The Gospel of Our Lord Jesus Christ According to John
Jesus said, ”If you love me, you will keep my commandments. And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate, to be with you forever. 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 in you.
”I will not leave you orphaned; I am coming to you. In a little while the world will no longer see me, but you will see me; because I live, you also will live. On that day you will know that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you. 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.” (John 14:15-21)
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I read a book written by an ex Jesuit priest. I don’t know if you know it but the Jesuits are called the soldiers of Christ. In keeping with that reputation, their training, is extremely rigorous
He wrote about the academic and theological learning they did, and what they learned about the history of their order. All quite normal.
But he said that at a certain time – and I don’t know if it was everyday – they would go to their dormitory, and each would draw the curtain around his bed, and each man would take out a switch, and would whip himself on the back with this switch.
I am not too sure why they did this. It could be to strengthen them, for any hardships they may face, but I think it was for a more doctrinal reason. There has been a belief in the church over the centuries that as Jesus suffered, we – if we are to follow him – must suffer also.
Today’s reading from First Peter (1 Peter 3:13-22 ) tells us that suffering for your faith is a blessed thing. Peter says that even if you have to suffer for righteous things, then God will bless you.
He was writing to people who had felt the whip – slaves – and others who were ridiculed, or physically harmed because of their beliefs.
And he wanted to encourage them not to give up. He cites the suffering of Jesus, an innocent person who died for those who are guilty and to bring us closer to our God.
And after suffering torture and death, Jesus was elevated to the highest position in Heaven, and he sits at the right hand of the Father.
Suffering does bring out hidden qualities in people. Quiet unassuming people have become heroes in the midst of suffering. Suffering has been likened in the Bible to gold that is heated in the furnace until the impure ore falls away and only the purest gold remains. It toughens us. It purifies us. If we can overcome suffering, with God’s help, then surely we will also be rewarded.
If you have lost a loved one. If you have suffered from a painful or disabling illness, if you are taking treatment for cancer, if a child has taken the wrong road in life, if someone you know and love is in pain, then you know what suffering is about.
And if you were to choose – suffering or no suffering, I know which you would choose – character building or not – no suffering!
The point is though, that as human beings, we will all suffer some pain, sorrow, heartache in our lives. There is no getting away from it. It’s how we handle it that matters.
George Matheson was born in Glasgow, in 1842. Before he reached the age of two it was discovered that his eyesight was defective. He, his parents, and the specialists fought a heroic fight, but before George had finished his course at Glasgow University, he was completely blind.
With great courage and faith, however, he graduated with honours in philosophy, studied for the ministry, and in a few years time became the minister of one of the largest churches in Scotland. In addition to his laborious preparation for sermons and services, he did a great deal of parish visitation, wrote numerous articles and twelve books, and continued his own studies throughout his life.
Blind!
It must have been heart-breaking for George Matheson’s parents to have a strange infection steal their son’s eyes. It must have been truly heartbreaking for a young man to lose his sight. Yet, George Matheson somehow found in that situation that God made resources available to him. God took account of his suffering, and gave him courage, resourcefulness, and grim perseverance, enabling him to be victorious over his handicap.
George took the life he had been given, blindness and all, and gave it back, a life fulfilled, and filled, and one which blessed countless others, both in his writings, in his ministry and in his example.
I am sure that there must have been nights when he cried himself to sleep, when his dark burden seemed too much to bear, and yet, with the help of his Lord, he made it through.
I said that we all have to undergo suffering of some sort. I say that because I know that in my own life (and I count myself to have been blessed to a great degree) I have encountered suffering.
I say it because in my job I met people all the time who were struggling with sickness, mental torment, grief disappointment, worry, stress, and so on.
It seems obvious, doesn’t it, that suffering is a part of human existence. And if it is, then it must have a purpose.
Imagine life being all rosy, no worries, no problems, nothing to bother you – just day to day – nothing happening in the suffering department.
It really wouldn’t be life, would it?
I am sorry to say it, but it looks like suffering is something that God could take out of the world, but for some reason doesn’t.
We all know people who have had to put up with the most horrendous situations. Situations that just hearing about bring tears to our eyes. Situations that we wouldn’t want to be a part of, for all the tea in China.
And yet these people come through, and do so with their dignity intact, their sense of being intact, and are somehow stronger for it.
A man was watching a new butterfly struggling to exit its cocoon. He watched for a while, and it appeared to him that the butterfly was suffering as it wriggled, and squirmed, trying to get out, but making little progress.
Feeling sorry for it, the man took a pair of scissors and tried to help by making a tiny cut in the cocoon, so the butterfly could come out more easily. It crawled out.
But that is all it ever did – crawl.
The pressure of the struggle was supposed to push life-giving colorful juices back into the wings, but the man, in his mercy, prevented this. The insect was never anything but a stunted abortion. It was condemned to spend the rest of its short life crawling in the dust.
It seems to me that maybe God knows what he is doing. It seems to me that you can depend on Him. Even when the struggle is hard and meaningless.
The Gospel reading recounts a few moments in that upper room before Jesus was betrayed. The disciples were panicking. They knew now what Jesus was saying – that he would suffer and die. That he would leave them.
They felt lost.
But Jesus told them, “Don’t worry, I won’t leave you orphans. I will send you a helper, a parakletos.”
The Greek word for helper, is parakletos. A parakletos is someone who is called in to help. It comes from the Latin word fortis, which means brave, and a parakletos was someone who enabled a dispirited, beaten person to be brave.
Their parakletos would bethe Holy Spirit.
Jesus, that night, was setting his disciples a hard task, sending them on a difficult engagement. But they would not be alone, the parakletos, would guide them and enable them to do what they were tasked with.
Jesus might be saying to us, in this day and age: “Life brings us many difficult times. Coping with them is something that is hard to do. So I am sending you a helper, the parakletos, who will enable you to manage, to make it through, and to come to the light.”
God in His love and mercy, in His infinite love for us His children, sends us the help we need to make it through the night.
He doesn’t want us to suffer. He doesn’t want us to have to cope all by ourselves.
In fact, as George Matheson found out, he wants to be with us in our struggles, and the Spirit he sends will give us the strength we need. .
George Matheson wrote these words after twenty years of blindness.
O Love that will not let me go.
I rest my weary soul in Thee!
I give thee back the life I owe,
That in Thine ocean depths its flow
May richer fuller be.
He took the life he had been given, a life that to many would have seemed empty and hopeless, and filled it with triumph.
With the help of his parakletos – the Holy Spirit. Am
