put your hand into the hand of God

King George 6th in what I think was one of his Christmas addresses during the Second World War, famously said, "I said to the man who stands at the Gate of the Year, 'Give me light that I may tread safely into the unknown.' And he replied, 'Step into the darkness, put your hand into the hand of God, and that will be to you better than a light, and safer than any known way.'"

Today in our gospel reading (John 14:23-29) Jesus was speaking to his disciples again, this time on the night before the crucifixion, about his departure from them – This week we’ve heard a lot about departures with Tony Blair announcing his decision to step down. He talked about his legacy and about the things that he had done, and failed to do in his role as Prime Minister, and he hinted at the successful state in which he had left the country for whoever will follow.

But Jesus’ promise of departure was rather different – He made no great speech about what he had done, he didn’t need to, and he promised to leave behind his peace, he asked his disciples not to be afraid, and he promised the help of the Holy Spirit to guide them through what must have seemed an incredibly uncertain future.

In effect it was these words that King George 6th was trying to express in that message. The country was faced with a dangerous and uncertain future, there was the hardship of war, the worry about loved ones, the limited resources and so on. For many people there was little to hold on to other than faith in God.

It seems almost a faith of last resort when we think of it superficially, and that is how we often look at it, but Jesus is promising so much more. In his promise of peace, he is promising something that only he, and not the world, can give, and something that nobody can ever take away. I read once that it is not Peace that is self induced, but rather anxiety – in other words the will of God is that we should live at peace – at peace with God, at peace with those around us, and even at peace with the world.

That is the gift of the Holy Spirit, but it is a gift that is so often ignored. The evangelist Billy Graham once said ‘Take the Holy Spirit out of the Church and 95% of what we do will still go on.’ I don’t know in what context he said that, and whether it was intended as a criticism or just an observation, but it must emphasise to us what we are missing if we are not building our lives, and our Church with the gift of the Holy Spirit.

In different ages, different people expect different things – In the talk about the reconstruction of St Teilo’s Church at St Fagans, that some of you heard earlier in the week, it was stressed how difficult it is to put ourselves into the minds of people from 500 years ago, and through the centuries our dependence on the Holy Spirit has I suspect changed dramatically – for those early disciples, they still felt the presence of Jesus very much moving amongst them, later in history, dependence on the Holy Spirit would become almost a superstitious kind of idea, maybe even a scary idea, and now perhaps that dependence has moved again.

Today we are reluctant to depend on the Holy Spirit because we are so often suspicious of depending on anyone or anything whether consciously or sub consciously. There are also many who use the Holy Spirit just as an aid to worship, and others who really don’t think that the Holy Spirit has anything at all to offer them.

And in every position we must surely look back to Jesus, and try, however difficult it may be, to place ourselves 2000 years ago, as we recognise his divine and saving power, and his extraordinary love. On Thursday we celebrate Ascension Day, a celebration because Christ’s work on earth was complete. Jesus never left us alone. He never left us without support and guidance. He never left us without anyone to care for us, or support and strengthen us.

When Jesus spoke to his disciples I think he spoke of the Holy Spirit as someone to guide every second of our lives – not a guide for worship, not a strength for the bad times, not an inspiration for the times when we need wisdom, but someone to guide us all of the time.

One of the most challenging questions that any of us can ask ourselves is ‘What is getting in the way of our relationship with God ?’ The answers can be varied, but I’m sure without exception we can all think of some things which are doing just that – maybe it is being too busy, maybe a fear of trusting, or a problem with prayer or worship, maybe it’s a dependence on a particular kind of worship, a problem with another person – there can be all kinds of different reasons for our failure to allow God fully into our lives, and yet as we reflect on it there is only question that he actually wants us to answer, and that is ‘Whether we want him to come in to our lives’.

It really is as simple as that – if God is not playing a full part in our lives it’s because we are choosing to keep him out. I’ll finish with one story about the evangelist D L Moody who Speaking to a large audience, held up a glass and asked, "How can I get the air out of this glass?" One man shouted, "Suck it out with a pump!"

Moody replied, "That would create a vacuum and shatter the glass."

After numerous other suggestions Moody smiled, picked up a jug of water, and filled the glass. "There," he said, "all the air is now removed." He then went on to explain that victory in the Christian life is not accomplished by "sucking out a sin here and there," but by being filled with the Holy Spirit.

May God give us the wisdom to allow God to fill each one of us with his Spirit, enabling us to get closer to him, and to each other, and to offer praise and glory to his name in everything we do. AMEN

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