruption. And it judges us in our inward corruption, to save us from destruction and death.

Consider also the Spirit's power to lead into all truth. On the day of Pentecost Peter preached to the assembled thousands convincing them of the truth of Jesus' life. The authorities had declared Jesus an imposter, liar, traitor, disturber of the peace and blasphemer, and thereby had him put to death. But God raised him from the dead to prove God true and every man a liar, says Paul. And said Peter and the Gospel of John, Christ is indeed God's way and truth and life.

Well-known biblical scholar and translator, J. B. Phillips, has lamented that many Christians today are living on the spiritual capital of the past -- a spiritual capital that is rapidly being depleted. Says the Rev. Dr. Phillips, "Our society ... bears all the marks of a God-starved community. There is little real moral authority because no ultimate Authority is known or acknowledged."1 As a result, says Dr. Phillips, many see little purpose in life. "Most ... hold on, without much reason or authority to the moral standards of what is commonly supposed to be the good life."2 Consequently, many of us become locked into a comfortable materialism and cozy agnosticism.

But that is not the way of the Spirit. It is the advocate of truth, willing to do its work with men and women open to it. Consider some of the martyrs of Christian history who risked themselves for the truth for our great benefit. Reformers like Savanarola and Huss were burned at the stake. The Bible we so much take for granted was given to us through the courage of men like Wyckliffe and Tyndale who were burned at the stake because they dared to translate the Bible into the common English tongue.

What power the message of the Bible has had for truth. And how men have violently resisted it in the past to protect their vested interests as today they resist it in totalitarian countries. But our resistance is not violent, but passive. We do not hate the Bible, we ignore it. We do not wish its extinction except by default through neglect. It has for centuries been the agent of the Spirit, but says J. B. Phillips, we really have not studied it with an adult mind. Note how hard it is to get people to study the Bible in an adult way.

If Pastor John Robinson assured the Pilgrims there was yet more light to break from God's blessed word of truth, so would Jesus assure his eternal flock of pilgrims that it is God's desire to liberate us from closed systems of thought. If we are bored, if we find life tiresome, if we are overwhelmed with skepticism and pessimism, is it not time for us to open ourselves again to the Spirit of Truth?

The greatest scientists are the humblest scientists. They are overwhelmed by how little they know and how great the mysteries yet to be discovered. So too in the life of faith and thought. It is the childish mind which suffers from arrested development. But it is the childlike mind that is ever open to new truth. Agnosticism can become as much a prison as ignorance.

The Spirit would awaken us to the truth that God is not a distant, unknowable mystery, totally unconcerned with the world. Rather, as Phillips says, God has focused himself in Jesus Christ, to manifest his being in a man, to show for certain that God's attitude toward mankind is one of unremitting love. By the Incarnation, the "enfleshment," God has demonstrated his advocacy for the world of man. It is, says Dorothy Sayers, "God taking his own medicine," entering into humanity to advocate for its coming to the truth and love of God.

So it is on this Sunday in Pentecost we pray to be open to the Spirit of God so as to be convicted of the sin which destroys us and to be led into the truth which would make us whole. The Spirit, the great liberator of thought, would teach us more and more, knowing the more we know, the more we are able to know. And the Spirit would teach us we are not living in a lunatic and chaotic world, but in a part of a law-abiding universe, the greatest law of which is love, as demonstrated in the death and resurrection of Jesus. And the challenge is this: should it be true that we admit that this earth has been visited by the Creator, if God has focused himself in the Christ, then the values and standards of this Son of God will inevitably challenge and judge our lives. But by the same token, for those open and humble, this same Spirit wishes not to judge to destroy, but to convict to bring us to the truth to make us whole.

For as John's gospel says, "God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes on Him should not perish but have everlasting life. For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save it and make it whole" (John 3:16-17). This is the Divine Advocacy.

1. Phillips, J. B. God, Our Contemporary, (New York: Macmillan, 1960), p. VIII.

2. Ibid., p. 6.

CSS Publishing Company, THE DIVINE ADVOCACY, by Maurice A. Fetty