A low-key Pentecost sermon. The Gospel of John has a very different image of the Holy Spirit than the tongues of fire and blowing wind we associate with the Acts story of Pentecost.
“You left us what?” Pentecost, 2025; St. Andrew Presbyterian Church; John 14 15-26; Acts 2 1-22
(John 14:15-26) 15 “If you love me, you will keep[g] my commandments. 16 And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate,[h] to be with you forever. 17 This is the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive because it neither sees him nor knows him. You know him because he abides with you, and he will be[i] in[j] you.
18 “I will not leave you orphaned; I am coming to you. 19 In a little while the world will no longer see me, but you will see me; because I live, you also will live. 20 On that day you will know that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you. 21 They who have my commandments and keep them are those who love me, and those who love me will be loved by my Father, and I will love them and reveal myself to them.” 22 Judas (not Iscariot) said to him, “Lord, how is it that you will reveal yourself to us and not to the world?” 23 Jesus answered him, “Those who love me will keep my word, and my Father will love them, and we will come to them and make our home with them. 24 Whoever does not love me does not keep my words, and the word that you hear is not mine but is from the Father who sent me.
25 “I have said these things to you while I am still with you. 26 But the Advocate,[k] the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you everything and remind you of all that I have said to you.
Introduction: At this point in their relationship with christ, I think the disciples would have had lots of questions:
if we go back a couple of months, the first question might have been “Jesus, Why did you have to be crucified?”
which quickly gave way to, “Jesus, What exactly is a resurrection?l
Which then led to “What does it mean that Christ has ascended?”
And now, after Jesus has ascended
and the tongues of fire and blowing winds have arrived with Pentecost and the Holy Spirit,
Their question, maybe our question also is: “You left us what?”
Perhaps as they puzzled over this question, they remembered Jesus’ words that we just read from the gospel of John.
Move 1: And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate,[h] to be with you forever.
a. If we are little bit intimidated by the Holy Spirit in the Pentecost story, we might find comfort in the image of the Paraclete, the Greek word translated as advocate in the gospel of John. (if you misspell parclete, spell check will suggest parakeet – not quite the same image)
a. Greek word parakletos
1. Paraclete is combination of para ('beside/alongside') and kalein ('to call’), which put together literally means “one called to be alongside another”
2. the word carries a secondary notion concerning the purpose of the calling alongside: to counsel or support the one who needs it.
outside the Bible text in common Greek usage, the word Paraclete is often used to describe a family attorney.
3. This, the NRSV’s choice to translate Paraclete as advocate or comforter.
Eugene Peterson in The Message translates it as “friend.”
b. Jesus has promised his followers: ’I will not leave you orphaned”
- Orphaned – no parents;
in the first-century world, being orphaned meant no status,
no safety net,
no security.
2. The Paraclete,
the who who walk alongside us,
the one who will advocate for us,
is the fulfillment of Jesus’ promise to not leave us orphaned.
3. The Gospel of John does not emphasize the power of holy Spirit found in blowing winds or tongues of fire, but instead he power of joining with us.
coming alongside us
the paraclete, who will not leave us alone.
c. in some ways, the paraclete is an extension of the God of incarnation, who chooses to live among us.
1. The God who breathed the breath of life into the mud returns in Christ to come alongside side us and make a home with us.
2. And now, as Jesus looks to his departure, he talks about “another paraclete.”
in other words, the Holy Spirit is coming to do what Jesus has already done - be with us. (Frances Gench, Encounters wiht Jesus, 109)
Not the tongues of fire image of the Holy Spirit, but the ongoing companionship of God who will not leave us alone.
Move 2: one of the roles of the Holy Spirit is to remind us what Jesus has taught us.
a. Scott Hozee a preaching professor at Calvin Seminary describes the Holy Spirit as “a tutor or a prompter on the wings of a stage while a play is going on.
- The Paraclete stands next to us or near us so that we can be reminded of Jesus’ words and teachings as the Spirit whispers those things into our hearts, prompting us to remember what we might otherwise forget. (Scott Hoezee, The Lectionary Gospel, http://cep.calvinseminary.edu/sermon-starters/easter-6c/?type=the_lectionary_gospel).
- Imagine a voice whispering in your ear as you go through life the things that Jesus has taught.
- a constant call to bring Jesus' teachings into our decision-making; a constant reminder of Jesus' presence with us.
4. this is the Holy Spirit as the Gospel of John describes the Spirit.
b. The Holy Spirit teaching us and our growing in understanding
1. it is not enough for us to remember what Jesus has said, but we must grow in our understanding of it.
2. The Holy Spirit is among us, teaching us how what Jesus has said applies to our current situation.
3. In his essay The Present Age, Soren Kierkegaard describes a jewel being placed in the middle of a frozen lake on the thinnest ice. While retrieving the jewel is enticing, no one is courageous enough to skate on the thinnest ice. So they learn to skate in intricate ways on the thick ice. The skaters develop great skills, and those watching applaud the daring skaters who show their skills, but never venture onto the thin ice to retrieve the jewel. Eventually, everyone forgets the jewel. Kierkegaard wonders if the church is like that. So focused on its activities that it misses the jewel. (https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B458F3TQxB4qMmkzb3JFRTBvZ1k/edit)
4. Holy Spirit reminds us and teaches us so that we do not forget the jewel, the good news that Jesus brings.
5. Maybe this is where the power of the Holy Spirit. Ones into play in the image of Paraclete.
the spirit uprooting us from our entrenched ways and blowing and pushing us into new understandings.
Move 3: the image of the Paraclete also shapes our understanding of community.
a. Pentecost as also known as the church's birthday.
- A celebration of the body of Christ that Jesus calls into being.
2. People like us walking a,Ingrid’s each other as we help each other grow in our faith and face our struggles.
b. Which is also the role we are called to have in The world.
1. Walking along side of those who suffer injustice,
or those who need food or shelter,
or those who need to find hope in the hopelessness of their lives.
like the Paraclete, we are sent to walk alongside of them.
c. Again, this is where the other penetrants story informs our understanding of the Paraclete.
1. Just as the people that Pentecost day found they were given the gift of languages so they could share the good news of Jesus Christ to people no matter what language they spoke,
So to, the Holy Spirit will equip us with the gifts necessary to walk alongside those in need.
2. The power of the Holy Spirit at work enabling us to share the good news of Jesus Christ with the world.
Conclusion: for many years, churches would celebrate Pentecost by releasing red helium balloons outside after worship.
The high-flying balloons would symbolize the blowing spurt that would take us to new heights.
Then, concerns about balloons killing birds and so on led to no helium balloon celebrations of Pentecost.
For the gospel of John, however, the helium balloon flying high is not quite the image of the Paraclete.
No, for John the Paraclete is just an old-fashioned balloon, blown up, but still right there beside you.
The Holy Spirit that will not leave you alone!l