Over the last few weeks, we have been exploring several Gospel passages together. As a quick reminder, Jesus had just told His disciples that He would soon be leaving them, and this made them feel overwhelmed by fear and anxiety. That same sense of unease still lingers in the air in today’s reading from the Gospel of John, chapter 14.
Today, we are exploring a crucial moment in the lives of the disciples, who had spent 3 years with their Master. Just Imagine how wonderful it would have been to walk beside Jesus—to see His face and hear His voice in person.
I often hear people say that they would believe without hesitation if Jesus would only show Himself to them just once. They say, “All my doubts and unclarities would vanish once and for all.”
For three years, those disciples had a “physical companion.” When they were hungry, Jesus provided food. When they were afraid of a storm, He calmed the sea. Their faith was tied to a God they could see and touch everyday.
From the very moment Jesus called them by the shores of Galilee, they never left His side. Many believers at that time also shared the same desperate need to keep Him close. They would think, ‘As long as Christ is physically with me, I am safe, but without Him, I’d have been completely lost.’
We can see the same sentiment in John 11, where Martha and Mary greet Jesus after they lost their brother, Lazarus. They express the same heartbreaking refrain, “Lord, if you had been here earlier, my brother would not have died.” It’s the same outlook: “As long as Christ is physically with us, we are safe, but without Him, we are lost.”
On one hand, it reflects their absolute confidence in Jesus’ power to heal the sick and perform miracles; on the other, it reveals a belief that Jesus’ power was bound by time and physical presence.
They are not alone, in this 21st century, a lot of faithful Christian believers carry the similar faith sentiment. Maybe, some of you here this morning as well. You want to be closer to Christ, and that’s why you are here today.
Imagine the person who has been your constant shadow for years—the one who shared your meals, your secrets, and your life. Now, that person looks you in the eyes and says, ‘I am leaving, and you will never see my face again.’ And you are in awe and confusion, and you want to know why.
For the disciples, this wasn’t just a change in plans; it felt like the lights were being turned out on their world. Jesus made them even more confused by saying, “In a little while the world will see me no more, but you will see me. When I go, you will not be left all alone. I will come back to you.”
To make matters worse, Jesus tells us something truly surprising in the reading today: “It is actually better for you that I go away so that the Counsellor, the Helper, can come to you.” What is He truly trying to convey to us?
Well, we must admit that in our modern world, we rarely discuss the Holy Spirit. This is a natural tendency; we are often hesitant to talk about things we cannot see or scientifically prove. However, I am convinced that if we shift our focus to the presence and ministry of the Holy Spirit in our ordinary, everyday lives, our faith journey will become remarkably powerful and wonderful.
And there is a beautiful paradox in this focus: the invisible Holy Spirit produces the visible fruit in our lives— and that’s a beautiful blessing that we can tangibly share with people around us, and eventually our life itself will become a living proof of our faith.
The point is, by sending the Holy Spirit, God initiated a monumental transition in how He relates to the world and humanity. The invisible transforms the visible into the divine tools. And the “With Us” perspective becomes the “In Us” perspective. We are moving from a focus on Jesus beside us to the Holy Spirit within us. Presence is replaced by indwelling.
This transition explains why many modern believers feel lost or discouraged once they leave the sanctuary. When we rely too much on an external “worship environment” to feel connected to God, we miss the reality that the source of our strength, the Counsellor and the helper, is now living within us.
We often look for God in the atmosphere around us, forgetting that God already dwells within us. Worship isn’t about the environment we enter. True worship is about the One who lives inside us.
Imagine a person from two hundred years ago suddenly transported to your city today. You hand him a small transistor radio. He looks at it, turns it off, and hear nothing but silence.
But then, you turn the dial. Suddenly, the room is filled with a beautiful symphony coming from thousands of miles away. Did the music just appear? No, the music was already there, filling the room. They just didn’t have the internal receiver turned on to hear it.
When Jesus was on earth, He was like a single speaker in one room—they had to be near Him to hear Him. But the Holy Spirit is like the radio waves. He is everywhere, all at once, permeating our lives. We don’t need to see the “station” to know the broadcast is real; we simply need to tune our hearts to His frequency. The power is tangible, even if the source is invisible.
Imagine you are trekking through a dense, dangerous bush. You have two options. First, you can have a world-class guide walking ten feet in front of you. All you’ve got to do is to follow his footsteps, but if you lose sight of him, you are lost and terrified.
The second option is that the guide hands over to you a high quality walkie talkie, through which the guide constantly communicates with you. Now, you don’t need to look for his footprints. You know where to go and when to stop. You feel the path instinctively.
In many other Gospels stories, Jesus was the Guide walking in front. The disciples were constantly afraid of losing Him. But in today’s passage, Jesus promises: “I am going away but I’m going to put My ‘spirit’ inside you.”
Friends, by the presence of the Holy Spirit, we no longer have to worry about losing sight of a physical leader because the Leader now lives within us, directing our every step from the inside out.
The Holy Spirit is God’s presence living in our hearts. God is no longer a historical figure we read about, but a living reality with who we can communicate. You don’t have to travel to a specific mountain or a specific city to find Him. He is as close as your next heartbeat. The Spirit is now part of you like an instinct.
I believe God wants us to rely on the Holy Spirit within us as a second nature. But how do we achieve this? There is only one way to make that a reality. Think of it like operating a helicopter. For most of us, flying seems impossible. But if you dedicated years to learning and practicing, you would eventually become an experienced pilot, enjoying the freedom of the air. At that point, flying becomes an instinct—a part of who you are that you can use and lean on at any moment.
How will this new ‘instinct’ or ‘second nature’ change our lives? How shall this change our relationships at workplaces, homes or in church? If Jesus becomes our “inner guide” through the Spirit inside us, we become a part of Christ, and Christ becomes a part of us.
We are not just following behind Jesus, trying our best to keep up with no success. We are leaning and practicing again and again to allow His Spirit to think through our minds, love through our hearts, and serve through our hands. Christ is in us and we in him. We become one with Christ.
When Jesus says, “Because I live, you also will live” in verse 19, He is promising a shared life, not only in this life, but also the eternal one after this. We’ve never been alone. We’re not alone. And we will never ever be alone.
Our strength does not lie in our degrees, our fortunes, or even the visible promises coming from a successful life. Our true strength is the invisible power of the Spirit living and working within us.
Through this power, our lives—and the lives of our loved ones, our neighbours, and eventually the world—become God’s dwelling place. That is the moment your life becomes a ministry, and there is nothing in all the world that can destroy it.
Remember: God is in you, and you are in Him. Christ is not merely beside you; He is in you.