John 16:5-16 · The Work of the Holy Spirit
What Do You Really Know?
John 16:5-16
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Kay Strom was teaching third grade in a large elementary school. One morning all of the teachers were called to the teachers' room for an emergency meeting, and they hurried over, leaving their classes unsupervised. Everyone was worried, but none as much as Mrs. Whiting, because her class of first graders was especially mischievous and unruly.

When they got to the teachers' room, Mrs. Whiting said, "I think I had better listen in and find out what's going on in my classroom." She turned on the intercom, and sure enough, her room was in chaos. Children were yelling and jumping and throwing things. But one little voice shrieked out above all the rest of the uproar.

Mrs. Whiting recognized that piercing voice. She picked up the microphone and in her sternest voice said, "Elizabeth, sit down!"

Immediately the room fell silent.

After a few seconds, a small humble voice answered meekly, "Okay, God."

The teachers knew all about intercoms and microphones, but little Elizabeth, from her perspective, could think of only one explanation for a voice coming from nowhere and admonishing her by name. (1)

What do you know about God? Certainly you're more sophisticated than Elizabeth. But what do you really know about God?

Years ago, a fifth grade teacher in a Christian school asked her class to look at TV commercials and see if they could use them in some way to communicate ideas about God. Here are some of the results: God is like . . .

BAYER ASPIRIN. He works miracles.

God is like . . . FORD. He's got a better idea.

God is like . . . COCA COLA. He's the real thing.

HALLMARK CARDS. He cares enough to send His very best.

TIDE DETERGENT. He gets the stains out that others leave behind.

GENERAL ELECTRIC. He brings good things to life.

SCOTCH TAPE. You can't see him, but you know He's there.

DELTA. He's ready when you are.

ALLSTATE. You're in good hands.

What do you know about God?

Milton L. Perry, a pastor in Kansas, tells about one time when he gave in to temptation. The source of this temptation was a letter. It was a letter sitting on a nearby table. The letter was addressed to his son. Pastor Perry knew the letter was his son's property and not for dad's curious eyes. And so Perry fought the desire to read it. But the longer he sat in the easy chair reading the paper, the more the letter called to him: "Read me! Read me!"

In a moment of extreme weakness, this good pastor gave in to temptation and picked up the letter, removed it from the envelope and read. Unfortunately, this did not help satisfy his curiosity at all, for as he read he found that parts of the written conversation were missing. He read words like, "Yes! She did! And you know what that means!" And, "He stopped that long ago!!!"

Now he was really curious. Who was she? And what did she do? And what does that mean? And what was it that he stopped doing, and who is he? There were more unanswered questions than there was information.

If we're honest about it, that's how we feel about God. We probably have as many questions as answers. What does it mean, God in three persons? When Jesus ascended, where did he go? Where exactly is heaven?

Questions. Anyone who puts his or her mind to the subject of faith has them. Now consider our lesson for today from John's Gospel. Jesus is speaking to his disciples when he says to them: "I still have many things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now . . ."

That is an interesting insight, don't you think? The disciples were not ready to receive what Jesus had to give. That's probably true of us as well.

Legendary business leader Lee Iacocca once said something quite interesting. He said, "It's a good thing God doesn't let you see a year or two into the future, because you might be sorely tempted to shoot yourself. But He's charitable. He only lets you see one day at a time. When times get tough, there's no choice except to talk a deep breath, carry on, and do the best you can." (2)

Lee Iacocca, theologian. Don't misunderstand me. I'm not making fun of Iacocca's suggestion. In fact, I think he's probably right. There are some things it's better for us not to know. Suppose, for example, you knew with absolute certainty that six months from now at this exact same time you were going to be hit by a car and die? Would you want to know? Obviously you would probably avoid cars, wouldn't you? Maybe you'd even stay in bed on that particular day.

Some of you will remember the story of the man who was told by a fortune-teller that he would die in a plane crash. So he avoided flying. Six months later he. . . . died in a car crash. An airplane fell on his car. According to this philosophy, even if we stayed in bed on that preordained day, a car could come crashing through our bedroom wall. So, would you want to know that was going to happen?

Some of us would like to have the gift of knowing the future. But most of us probably would rather not know. It is the same with our knowledge of God. He has chosen to show us just a glimpse of who He is--Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. But we have other questions. Unavoidable questions. There is undoubtedly a reason for that. Jesus said that his disciples couldn't bear some of the things he was able to tell them. There is a reason we don't know everything about God.

But there's something we need to see. We don't know everything about God, but we know everything about Him that we need to know. The scriptures assure us of that. We know enough to save us. We know that God created everything that lives, moves, and exists. We know that God loves us and sent His only son to die for us. We know that God is with us through the power of the Holy Spirit. That's all we really need to know. After all, we are not saved by our knowledge, but by our faith. And that's good. If we were saved by the power of our intellect, some of us would be at a real disadvantage. Or would we? Sometimes brilliant people have a tendency to substitute their intellectual musings for simple faith--and they go off in all kinds of directions.

Most of us would agree that Thomas Jefferson was one of the most brilliant men who ever lived, but it would be a mistake to buy into Jefferson's theology. Jefferson was a deist who believed that God created the world and then told it goodbye. God, he surmised, was no longer interested in the affairs of men, much less in control of them.

When Jefferson read the Bible, he found doctrines like the deity of Christ that didn't correspond with his beliefs. So what did he do? He simply cut out the passages he didn't agree with. The Jefferson Bible contains the four Gospels, but deletes every reference to Christ's deity. Each Gospel ends at the crucifixion. The reader is left with a Jesus who was a very nice but sadly misunderstood man who died at the hands of his enemies and remained a corpse. There is no forgiveness, no hope, and no living Savior. According to Jefferson, humanity doesn't need God. We can make it on our own. (3)

It doesn't take a degree from Harvard to see that this kind of faith will not produce souls fit for heaven. It has no saving power. Sometimes people with superior intellectual powers make this mistake. We are not saved by our knowledge, or our intellect, or by a high and mighty education. We are saved by our faith, which is available to all of us. Faith is available even to the youngest and most limited among us.

Maybe that is why Jesus used a child to help illustrate what it takes to enter God's Kingdom. When little Elizabeth heard the voice on the P.A., she assumed it was God. That shouldn't surprise us, since children are not nearly as cynical and close-minded as adults are. Children have an amazing ability to see life without boundaries. They are bursting with potential, and see no reason why they can't achieve anything they set their minds to.

Bobbi and Kenny McCaughey of Carlisle, Iowa, know a lot about children. In 1997, the McCaugheys made national headlines when Bobbi gave birth to septuplets--four boys and three girls. In addition to their older daughter, Mikayla, that makes for a full house. Here is what the eight children said when asked what they want to be when they grow up:

Mikayla, the oldest, wants to be a missionary.

Brandon wants to be "a police."

Joel wants to be a "navy boy."

Natalie wants to be "a baby doctor."

Alexis wants to be "Rapunzel."

Kenny wants to be a superhero.

Nathan wants to be a bunny.

And Kelsey announced that she wants to be "a doctor and a princess." (4)

Well, why not? I understand that both jobs pay pretty well. We laugh, but in our heart of hearts maybe we need to recapture the innocence of a child.

Pamela J. Byers of Arcadia, Indiana, had an experience that many of us can relate to. It was a cold day in midwinter. Pamela's husband had left for work and the older children were in school, leaving Pamela, her 6-year-old daughter, Keely, and their newborn son at home some distance from town. Having some errands to run, Pamela bundled up the kids, settled them into their car seats, and got behind the steering wheel. Just then she realized several things at once: She didn't have her car keys, the house was locked, and they were out in the cold. Pamela's mind raced as she considered her different options. Her words betrayed the frustration she felt as she thought about the three of them struggling to stay warm in the bitter cold. Then she heard a little voice from the back seat: "Mommy, why don't we pray about it?" "Keely," Pamela said, "there's no way God can do anything." After all, she thought to herself, she was the one who had locked the keys in the house. She couldn't expect God to come to their rescue when they were suffering the result of her own carelessness. But Keely is a persistent child, and she pushed her faith on her Mother again: "Mommy, please pray about it. Jesus can help us." How could Pamela not honor that request? Keely was asking her to do something she believed in. So Pamela prayed. She doesn't remember the prayer; but she fulfilled Keely's request with a doubting heart. "Mommy," Keely said, "look in your purse where you keep your money. See if there's a key to the house." Pamela explained that she didn't keep a spare key in her change purse. She had only one key, and it was on a key chain locked in the house. "But Mommy," the little voice persisted, "look in your purse anyway." To this day Pamela doesn't know how a key ended up in her change purse. But that day her daughter's faith became her faith. (5)

Now we can think of a host of practical explanations for how the key came to be in Pamela's purse. But that's not the point, is it? The point is that a little child's faith and sometimes just genuine, simple faith is rewarded when people with more sophisticated solutions stand around frustrated.

What do you really know about God? Actually we know very little. But what we do know is enough to transform our lives. The truth is that our greatest need is not to know more, but to be able to trust more--and we all know this is true. ""˜Tis so sweet to trust in Jesus," says the old gospel tune and it is sweet to trust. And experience has taught us that it is also the very best way to live.

In her song titled "Trust His Heart," singer-songwriter Babbie Mason puts it this way: "God is too wise to be mistaken; God is too good to be unkind. So when you don't understand, when you don't see His plan, when you can't trace His hand, trust His heart." (6) And that's great advice. What do you know about God? If you know that Jesus loves you and died for you, that's all you really need to know.


1.  Kay Marshall Strom, Seeking Christ (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1994)pp. 96-97.

2.  Floyd Flake and Donna Marie Williams, The Way of the Bootstrapper (HarperSanFrancisco, 1999), p. 203.

3.  Pat Springle, Making Choices That Honor God (Elgin, IL: David C. Cook Publishing Co., 1990).

4.  "A Very Merry McCaughey Christmas" by Kathryn Casey, Ladies' Home Journal, December 2003, p. 54.

5. Adventist Review, May 29, 2003, http://www.adventistreview.org/. Cited by Wit&Wisdom.

6. Cited in Ed Young, Against All Odds: Family Survival in a Hostile World (Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1992).

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan