John 14:15-31 · Jesus Promises the Holy Spirit
The Legacy of Jesus
John 14:8-17 (25-27)
Sermon
by David E. Leininger
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A certain widow expected to inherit all her late husband's wealth. Instead, she learned from the lawyer that her husband had left her $5. Everything else went to his secretary. Naturally the widow was furious. She drove to the tombstone establishment and ordered that the inscription on her husband's monument be changed.

"I'm sorry," said the man doing the chiseling, "you told me to inscribe ‘Rest in Peace' on the stone and that is done; I can't change it now. You'll have to buy a new stone."

The widow thought for a moment then said, "No, no new stone. Just add something after ‘Rest in Peace.' Chisel in ‘Till We Meet Again.' "

Another story. Mr. Smith had died. The funeral was over, and after a few weeks, the family had gathered in the attorney's office for the reading of the will. The lawyer went through all the preliminaries and then got down to what they were waiting to hear: What had been left to whom. He read, "To my loving wife, I leave the house and all its possessions. To my son, I leave the stocks and bonds. To my daughter, I bequeath the sum of $100,000 with which to raise and educate her two beautiful children. And finally, to my good-for-nothing brother, Harry, who always said I would never remember him in my will, ‘Hello, Harry.' "

Those stories are prompted because our text gives us Jesus' legacy. "Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid" (John 14:27). There is nothing that the disciples would need more of over the next few awful days of trial and crucifixion, death and burial, than what had just been given them. They would be in turmoil over the loss of their leader. They would find themselves huddled behind locked doors for fear of arrest on order of the rulers of the temple. With Jesus crucified by the Romans, they could have been in just as much danger from Pontius Pilate's legionnaires. But they had been given a legacy of peace, and peace is what they came to possess as the risen Christ was revealed to them.

As promised, it was not the peace that the world gives, the casual greeting, "Shalom" that neighbors would offer as they passed on the street, the same greeting that folks in that part of the world offer one another to this very day. No, there was nothing casual about this kind of peace. This one meant something.

The kind of peace that the scriptures talk about is not just an "absence of conflict" kind of peace. The shalom of the Bible means more. It is not the kind that the world finds in drugs and alcohol and sex and an endless list of things that do not really satisfy. No, the kind of peace that scripture talks about (and over 400 times, as a matter of fact) carries with it the connotation of unity, completeness, rest, and ease.

Perhaps the best way to illustrate that kind of peace is to try to describe the scene in our car the day after our daughter was born. It was a trip my wife and I will never forget. We were surrounded by a series of tornados, millions of dollars in damage, and seventy people killed. We were driving from Camden, South Carolina, to our home in the little village of Liberty Hill, a trip that would normally take about 25 minutes; this day the trip would take three-and-a-half hours. Trees were down, utility poles snapped, live power lines were dangling, and debris was all over the road.

Suddenly a hail storm descended that, quite frankly, scared me half to death. I was convinced that there was no way our car windows would be able to survive it and that we would find ourselves in the middle of that terrible storm stranded on the highway with a newborn baby. The noise in the car was deafening as the hail continued to pound relentlessly down. We may as well have been sitting in a tin can with someone beating a tattoo on us with drumsticks. As it turned out, the damage to the car was worth well over $1,000, not an insignificant sum back then (or now, for that matter).

I looked over at Christie who was holding Erin tightly to herself. Christie was as scared as I was. Then I looked at Erin. She was sound asleep — not a worry in the world. She had peace in the midst of that awful storm.

Sounds impossible, doesn't it? Some would say, "Sure, Erin was peaceful in that storm; she could afford to be peaceful — her worries were taken care of, and she was too young to know any different." That's true, but it makes no difference here, because that is precisely what Jesus was leaving his friends — a "worries taken care of" kind of peace that comes from a childlike trust.

In Philippians, Paul writes, "Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus" (4:6-7). That is a pretty good three-step formula. If we would have inner peace, don't be anxious (even though that might be our natural tendency); bring everything to the Lord (not just the things we might think the Lord would be interested in); and bring our problems in the right spirit — a spirit of thankfulness.

Peace was a characteristic of the early church. They had problems, to be sure. There were persecutions, personality clashes, and theological disputes. Yes, there was a certain amount of conflict. But through it all there was growth. As the book of Acts has it, "Then the church throughout Judea, Galilee, and Samaria enjoyed a time of peace. It was strengthened; and encouraged by the Holy Spirit, it grew in numbers, living in the fear of the Lord" (9:31).

Note the emphasis on the Holy Spirit that is also a part of Jesus' upper room legacy: "the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and will remind you of everything I have said to you" (John 14:26).

"Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid" (John 14:27) — the legacy of Jesus to his disciples, not just those there that evening, but to all who would follow him down through the ages.

Oh, that the world might hear him speak
The word of comfort that men seek;
To all the lowly, and unto the meek,
Jesus whispers "Peace."
— Della M. Warren[1]

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1. "Jesus Whispers Peace," words by Della M. Warren, 1936. In the public domain.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Lectionary Tales for the Pulpit, by David E. Leininger