John 14:5-14 · Jesus the Way to the Father
What You See Is What You Get
John 14:5-14, John 14:1-4
Sermon
by Johnny Dean
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This past week I began doing something I’ve been putting off for a long time now. In an attempt to lose some of the extra pounds I’ve been carrying around, and at my doctor’s urging, I enrolled in a water aerobics class at the YMCA in Rocky Mount. Three days a week, from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m., you will find me there, exercising with my new friends in the heated swimming pool.

The major reason for doing this is to improve my overall general health. I suffer from high blood pressure and a couple of other minor problems, and the doctor tells me that losing weight could very possibly eliminate, or at least moderate, these conditions, maybe even to the point that I won’t have to take medication for them any more. And I like that prospect. I don’t like to take medicine, even Tylenol. Maybe that’s why I have such difficulty remembering to take it. At any rate, I really want to feel as young as many of you have told me I look, and in order to accomplish that, I have to make some changes, both in my eating habits and in my activity level.

Of course, physical well being is only part of the picture. I am a firm believer in the holistic approach to health – that is, I believe that in order to be truly healthy, you have to provide the proper nourishment not only to your body, but to your mind and spirit as well. So much illness is psychosomatic, a product of the mind.

I remember reading an article in a magazine that reported that one person out of ten now living in the United States will have some form of mental or nervous breakdown, most of them brought on by worry or emotional conflict. The writer of the article went on to state that one person out of twenty would likely spend some time in a mental institution! Some of you may think you’re already there, and given the news events of the past couple of weeks, you could be right! The inmates do appear to be running the sanitarium! The famous Mayo brothers said that over half of the hospital beds in America are occupied by people whose main problem is anxiety. They further state that 15,000 patients treated for stomach disorders at the Mayo Clinic had no physical basis for their illness. Of the causes they cited in their report, fear and worry were at the top of the list. And we all know of instances where worry is taking all the joy out of someone’s life. We worry about things that have already happened and things that might happen, and we worry about things over which we have absolutely no control.

Into the midst of our human condition Jesus comes. He looks around and sees troubled hearts everywhere, worrying about food and clothing and disasters, worrying about our children, wondering if there is any place in the world today where they can be safe from harm, safe from falling bombs, safe even from other children.

We look to our governments to provide a solution – a peaceful end to the violence in Europe, some way to protect ourselves from people who seem to have interpreted the Second Amendment to the Constitution to mean they have the right to arm themselves to the teeth with military assault weapons while at the same time bearing no responsibility to insure that those weapons don’t wind up in the hands of those who would use them to kill indiscriminately.

But Jesus says we’re looking for solutions in all the wrong places. Jesus says if you want to cure the anxiety that is making you sick, fill your life with spiritual values. "Believe in God; believe also in me," Jesus says. To rid your life of anxieties, place it in the hands of Jesus. Let your heart be filled with his presence, and let God be God. Long before modern psychology knew that depression, low self-esteem, and anxiety were the major causes of health problems, both mental and physical, Jesus was saying that if don’t have faith in the one to whom you turn for help, you’re wasting your time. What Jesus wants for us, what God wants for us, is for us to be whole and to experience life in all its fullness. And we cannot do that if our life is filled with anxiety.

We didn’t invent anxiety in 1999, but we’ve certainly refined it to an art, haven’t we? Those first followers of Jesus, the first disciples, lived in anxious times also. After many long years, Israel was still under Roman occupation and rule, and there were no signs that a change was about to come. And Jesus didn’t help any, with all his talk about his own impending crucifixion and death.

In our Gospel text for today, the fourteenth chapter of John, the disciples of Jesus asks a series of questions in response to their anxiety about his announcement that the end of his life is near. In an attempt to calm their fears, Jesus said, "Do not let your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me. In my Father’s house there are many dwelling places. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? And if I go to prepare a place for you, I will come again and take you to myself, so that where I am, there you may be also. And you know the way to the place where I am going."

And Thomas – good old honest Thomas – speaks for us all and says, "Lord, maybe I wasn’t there the day we covered this in class, but I don’t know the way. Could you maybe give us some general idea, some directions? A map would be helpful."

Jesus replies, "I am the way, the truth, and the life. Nobody comes to the Father except by me."

Philip chimes in then and says, "Lord, if you’ll just tell us what God looks like, we’ll be satisfied. If we know what God looks like, we’ll have a better idea of who to look for when we get there."

And Jesus says to Philip, "What you see is what you get, Philip. You’ve seen me. I look just like my Father. Always have, ever since I was a baby."

