Overview:
John 16:4–15
On the last night Jesus spent with His disciples, He had much to say about what their lives would look like without Him. But He didn’t want them to despair; instead, He revealed to them the secrets of both His victorious life and their own victorious lives.
Chuck Swindoll explains what Jesus revealed to His brothers and how the promise of the Holy Spirit brings hope and strength for all Christians struggling to face adversity.
Message Summary:
Message Key Facts:
- The "Orphan Syndrome": Swindoll notes that the disciples were paralyzed by grief and fear, unable to process Jesus' departure because they felt abandoned, revealing a deep human need to be "kept" and secure.
- The Strategic Advantage of Departure: Jesus taught that it was profitable for Him to go away because, while He could only be in one place at a time physically, the Holy Spirit can empower a believer in Israel and a believer in Australia simultaneously.
- Conviction Through the Believer: Swindoll revisits the orthodox view that the Spirit works directly on the world, suggesting instead that the Spirit convicts the world through the presence of the believer. He uses 1 Corinthians 7 (the sanctification of an unbelieving spouse) to illustrate how a believer’s presence acts as a "living letter" that exposes sin.
- The Three Areas of Conviction:
- Sin: The world realizes its specific sin of unbelief by seeing the believer's source of power.
- Righteousness: With Jesus gone to the Father, the world sees righteousness modeled in the Spirit-filled believer.
- Judgment: The world sees that the "ruler of this world" (Satan) is judged because believers live free from his power and standards.
- The "Transformer" Analogy: Swindoll likens the Spirit’s ministry of illumination to an electrical transformer. He takes the "high voltage" of God’s absolute truth and breaks it down into "meaningful units" that individual believers can handle and apply.
- Channels and Changes: The sermon concludes with two principles: In convicting the world, the Spirit looks for channels (us); in communicating the Word to us, the Spirit looks for changes (transformation of character, not necessarily circumstances).
Message References:
- John 16:4–15: The primary text, detailing Jesus’ promise of the Helper (Advocate) and the Spirit’s twofold ministry to the world and the believer.
- John 14:16–17: The affirmation that the world cannot receive the Spirit of truth, supporting the view that He works through believers.
- 1 Corinthians 7:12–14: A supporting passage showing how an unbelieving spouse is "sanctified" (brought under conviction) through the believing partner.