John 14:5-14 · Jesus the Way to the Father
The Hard-to-Believe Promise
John 14:5-14
Sermon
by Louis H. Valbracht
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As our Lord took leave of his disciples, promising them the coming of the Holy Spirit and the power that would be thereby transmitted to them and through them, he repeated a promise which he had made before. He was attempting to reiterate the power that we have at our fingertips, if we only believe it. Actually, it concerns the subject of prayer, because any petition addressed to Christ is a prayer. So when he says: "Whatever you ask in my name, I will do it," we have the whole key to the power of prayer. The reason many of our prayers go apparently unanswered or are answered only with a negative silence is the fact that the petition is not addressed in Christ’s name. The whole power of prayer depends upon that qualifying statement: "Whatever you ask in my name." If we are skeptical because God does not seem to answer our prayers, then we must ask of our petitions whether they are worthy to be asked in the name of Christ. Obviously, many, or perhaps most, of our prayers do not come under this category.

What we speak of comes under the heading of things difficult to believe, because we are speaking of the power and the efficacy of prayer. Prayer, oh, yes, that’s something that we talk about, laud, praise, in Sunday school; and then, the rest of the time, regard with a high level of skepticism and neglect. Perhaps the little girl is more truthful than we would like to believe, when she asked her mother why they always said their prayers just before going to bed. Quite understandably, she inquired: "Is it because the rates for long distance are cheaper at night?" The objects of our prayers, and the answers to them do seem like a long, long distance away.

Do you remember the incident in Huckleberry Finn where Mark Twain has Huck make a very human observation? "Miss Watson took me into a closet and prayed, but nothing came of it. She told me to pray every day, and whatever I asked for, I would get. But it weren’t so. I tried it. Once I got a fish line but no hooks. I tried praying for hooks, three, four times, but somehow it wouldn’t work. One day I asked Miss Watson to try for me, but she said I was a fool. She never told me why. I couldn’t make it out in no way. So I says to myself, if a body can get anything he prays for, why don’t Deacon Wynn get back the money he lost on pork? Why don’t the widow get back the silver snuffbox that was stole? Why don’t Miss Watson fat up a bit? No, I says to myself, there ain’t nothin’ to it." Yes, Huck’s concept of prayer is too tragically common. Prayer, to many, is a kind of process of looking over a menu of what life has to offer and then ordering all the best things, with the full expectation that God, like an attentive waiter, will scurry around and provide them for us.

And so, again and again, we wonder about our prayers. Many of the questions are thoughtful and sincere. There’s a legitimate area of confusion and questioning. The other day, I was reading the musings of one of our pastors in Buffalo, New York. He was telling of the tornado that tore through that area of the nation some years ago, you remember. It roared through Michigan and Ohio, leaving death and devastation in its wake. And then, strangely, inexplicably, it leaped over Buffalo and dipped down again to rip through Worcester, Massachusetts, and level it to the ground. That night, all through the night, people prayed, as they heard on the radio and television warnings blared out of the devastation, the impending disaster that was waiting them. Buffalo was spared. But hadn’t people prayed in Flint, Michigan? Hadn’t there been thousands of prayers go up from Worcester? And so, the morning after, we were left wondering. Why did the people in Buffalo live and the people in Flint die?

Again and again, I relive the scenes of the battle of Iwo Jima. Hadn’t we all prayed at Iwo? I am sure that there was not a human heart in that whole island from which some prayer had not been wrenched. And yet, for years now, the grass has been green on the graves of those who died all around me. Why am I still alive? During the retreat to Dunkirk, for several days, the English Channel was whipped by storms, you remember. And yet, on those important days, when the ships and boats of every description came out to gather up the remnants of the retreating British Army and take them back across the Channel, the Channel was strangoly glassy and quiet and calm. And again and again, it was said: "God did this."

You read the words of Johnny Bartok of Eddie Rickenbacker’s crew, describing those days when they were forced down in the Pacific: "As soon as we were in the rafts and at the mercy of God, we knew that we were in no condition to expect help from him. We spent hours each day confessing our sins to each other and to God, and then we prayed, and God answered, and it was real. We needed water. We prayed for water. We got water. We asked for fish. We got fish. We got meat when we prayed. Sea gulls don’t go around sitting on people’s heads, asking to be caught. On the eleventh day, when the plane flew over, we cried like babies. It was then that I prayed to God: ‘If you send that plane back, I’ll tell everybody that I believe in you.’ Other planes flew on, but that plane came back. Why? Did it just happen? No, God sent that plane back."

And so it is with our prayers. What do we make of all of this? More people than we can guess ask: "What does it all mean?" Whether it’s grief or gladness, tears or triumph, pain or pleasure, they say: "What did I do to deserve this? Was it prayer?" Well, it’s a true but tragic fact that few people really pray today. In only about thirteen percent of our homes do we even go through the

perfunctory performance of saying grace before meals, and then, usually, only when children are present. Why our lack of prayer? Why our skepticism? Perhaps one college student’s answer will suffice. He put it to me this way: "We don’t have to pray for things today. We have the brains and power to go out and do them and get them for ourselves, without any superstitious dependence upon prayer."

