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Getting Our Priorities Straight Today, Tomorrow, Forever Keith McFarren May 10, 2026 John 14:15-21 One of the thing I want to do when I’m up here every week is to not only share God’s word with you but I also want to teach you something at the same time. I want you to learn something that you can take home with you and apply to the way you live your life throughout the week. We started the Christian year out in the fall of last year by going through the AdventSeason which is all about the coming of Christ. Then we went through Epiphany in which Jesus manifest himself or made himself available to the entire world and then we went into the Lenten season in which Jesus went into Jerusalem and then was eventually crucified and then resurrected. What I have been trying to get you to see or to understand during these last few months is that none of these events happened just by chance. Everything that happened has been planned out since the very beginning of time. That’s why we go back and forth between the Old Testament and the New Testament so that you can see that everything that was prophesied in the Old Testament, no matter how far back we go, has come true and has taken place in the New Testament. From the very beginning, everything that God and his prophets said would happen really did happen. That is what I hope you get out of what we’ve been talking about. God’s promises are true. He is who he says he is and everything happens just as he says it will happen…and because he is who he says he is and since everything that he promises really does happen, we should have confidence in him and know that we can place 100% of our trust in him. No matter what is going on in the world around us or no matter what is going on in your life…you can trust in God. The coming of the Holy Spirit is once again based upon the word of the Lord and because he loves all of us equally there are no conditions attached. He didn’t say that he would send the Spirit to some people and not to others. He didn’t say that only certain socioeconomic groups can have the Holy Spirit – not only the rich or not only the poor – not only white people or not only black or Hispanic people. He simply said, “I will ask the Father and he will give you (all of you) another counselor” (John 14:16). I don’t know if you’ve noticed or not but if you look in your bible you will find that everything we are talking about takes place during the Last Supper. It’s part of what historians call Jesus’ Final Discourse. It’s the time that Jesus not only shares his farewell meal with his disciples but also gives them his final words on what’s coming and what to expect in the future when he is no longer with us. Jesus’ farewell discourse is meant to be a time of instruction for each of us. It’s like Jesus is the professor and he’s attempting to prepare his students for their up and coming final exam and he wants to make sure they have everything they need to pass the final test. It’s these same words that we have lived by for the last 2,000 plus years. Through these teachings we’ve learned how to be disciples and how to continue to grow during our faith journey. We’ve learned how to be the church, not only as individuals but how to be a community of faith. And we’ve learned how to see all the worlds people and we’ve learned how God wants us to treat them and we’ve learned that it is our responsibility to invite all of them into a deeper relationship with God. But there is something else going on as Jesus shares his heart and his future with those who have been following him. He is offering them a legacy; he is offering them a continuation of himself that will continue on into the future, a continuation that is to be passed on in and through his disciples. He is, in a sense, putting all of his theological eggs in one basket during this world changing, kingdom building effort, by allowing all of his missional hopes to reside in these somewhat inept men that have been following him. Today is the day that Jesus plants the seed. On that day Jesus will be with them…but yet again, he won’t. On that day, they will see him, but the world won’t. “On that day, you will know that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you.” On that day, they are to be the story. They are to live the story. They are the ones who will know that the story is more than just a dream. They are the ones who will know the story because “on that day” the story and the hope will abide in them. That is the gift that Jesus offers them in this instructional moment. He offers them the gift of the promise of presence…his presence, the Spirits presence…a presence for today, a presence for tomorrow, a presence forever. There is a lot we don’t know and will never fully understand about the Spirit of God. But if we listen to what Jesus tells us here, there is a lot we do know and a lot that we can believe in. We know that Jesus won’t leave us to struggle with the Christian life that we, as his disciples, want to follow. We know that he will leave us a Helper, a Comforter, an Advocate…a Spirit that will always be with us to help us during times of trouble or in times of need…a Spirit that will always be there to guide us to do the right thing, to guide us to do what God wants us to do and at the same time the Spirit will be there to enable us to do it. We know that access to this Spirit that he’s talking about is a function of faith…meaning that it involves a one on one relationship with Jesus. “The world,” Jesus tells us, “cannot receive the Spirit.” And that’s because the world doesn’t know the Spirit or doesn’t recognize the Spirit. Not because they aren’t worthy of the Spirit, but because they don’t have the one on one relationship with Jesus that is a requirement to experiencing the presence of the Spirit. To know and to be known by the Spirit requires more than just saying that we know God. To know and be known by the Spirit takes something much deeper and much more personal. It requires an act of self will…it requires an act of self-giving…it requires an act of offering our lives to Jesus. And by offering our lives to Jesus, we will find that the link to God that used to come to us through our relationship with Jesus, now comes to us through our relationship with the Holy Spirit. In verse 26, Jesus tells us that the function of the Spirit is to remind us of the past and teach us about the future. This Spirit, this Advocate, or Comforter, or Councilor or Helper is the continual presence in our lives that keeps us connected to who we are and who we strive to be. It continually reminds us of what God has already taught us. It’s the Spirit that comes and whispers in our ear that we are much better than we sometimes act or sometimes think. It is the Spirit that comes to us in the darkest of times and reminds us that we are not alone. It is the Spirit that comes to us and reminds us that we are unconditionally loved…especially during those times of our lives when we feel very unloved. But it’s not just what we already know that is recalled in our souls by the prompting of the Spirit. The Spirit also has a desire to push us further on our faith walk than we’ve ever gone before. It’s that same Spirit that will push us to climb higher in our understanding of God’s kingdom than we’ve ever climbed before. It’s the Spirit that will teach us, time and time again calling us to experience new levels of accomplishment and understanding things that we’ve never understood before. Can we still love Jesus when he has gone? Sure we can! We can still love Jesus, even after he is gone, not just by clinging to a bunch of cherished memories of the past. But we can also continue to love Jesus by doing his works here on earth and by keeping his commandments and by keeping our hearts and minds open to the presence of his Spirit. We can continue to love Jesus be letting the Spirit chart the continuation of his life through our own lives. Jesus lived out God’s love by keeping God’s commandments, by making God known to the world, by offering God’s promise of salvation to the world, by loving unconditionally, even to the extent of laying down his life. Jesus’ relationship with God was not some type of private, mystical relationship, a relationship in which their love for each other benefitted only themselves and did nothing for God’s creation. On the contrary, the love of God and Jesus was a public type of love, a love first revealed at Jesus’ birth and repeatedly revealed through Jesus’ words and ministry…all done for the sake of you and me, so that we too might come to believe and share that same love with the rest of the world. Our relationship with God and Jesus, a relationship that is present today, tomorrow and forever was made possible following Jesus’ death, resurrection and ascension into heaven. It’s a relationship not made available to just certain individuals but made available to the entire faith community…it’s an ongoing relationship that is continually strengthened by the never ending presence of the Spirit of God to those who choose to believe. Open your hearts and open your minds. Wait and watch…all in expectation of his arrival into your life. |
