John 14:15-31 · Jesus Promises the Holy Spirit
What On Earth Is The Trinity?
John 14:15-31
Sermon
by Donald B. Strobe
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English mystery writer Dorothy Sayers was also a lay theologian in the Church of England. In one of her books she discussed the difficulty a missionary to the Orient had in trying to explain the Trinity. As you know, one of the symbols for the Holy Spirit is a descending dove. The Oriental gentleman, lost in the maze of theology, said: "Honorable Father I understand. Honorable Son I understand. Honorable bird I don't understand at all!"

He is not alone! George Bernard Shaw once said that all professions are conspiracies against the laity. Nowhere does this seem to be more true than in the Christian doctrine of the Trinity.

STILL, CHRISTIANS ARE TRINITARIANS. "In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy (Spirit)." With those familiar words, Christians baptize their children, marry their spouses, bury their dead, and celebrate their sacraments. The words are a part of the worship and ritual of every Christian body on earth. Everywhere you go in the world, you will find Christians using the same language about God. "In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit." Just what do these words mean? Are they merely theological mumbojumbo designed to confuse the laity, or do they point to something real and important? For most of us they are a means of dealing with the nature of God.

Ninetyeight per cent of the American people, according to most polls, say that they believe in God. That can mean everything or that can mean nothing. For many people, that belief is a vague notion about "Someone in the great Somewhere" (to quote a popular religious song of some years ago). For a lot of people God is nothing more than a vast oblong blur. C.S. Lewis once wrote of a girl he knew who said that the word, God, reminded her of a "vast tapioca pudding." The only problem was that she hated tapioca pudding!

It makes a tremendous difference what sort of God we believe in. In these days when religious fanatics threaten the world, we have come to realize, if we didn't know it before, that belief in God is not enough. The question is: what sort of God do we believe in? Do we believe in a God who condones the taking of hostages, the murder of innocent people, the tyranny and oppression of millions?

Christians believe in a God who has revealed His nature and purpose to the world in and through Jesus Christ. We also believe that God continues to reveal Himself, continues to act on the stage of human history. When Jesus was no longer with the disciples, they did not feel that God had left them. And, at Pentecost, the presence of God became richer and deeper than ever before, as the Holy Spirit came upon them. This God who continues to reveal Himself in the world and in the hearts of persons, Christians call "Holy Spirit."

Very early in the life of the Christian Church it was found necessary to speak of God in these three ways: as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Around the year 55 A.D., St. Paul wrote two letters to the church at Corinth. In the second letter Paul wrote: "The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all!" (II Cor. 13:14) I imagine that Paul would have been surprised if someone had told him that those words would become an official blessing or benediction used universally by the Christian Church for the next two thousand years! But those words sum up the essence of the Christian Faith. We believe that because of the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ we have come to know the love of God, in and through the fellowship (the community) of the Holy spirit, which is the Church. And so we sing: "Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty...God in three Persons, blessed Trinity!"

DOES THIS MEAN THAT WE BELIEVE IN THREE GODS? Emphatically not! In fact, the doctrine of the Trinity was set forth in an effort to preserve the oneness of God. It was not developed by theologians living aloof from the world in some ivory tower, but it came out of the daybyday experience of those first Christians. As good Jews, they believed in One God. But they had experienced the presence of God visiting them in the person of Jesus, who they called the Christ: "God's anointed One," (the Revealer of God). And when Jesus was no longer with them in the flesh, they did not feel that God had left them. Indeed, Jesus Himself had told them: "It is to your advantage that I go away, (for) I will send the counselor to you...the Holy Spirit. I have been with you. He shall be IN you." (See John 14:16) Jesus Christ, we believe, is the supreme revelation of God.

As a Man, Jesus could only be in one place at one time. And that place was Palestine, a little country some 50 x 150 miles, smaller than Massachusetts or New Jersey. Christians believe the Holy Spirit universalized Jesus. Through the Holy Spirit Jesus Christ is more alive to millions more people today than He ever was in the first three decades of the first century. Of course, the Trinity is a deep mystery. Theologians have spent lifetimes spraining their brains trying to understand it.

It helps to remember what the early church meant when it spoke of "God in three persons." The word "person" come from the Latin "persona," and originally referred to the mask worn on the stage by actors in a play. Because of masks, actors in the Roman theater could play several different roles. So God plays several different roles on the stage of human history. God is Creator, God is Redeemer, God is Sustainer. We might say that the doctrine of the Trinity describes God's progressive efforts to get closer and closer to us. Not content to be "above" us, God came to walk beside us. Not even content with that, God now dwells within us. That is what we mean when we say, "I believe in the Holy Spirit." The Holy Spirit, as Yale professor Halford Luccock used to say, is "God in the Present Tense."

