John 14:15-31 · Jesus Promises the Holy Spirit
You've Won the Heavenly Sweepstakes!
John 14:15-31
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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A good rule of thumb, as you go through life, is this: vow never to eat anything that calls itself "processed." When I was a kid we used to refer to those staples of mom's lunch box meals as "plastic meat and rubber cheese" sandwiches. You know, mysterious paper-thin "processed" meat slices combined with those perfectly square, individually wrapped "processed" cheese slices. Remember them?

It is doubtful that those sandwiches will ever de-compose in our landfills. Even worse was the threat of a processed turkey roll (note that they couldn't bring themselves to call it a roast) at a Thanksgiving or Christmas celebration. We always voiced loud and revolting opinions about just what parts of the turkey had been "processed" to create those symmetrical loaves of "meat."

"Processed" isn't even a very reassuring term when applied to people. Prisoners entering the penitentiary are "processed." How many of us would be please to open the front door and find a process server standing there? And just what is a "processional" but an excruciatingly slow-moving show-line of people going somewhere we seldom know where--all while we are forced to watch standing or from uncomfortable chairs.

While we can easily recognize the short-comings of processed food and the tediousness of processed people, it is perhaps not so easy to see how we have come to order our own lives and our own faith according to a "process." As "respectable" citizens, church-members, parents, and children, we are repeatedly taught to "trust the process" that others lay out for our lives.

  • We finish high school, get a job, go to college--because we "trust the process."
  • We balance our checkbook, pay our taxes, and keep to a budget - because we "trust the process."
  • We eat healthy foods, get some exercise, watch our weight, and mind our blood pressure - because we "trust the process."
  • We vote for candidates we trust, obey street signs, and recycle our cans and bottles- because we "trust the process."

    In short we do all the safe, reasonable, rational things we can do in an attempt to impose the greatest amount of order and control possible upon our lives. We don't want catastrophes or disasters. But neither do we want surprises or serendipity. We just want to "trust the process."

    Here the tapes playing in your skull right now:

    "Act, don't' react."

    "Leave nothing to chance."

    "Never be surprised."

    "What's your plan?"

    Using a child's logic we still believe if we can just do everything right, move carefully from "a" to "b" to "c" to "d", everything will have to turn out all right.

    The trouble with "trusting the process" is that the world refuses to play by static "process" rules. We have so very little "control" over life.

  • You were going to finish high school, but your dad got sick.
  • You had a great job, but a recession kicked in and kicked you out.
  • You were in the middle of college-but your first child came along.
  • You were never going to be in debt-but who knew there would be so many bills.
  • You have always taken care of yourself physically-but suddenly a tumor shows up.
  • You always drive so carefully-but that drunk driver came out of nowhere.
  • You only buy organic-but find your drinking water has been contaminated and is best described as a drug cocktail.

    Our lives will never "process" along in measured, managed steps without a hitch. Trusting a "process" will never be able to see us through the moments of chaos and calamity that impinge upon our attempts at order and stability.

    This is why today of all days the church celebrates this reality: Jesus' church is not a "processed" church but a "possessed" church. It is this day we remember that disciples of Christ are called not to "trust the process" but to "trust the Spirit." At Pentecost the Holy Spirit took hold of the slow and struggling disciples and shook them, transforming them, possessing them, with the very Spirit of Christ. Once "possessed" by this Spirit the disciples were "plugged in" to power--to Jesus' presence, to divine perfection and providence, to God's pre-eminent place in their lives.

    We can read about the immediate effect this Spirit-possession had on the disciples. Overnight this confused, inarticulate group became on fire: governing apostles, fearless prophets, relentless evangelists, discerning teachers, compassionate pastors--proud eye-witnesses of all Christ's words and deeds. Only when they gave up trying to "process" Jesus life and death and instead became "possessed" by Christ's Spirit did the disciples finally understand what they had seen and heard right in front of their eyes. It took Spirit-possession to move the disciples from misgivings to mission.

    Pentecost was the event that turned their lives upside-down (as Acts puts it), transforming everything in their past into a new Spirit-filled future. There was no "process" to trust. Everything was new in Christ.

    Think it is too hard to get your rational, twenty-first century, over-processed mind around such a monumentally transforming moment? Every year when you watch the Super Bowl you witness a similar event. Our clueless culture prefers, however, to call it the "Publishers Clearing House Sweepstakes." You've seen it. Those guys in that tacky van pull into some unsuspecting soul's driveway and pound on their door. When they open the door that individual's life is instantly changed. Their life will never be the same again. The realities that have sculpted their life up to that moment are dramatically altered by that ten million dollar jackpot. They are shocked out of a "processed" life and jolted into a "possessed" life. It may be a possession by money, fame, and things. But it is a possession nevertheless.

    If even our greedy consumer culture can understand such a possession-filled possession, why does the twenty-first century church seem to have such trouble accepting the validity, the necessity, for a Spirit-filled possession?

    Why do so many churches find comfort and contentment in just "trusting the process" year after year, opportunity after opportunity? In today's gospel text Jesus taught that if his disciples would simply love him and obey his commandments (which were themselves repeated demands to "love others as Christ as loved you"), then they would experience a oneness with him and with God that would empower them beyond their wildest imaginings.

    They would even do "greater works" than Jesus. They could ask for "anything" in Jesus' name. This is the power, the wonder, and the fulfillment that Pentecost celebrates.

    This is a Pentecost moment. It's your choice.

    Will you live a processed life or a possessed life?

    Will you live a managed life or a guided life?

    Will you live a self-directed life or a God-directed life?

    Today you've won the Heavenly House Spiritual Sweepstakes! How can your life ever be the same again?
     

ChristianGlobe Networks, Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet