John 14:15-31 · Jesus Promises the Holy Spirit
Veni, Spiritus Sanctus, Veni
John 14:8-17 (25-27)
Sermon
by Arley K. Fadness
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On this Pentecost Sunday, as we celebrate the birthday of the church, I want to teach you a simple and yet potentially powerful prayer. It goes like this ... "Veni, Spiritus Sanctus, Veni," or as the Germans would say it, "Komm Heiliger Geist, Herre Gott." In English it is simply, "Come, Holy Spirit, come."

There is no prayer in German, Greek, English, Swahilli, or Latin more powerful than this — "Veni, Spiritus Sanctus, Veni." This prayer opens us to the Holy Spirit, who comes, fills, and leads our lives. For when the Holy Spirit appears, the miracle of new life, renewal, and dynamis (power) breaks loose. "Come, Holy Spirit, come!"

A ship strayed off course near San Deigo some years ago. The ship got stuck in a reef at low tide. Twelve tugboats failed in their attempts to move it. Finally, the captain instructed the tugboats to leave. He decided, "I'll just be patient and wait." He waited and waited. Then high tide appeared. All of a sudden the Pacific Ocean began to rise. The rising tide lifted the ship and placed it back into the channel. What human power could not do, the rising tide of the Pacific Ocean did!1

Something like that happened to the early church on the Day of Pentecost! The disciples and others were all together in one place — confused, unmotivated, fearful — when suddenly the tide of God rolled in!

Jesus' promise in John's gospel was literally fulfilled on Pen­tecost Day.

I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Ad­vocate, to be with you forever. This is the Spirit of truth ... but the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you everything, and remind you of all that I have said to you.

— John 14:16-17, 26

Jesus knew the disciples would forget "all I have said to you." Jesus, knowing the tendency to get stuck or distracted by alien truths, provides a teacher who would teach and remind. This teacher/ advocate, literally, "one called to the side of," would never, ever, allow the followers of Jesus to live without help! Like an old speech professor, the Spirit of truth whispers the secret of Pentecost into the ears and hearts and minds of Jesus' followers. The secret of Pentecost is the gospel — the gospel, which is the good news — the story, the witness of Jesus Christ died and raised from the dead!

When Pilate, swimming in a swamp of half truths, myths, and political intrigue asks, "What is truth?" he unwittingly expresses to Jesus humanity's eternal yearning and longing for truth. Little did Pilate realize, standing there, right in front of Pilate, was and is the truth! The old speech professor, the teacher, who has been around a long time, urges all to know the truth, teach the truth, and tell the truth. "Come, Holy Spirit, come."

Today is a perfect day to give thanks to God for teachers. Many of us have been blessed with excellent teachers, mentors, and mod­els. I attended a one-room country school for eight years learning like the characters in the The Little House on the Praire. There was Miss Prunty, Miss Olson, and Mrs. Watts. Later I was schooled and nurtured in a Christian high school, two colleges, and two theo­logical seminaries. One of my favorite teachers was professor, preacher, poet, Dr. Gerhard Frost, who taught us seminarians the importance of the teaching ministry in catechetics class. Dr. Frost once said, "The art of teaching is the art of getting out of God's way. The best teacher is he who most truly transports each indi­vidual into the presence of God. God-centered, Christ-centered, Spirit-centered teaching — this is true teaching."2

I was never subjected to, nor crippled by, a bad teacher. His­tory abounds with teachers who failed to teach well and who failed to teach the truth. Marcion was one bad egg. Marcion was declared a heretic by the early church, since he would have thrown away the Old Testament. Sabellis is another who taught modalism, a heresy that promoted the Trinity as expressed in three separate modes. Pelgius, an Irish monk, confused salvation by trying to mix water and oil, teaching that grace needs an act of human will to be efficacious.

The list of dubious teachers is long: Joseph Smith, Charles Taze Russell, and in our own day, Warren Jeffs, and many others.

It is refreshing that Jesus promises a teacher, an instructor, an advocate, worth listening to. This instructor/advocate, the paraclete, guides Jesus' followers into the truth.

Today when you and I pray, "Come, Holy Spirit, come" we can expect the three P's of Pentecost: people united, power ex­cited, and passion ignited.

In the first place this instructor, who teaches and reminds, is worth listening to because the Spirit of truth creates people united. After all, they came from different countries, many different lan­guages that first Pentecost. Galileans, Parthians, Medes, Elamites, and people from Mesopotamia, Cappadocia, Pamphylia, Phrygia, and Judea were there. People divided by national boundaries were suddenly united! All diversity was brought together. The Holy Spirit works unity through the gospel of reconciliation through Jesus Christ.

Take a quarter, dime, nickel, or penny out of your pocket. What slogan do you see besides, "In God we trust"? It's the Latin phrase, E pluribus unum, which means "Out of many, one."