Or, perhaps, we could put it this way. Many of you watched the television program "CBS Reports on Unidentified Flying Objects." The sum and substance of the whole report was that if there were UFO’s around, we have the equipment and the knowledge to know that they are there and they are not. But I was particularly intrigued with the final statement of that program, made by a young, brainy, eminent astronomer. The reporter had asked him why he thought there was so much interest in so many observations of UFO’s today, if they didn’t really exist. And with sophisticated, intellectual snobbery, he said, with all of the country listening and as the final punch line of that program: "Oh, I suppose it’s our contemporary substitute for God. They take the place of that superhuman, omniscient, all-seeing, benevolent creature out there some place that people like to think are watching over them but in which nobody believes very much today."

There it is, fellow citizens, and I shuddered, because it gives us the answer for our neglect of prayer, our obsession and our preoccupation with our own power to answer our own prayers! Power - it’s the keynote of our age, power windows, power brakes, power steering, power garage doors, power politics, computerized power, transistorized power, industrial power, financial power. We are strong. We are independent. We need no help of any kind from anyone. We are wise and powerful, wealthy and affluent. Rufus Jones tells the story of the daughter of a farmer who had become very prosperous, who went into the village store. The storekeeper, trying to make friendly conversation, asked: "And how are your hens laying? Are they laying well?" "They can," the girl replied, with her nose in the air, "but in our financial position, they don’t have to."

And so, we are obsessed with our own power, our own wealth, our own affluence. I shudder, again and again, when I hear the witnesses before our Congressional Committees report that we are still capable of standing alone with our own power and fighting off the rest of the world single-handedly, if necessary. Our Lord said, prophetically, of us: "So far, you have asked nothing in my name. Ask and receive that your joy may be full." And, again and again, by word and attitude, we have said: "Please, Lord, we’d rather do it ourselves! Don’t worry about us. We have the power!" Power, the keynote of our day, whether it’s personal or national.

We find it very hard to understand a statement like Paul’s, when he says: "When I am weak, then I am strong." In the diaries of Paul Goebbels, that fiendish voice of Nazi superman propaganda, he refers two or three times to Mahatma Gandhi. In each case, he calls him a fool and a fanatic, because he chose a course of nonresistance and peaceful revolution to seek the freedom of India. In Goebbels’s estimate, only force, only power, could achieve victory in the world. It was the only thing that really had meaning. Today, Nazi Germany is just a terrible memory - and India is a growing, independent nation. That which Goebbels thought was strength was weakness. That which he thought was weakness was strength. Today our greatest danger, beloved fellow citizens and fellow Christians, is not our weakness. Our greatest danger is our strength!

Consider the dangers of power. When Laval asked Stalin not to antagonize the Pope, Stalin merely retorted: "How many divisions does the Pope have?" One of the dangers of power: it makes men overconfident. It blinds their eyes to reality. Samson, in the Old Testament, was supremely confident of his own strength and physical power. He had never read the modern magazine advertisement "Never Underestimate the Power of a Woman." But Delilah used his own strength against him, his power. His very strength was his weakness.

Power corrupts. Men lose their respect for human rights and human dignity. They begin to feel superior to moral law, to divine law, to human rights, to any right, except their own, backed up by their own invincible power. The lust for power works like termites, boring from within, leaving outside what appears to be strong but is rotten and crumbling at the core. Wasn’t it Alexander the Great who became so arrogantly irritated when the terrible storm would not allow his great armies to cross the Straits of the Dardanelles that he commanded his soldiers to go out and beat the waves with rods to punish the water?

Men in their power and their prosperity lose their understanding of the power of the unseen. The unswerving steadfastness of the democracies during World War II completely mystified Hitler. He didn’t know what kept them going, what held them up. How do they keep on? You see, he had forgotten the unseen power of the spiritual forces of Almighty God. And, notice, that Almighty God always works his will, not with the power of men, but with the weakness of men. Can we read history? The evidence is there. Every nation that has feverishly prepared for a war has lost it! Our nation has been unprepared for every major war into which we have been forced, and we have never lost one! Our very weakness was our strength! This nation’s strength has not been in its power to destroy but in its power to construct. It has not been our alliance with armies but our alliance with God that gave us strength.

Remember the Constitution. Most of the state constitutions of this union contain statements acknowledging that that state is established with the dependence upon the power of Almighty God. The first university in this land had as its motto: "To the glory of Christ." The framers of the Constitution of ths nation called this country "a divine adventure in a new type of Christian commonwealth." For years, the only book that we used in our public schools - the only book we used in the schools of this nation - was the Bible! We talk a great deal about the American way of life. Do we remember, any more, what the American way of life really is?

We are strong, when we know how dependent upon God we are. Each time we are faced with some desperate crisis, we have prayed. No, Christ doesn’t explain in minute detail just how prayer works. He doesn’t explain how he makes giants out of weaklings. He doesn’t explain how he makes strength out of weakness. But we do know that, as a people, as a nation, we have lived by the power of prayer - Washington on his knees at Valley Forge, Lincoln confessing that when his knees shook, he knelt on them.

Remember the day after the day of infamy, December 8, 1941, when President Franklin Delano Roosevelt confronted the Joint Session of Congress and the entire nation over the air? Our Navy was at the bottom of Pearl Harbor. Our handful of troops, scattered around the world, were ready for almost immediate defeat and annihilation. We were weak, defenseless, unprepared. We could not raise a hand in our own defense. And yet, his voice came out with a ringing affirmation of victory - ultimate, inevitable victory! But, remember this, fellow citizens - oh, may we never, never, never forget it - that his last words were a prayer: "Help us, God! Help us, God!"

So may we remember the hard-to-believe promise of our Lord: "Whatever you ask in my name, I will do it, that the Father may be glorified in the Son."

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Embalmed Alive!, by Louis H. Valbracht