The key to calming our fears, conquering our anxiety, says Jesus, lies in believing in God, believing that, no matter what the current circumstances of our lives may be, God has a place for us in the kingdom, a place prepared for us by Jesus himself. The disciples heard Jesus say that, and it is recorded in the Bible. But I still think some folks in the church don’t believe him even today. Some of us are still confused and unclear about exactly what Jesus was trying to say. Through the years that I’ve been in ministry, people have asked me questions about life after death – maybe I should have said other Christians have asked me that question. One of the sources to which I have referred those who asked this question is John 14:1-14.

"But what about people who commit suicide? Or what about people who commit murder? What if one of those two boys out in Colorado who killed all those children and that teacher, just before he pulled the trigger and took his own life, said ‘God, I’m truly sorry for what I’ve done here. Please forgive me.’ Do you think he’s going to heaven? And what about homosexuals and prostitutes? Do you think there’s a place waiting for them too?"

And my reply is usually something like, "I don’t know. But I do seem to recall that one of the things the Pharisees and other religious leaders of his day scolded Jesus for was eating dinner with all kinds of folks many of us wouldn’t be caught dead with."

I have to confess that I don’t like question and answer periods like that because they always seem to put me in the position of being God’s defense lawyer. I’m don’t do spontaneous very well. I like to have time to prepare what I’m going to say. I plan to be more spontaneous in the future, though.

I do wish that some of the disciples had asked Jesus more questions, especially specific questions. Of course, we know that Philip and many of the other disciples didn’t have much to say. They mostly just listened and scratched their heads a lot. And Thomas, as we will later discover, had a lot of questions and doubts but mostly kept them to himself. But for the life of me I don’t understand why Peter – good old impetuous Peter – didn’t ask more questions while he had the chance.

I don’t know about you, but I have a few questions of my own I’d like to ask Jesus if I had the chance - questions like: what DOES God look like? Where exactly is Heaven? What’s my mansion going to look like? And what’s my expected move-in date? Did my father get a mansion or was it one of those fixer-upper types? I think he would have enjoyed that more. Will my mansion have bathrooms with golden fixtures? If so, what for? Will it have a kitchen with all the modern conveniences? If so, what for?

But besides those questions, I have other concerns, as I’m sure you do also. If I heard Jesus correctly, what he said was the only thing we have to do is believe in God and believe in Him and there would be a place for us prepared in Heaven. I know that there’s lots of church folks who aren’t really fond of that rule.

I remember hearing more than one person say, "You know, I resent folks who get a mansion when they don’t really deserve one. They sure haven’t done anything while they’re here to deserve a mansion. You know who I’m talking about, preacher. It’s those murderers and prostitutes and child molesters and drug pushers and welfare deadbeats who just won’t work. I don’t think they deserve a mansion, and neither does anybody else I know. Now, if you think they do deserve just as good a place as us God-fearing, hard-working law-abiding Christians, please tell me why? What kind of God would allow that to happen?"

That last question is the same one I’ve had to deal with in these last two weeks. What kind of God would allow that to happen? Well, I never said I had all the answers. I can only respond that one of the beauties of the Christian faith is that in Jesus of Nazareth, in the Risen Christ, we have found answers to our deepest questions. Because of Jesus, we know about God’s overwhelming love and compassion for all of us. But at the same time we must acknowledge that some of our questions will never be answered in this life. As Martin Luther said, God is both revealed and hidden, present and absent, known and unknown.

Sometimes we are more keenly aware of God’s presence. At other times, we feel as if God must be a million miles away. In either case, the ultimate question we must ask ourselves is, "Do you believe in Jesus Christ? Do you believe that Jesus is the Son of the Living God?" And if your response is "Yes," then go on living in hope because there is a place for you in the kingdom of God, a place prepared for you by Jesus himself.

But I have yet another question for you this morning, one that the preacher at Fort Trial caused me to consider by what he had to say last Sunday afternoon at the spring workshops about this passage of scripture we’re looking at today. What if the place Jesus has prepared for you is the place where you are right now?

When we pray the Lord’s Prayer, we pray for God’s kingdom to come "on earth, as it is in Heaven," don’t we? What if it already did and we just don’t know it? How would our lives be different? Would our values be any different if that were the case? I think they would. So why don’t we just live and love and work as if we have already arrived in the place Jesus has prepared for us? What have we got to lose? If we did that, if we lived every day as if we were living in the kingdom of God right now, would any more of our children have to die for professing their belief in God or because of the color of their skin? What are we waiting for? AMEN

Staff, by Johnny Dean