The phrase was first cast on our coins in 1795 and has been on them ever since. Our country started out as many states but came together under one common government. The motto, E pluribus unum, fits our nation. It also fits the church of Jesus Christ. Out of the nations, God gives one language, one speech, one voice, one truth, one focus, one purpose, one vision, and one mission. To­gether we thrive, apart we disintegrate.

Beekeepers tell us that honeybees can only live in community. Individually, they cannot and will not survive. So it is the church of Jesus Christ is only vibrant and alive as the members live in community. "Come, Holy Spirit, come" create your people united!

When you and I pray, "Come, Holy Spirit, come" expect the second P of Pentecost: power! power engaged! power excited! Af­ter all, Jesus promised power in Acts 1:8: "You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you ... you will be my witnesses."

Why be weak? Why be paralyzed? Why be stuck at low tide — marooned on life's sandbanks? My children sometimes gave me a farewell as I left to conduct worship at our church. They never said, "God be with you" or "preach the gospel" but "Dad, don't be boring."

A certain church signage advertised their air-conditioned sanc­tuary by the words: "It's cool inside." Some wit penned under­neath, "Brother, you said it." Far from cool, far from boring, that first Pentecost exploded with wind, fire, and holy breath, promis­ing a new wild freedom, an intoxicating joy ride.

When you and I are stalled, when we feel weak, disabled, and down, the Spirit of truth functions like a set of jumper cables. We have connection.

Author Robert Fulghum wrote, "Jumper cables? You want jumper cables? Sure I got jumper cables. I can hook you up to Grand Coulee Dam, buddy, or wire you into the Almighty God or whatever powers there be."3

God's gift to us, like jumper cables, is access to power, power from on high, power excited!

In the third place, pray, "Come, Holy Spirit, come" and expect passion ignited! What is it that you love to be and do? What is it in your life that energizes and fulfills you? Remember the old Peace Corps ad? "Join the toughest job you'll ever love." Finding your passion is more than a cliché or a fad. Finding and engaging your gifts and passion reveals God's callings for your life. Your passion is your vocation. When you discover your passion, you also dis­cover your path.

Imagine this scene — coming into worship and the ushers giv­ing you a helium balloon. The balloon represents your passion in life. As you hear the scripture readings, the sermon, participate in the liturgy, sing the songs, and pray the prayers, your heart is touched, your passion is stirred, a dream is kindled, a goal is in­spired, and you let go of your balloon. As the balloon rises all through worship, you physically see the Holy Spirit-empowered passions ignited in the body of Christ expressed. Then in discus­sion groups and classes you share how God has created you and gifted you and launches you out into mission.

People united! Power excited! Passions ignited!

My dad was filling a silo one day in Day County, South Da­kota, with the help of his neighbors when suddenly the WC Allis Chalmers tractor he was driving, flipped over backward on top of him and the steering wheel pinned him to the ground. In a flash, a couple of neighbors ran over, grabbed hold, and lifted that iron tractor off him in an unbelievable surge of power. Though injured, Dad's life was spared. He recovered from that accident, living un­til he was 96. Many have wondered, how did the neighbors do that? Where did that amazing lifting power come from in that in­stant of need?

Though it was unlikely that the neighbors took time to pray, "Come, Holy Spirit, come," they nonetheless suddenly became, in this crisis situation, people united, power excited, and passions ignited!

How strong, how powerful do you and I feel today on Pente­cost morning? More often I feel shy, insecure, and inadequate. Too often I am forgetful and tempted to follow the latest truth or fad. Thanks be to God, through the word, the sacraments, through the Holy Spirit's teaching and reminding. I am renewed by grace, and I am able to switch the focus from myself to the work and action of the Holy Spirit. In glad response I sing the song of total grace, no act of my own will, to experience salvation full and free. Amen.

The Spirit's called me to follow Jesus,
The Spirit's called me to follow Jesus,
The Spirit's called me to follow Jesus,
God leads me still, God leads me still.

 

Called and enlightened, the Spirit gathers,
Called and enlightened, the Spirit gathers,
Called and enlightened, the Spirit gathers,
Preserving faith, preserving faith.

 

By my own reason, and strength I perish,
By my own reason, and strength I perish,
By my own reason, and strength I perish,
God save us all, God save us all.
4
 

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1. Bailey E. Smith, Nothing But The Blood (Nashville, Tennessee: Broadman Press, 1987).

2. Gerhard E. Frost, The Law Perfect (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1959), p. 1.

3. Robert Fulghum, All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten (Ox­ford: Ivy books, 1989).

4. "The Spirit's Called Me," words by Jeffrey Callander, can be sung to the tune "I Have Decided To Follow Jesus." Used by permission.

CSS Publishing Company, Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (First Third): Veni, Spiritus Sanctus, Veni, by Arley K. Fadness