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So Close, Yet So Far Away

JOHN 16:5-15 - So Close, Yet So Far Away

This past weekend, Joe taught from John 14 about how the Spirit is our help from God to love and obey Christ. The Spirit empowers us to live a life of worship that honors our Savior. Our response are either to be led by the Spirit, to ignore the Spirit, or to deny the Spirit. This week in our L3 readings, one of the passages we read was in John 16, where Jesus continues to teach about the Holy Spirit, who would come to the disciples after His death.

The Advantage

In this passage, Jesus goes so far as to say, "It is to your advantage that I go away, for if I do not go away, the Helper will not come to you. But if I go, I will send him to you (John 16:7)". He is telling His disciples that it is better for Him to leave them than it would be if He had stayed in the flesh. Why is that? How could it be better for Him to go away? I can only imagine the questions that the disciples had to be feeling after having spent three solid years physically walking with Jesus. It had to feel, in a way, like He was abandoning them. However, that couldn't be further from the truth.

God With Us

In his book The Problem Of Pain, C.S. Lewis wrote something that has always stuck with me in regards to the distance and nearness of God. He says this: "God is both further from us, and nearer to us, than any other being" (The Problem Of Pain, p. 33). In the context of this quotation, Lewis is discussing the relationship between the Creator and the creature. As the Creator, God is very different than His creation. He is infinite, we are finite. He is omnipresent, we are in one place at a time. He is perfect, we are sinful. In these ways (and many others), God is very far from us. 

However, Lewis also speaks of how near God is to us (also called His "immanence"), in that He supplies every breath that we breathe, and any powers we have in this life are supplied by His endless power and energy. This divine nearness is further amplified by the Spirit's presence with us when we are in Christ. He is truly God with us. Before Christ's death and resurrection the Spirit was only given positionally to those who were leading God's people (kings, prophets, and priests). But, because Christ died in our place for our sins, we stand before God in Christ's perfect righteousness, and therefore His Spirit can dwell in us. Everyone who trusts in Christ has the Spirit.

In the Spirit, God is nearer to us than would be possible in any other way. This is why it was better for Christ to "go away," because rather than having only His physical presence in the flesh, we have His Spirit dwelling in us every moment of every day, empowering us to live a life that loves and obeys Christ, giving Him the glory He deserves as our Savior!

The Bottom Line

With the Spirit dwelling in us, we can follow His leading to love, honor, and exalt Jesus. We have God's continual presence in our lives, teaching us, transforming us, and making us holy. This work will be completed when we finally see Jesus face to face. Praise God for the gift of the Spirit, and may we never take His presence with us for granted.

In the Son,

Bill Horn
FBC Worship Arts Pastor

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