John 14.15-17, 25-26, 15.26-27, 16.7-15
Giving Up Control; Letting the Spirit Lead
Empowerment through the Spirit: The Charismatic
Tradition
James Sledge August
24, 2014
The
Christian faith has its share of pithy sayings and proverbs that people can
pull out in particular situations. They are a mixed bag. Some are helpful, and
some are not. Some do a reasonably good job of capturing some facet of the
Christian faith and life. Some distort it terribly. Some of these take on
quasi-biblical status. Many people think
the saying “God helps those who help themselves,” is in the Bible. It’s not, of
course. It is in Poor Richard’s Almanac
by Benjamin Franklin, but the saying itself predates him. And it’s contradicted
by many biblical teachings.
One
of my least favorite of such sayings is one you’ve surely heard. “God never
gives you any more than you can handle.” I suppose that some find this helpful,
but I also know that it can inflict a great deal of pain to people who are
already suffering, telling them that the experience that is leaving them broken
and shattered is no more than they can handle. I wonder what Jesus on the cross
would have said to someone who “comforted” him with this after he cried out,
“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
Another
of these little sayings gets trotted out when church people are in recruiting
mode. When someone is asked to coordinate Vacation Bible School, teach a class,
or take some leadership role but responds, “Oh I don’t think I have the gifts or
abilities for that,” the recruiter may come back with, “God doesn’t call the
equipped; God equips the called.”
If
you’re not familiar with that one, you may want to write it down. “God doesn’t
call the equipped; God equips the called.” It can come in quite handy when
someone is on the fence, interested in helping but not certain she has what it
takes. And while it can certainly be misused, unlike the previously mentioned
sayings, this one is not only true but also biblical.
Our
gospel reading this morning says as much. The Advocate, the Spirit will come
and abide in Jesus’ followers. The Spirit will “teach you everything,” says Jesus. “(The
Spirit) will guide you into all truth.” As wonderful as it must have
been to have been taught directly by Jesus, he says that it is to his followers’
advantage that he leaves them. They will be better off with God’s presence
dwelling within them via the Spirit than they were having Jesus with them. And
if Jesus is to be believed, those first disciples have no advantage at all over
us. We can know all they knew, experience all they experienced, through the
Spirit.
It’s
only hinted at in our scripture this morning, but other places in the New
Testament make clear that the Spirit empowers Jesus’ followers to do all sorts
of things they could never have done on their own. Writing to the church in
Corinth, the Apostle Paul says, “To each is given the manifestation of the
Spirit for the common good.” Everyone is given some spiritual gift that is an
essential part of the body of Christ. And these are totally distinct from
natural talents or abilities. They are, if you will, supernatural abilities.
I’m
guessing that this term makes some people a bit nervous. Supernatural is not a
word you hear bandied about very often in Presbyterian churches. For a variety
of reasons, the Spirit has been the neglected member of the Trinity in Mainline
churches over the years. We talk about God and Jesus, but we’re not quite sure
what to do with the Spirit. Recent years have seen a big uptick in talk and
interest in spirituality and so the Spirit. But even here, it is sometimes
relegated to a very private, personal sphere, about my spirituality but not so
much about the body of Christ and the work and ministry of the Church.
I
recall a conversation I once had with a church leader about my wanting the
Session, our Presbyterian governing council, to become a become a more
spiritual body, one that spent less time discussing and debating what to do and
spent more time seeking God’s will and guidance, discovering what God was calling
us to do and so would bless and empower us to do. The person I was talking to
looked very befuddled as I said this. She simply could not conceive of any way
that church leaders could make a decision other than discuss it and do our very
best to figure out what the right decision was. “God gave us minds and our
reasoning ability,” she said. “We’re supposed to use those.”
I can certainly agree with that, but I
can’t agree that there’s not more. God did not simply give us minds and some
information in the Bible for us to do our best with. Jesus promises the Spirit,
a presence who will be with us, teach us, guide us, and empower us.