"I'm gonna love you for forever," that's what he used to say,
Then you found out that forever ended last Tuesday …
So sings Carolyn Arends on a great song called “Life Is Long.” Don’t we want, more than anything, a love that will never go away, never diminish, never end? That human longing makes poignant even our sweetest relationships. Knowing that our beloved will grow up and maybe away, or will one day depart this life or our life, is what puts the bitter in bittersweet.
Next Sunday we celebrate the Feast of Pentecost, that great day when the Holy Spirit came in power upon Jesus’ unsuspecting disciples and turned them into apostles. This great event is not reported in any of the four Gospels – it appears in Acts. The Gospel reading appointed for Sunday is from John, and shows us Jesus trying to explain to his followers the gift of Holy Spirit that God will send:
“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 for ever. 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.”
Is Jesus saying this great gift will come only if they keep his commandments? Is the Holy Spirit a reward for good behavior? No, I believe he is saying, “If you love me, keeping my commandments will come naturally to you. And as you live in my truth and walk in my ways, you will be open to receiving this gift the Father will send.” Jesus says this Spirit of truth is an advocate, someone who will stand by them in times of trial and equip them for ministry the way he did – only this one will not be limited by time or space. “He will be with you forever.”
The promise of a love that is forever – that fulfills our deep-seated longing. And it gets even better: we don’t have to go looking for this love, this power, this presence. Jesus said the Spirit of God will abide with us, even in us. We won’t be taken over, ala an “invasion of the body snatchers," not possessed by God’s Spirit in a way that invalidates our unique selves, but abided with, walked with, held close, counseled and consoled, by God, right here within us. Always.
That is a gift worthy of eternity. And we already have it. How does that change how we live and love?
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