WHAT DOES THE HOLY SPIRIT DO? That is the question that makes this doctrine relevant to your life and mine. The Holy Spirit makes God real in our lives today. The Revised Standard version translates Jesus' title for the Holy Spirit as "counselor." That seems to me to be a rather weak translation of the Greek word "parakletos." You may have heard preachers use the English form of the word: "Paraclete." (Not parakeet! There's that "honorable bird" again!) A "parakletos" was someone found in ancient courts of justice, a legal assistant, a counsel for the defense, an advocate, one who pleads the cause of another. It also was the Greek word for one who runs alongside a fainting soldier and cheers him on. We could all use a bit of cheering on, from time to time! That's what the Holy Spirit is supposed to do. The Holy Spirit is the "Cheerleader!"

The King James Version calls the Holy Spirit the "comforter." There is an old story of a seminary student in Edinburgh who had a typographical error on a term paper. He was trying to say that "The Lord has taken away our guilt." The sentence came out: "the Lord has taken away our quilt." To which his professor penned in the margin: "That's alright; He has promised to send us the Comforter!" "The Comforter." That's not a bad word, for it comes from two Latin words which mean "One who stands beside us to give us strength." Again, who is to doubt that the Church, and all of us who are within the Church, could use an extra portion of spiritual strength?

One of the nicknames given to the early Methodists was "The Enthusiasts." It was not intended to be a compliment. They were looked upon as being weirdos. Imagine, people who sought to live their lives completely under the direction of the Holy Spirit! But the word "enthusiasm" comes from two Greek words "en theos," meaning "in God." What would our lives look like if they were lived "en theos," "in God?" I daresay there would be more joy and power to them.

The Church is supposed to be "the Fellowship of the Holy Spirit." Someone once suggested that around any given church there might be drawn three circles: An outer circle, a middle one, and an inner one. In the Outer Circle are those to whom religion is little more than a routine. It is more of a burden than a blessing. They carry it, it does not carry them. As Harry Emerson Fosdick once said, "Some people have just enough religion to make themselves miserable." I've seen people like that. They attend church occasionally. They drop a few dollars in the offering plate once in a while. They call on the church for weddings, funerals, and baptisms. But they are living on the edge of the Christian Life. Tragically, this group is very large.

A pastor was typing the creed, and instead of typing "I believe in the Holy Spirit," he inadvertently omitted a vowel, and typed: "I believe in the Holy Spirt." For a lot of people, religion is a matter of "Holy Spurts." There is a burst of activity at Christmas and Easter, but little in between. These are the folks in the outer circle.

In the Middle Circle are those who have had some sort of religious experience somewhere along the line. They attend church fairly regularly, contribute fairly well. They are essentially good people. But their religion has little joy and power in it. They go through the motions, but there is something missing. They have a deep longing for something more, something deeper. They have a hunch that they are missing something, but they don't know what it is or where to go to get it. Again, their group is very large. Not as large as the first circle, but large.

Then there is the third group, the Inner Circle. These are the peopleand every congregation is blessed with some of themfor whom religion is a reality and not merely a ritual. They are in touch with the deep resources of the Christian Faith. They know what it is to have a personal relationship with God in Christ through the Holy Spirit. Now that term "Inner circle" sounds pretty snobbish, doesn't it? It sounds rather elitist. But do you know what? It's not. The God proclaimed in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ stands with outstretched arms to welcome everyone in. If anyone is outside this inner circle of God's love it is because of their own choosing.

In the 16th century there was an Italian nobleman name Lorenzo de Medici who lived in Florence and took pride in staging pageants...especially religious pageants. One day he really outdid himself. He was staging a recreation of the Pentecost story in one of the churches in Florence, and attempted to reproduce it exactly in every respect...including the "tongues of fire" which the Book of Acts says came to rest on the heads of the disciples at Pentecost. Unfortunately, the fire got out of hand and burned the costumes, set fire to the draperies, and eventually burned down the whole church!

Perhaps there's a parable for us here. What would happen if we could get some of the spiritual fire which empowered those first Christians at Pentecost? Perhaps it would not burn down the church, but burn out of the church all of the laziness, pettiness, selfishness, halfheartedness, lukewarmness, and give the world a sample of what a spiritfilled people really looks like: a people filled with "Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, selfcontrol." A people of God's purpose living and working in the world.

by Donald B. Strobe