Friends in Jesus,
A beloved Psalm, Psalm 121, asks the question, âI lift up my eyes to the hills. From where does my help come?â Itâs a timeless question. Where does our help come from? As we survey all the problems in this world, and all the problems weâre facing or our loved ones are facing, how can we not admit, âWe need help!â  Psalm 121 answers its own question. It declares, âMy help comes from the Lord, who made heaven and earth.â And what a comfort that answer is!
Jesus also promised His disciples help from the Lord on that Thursday night when He was betrayed. He did so several times in His conversations with the disciples in the final hours before His arrest in the Garden of Gethsemane.
Tonight, we heard Jesusâ words in John 15:26, âWhen the Helper comes, whom I will send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth, who proceeds from the Father, He will bear witness about Me.â Â Last Wednesday, our service focused on Jesusâ words of comfort, and His promise to send the Helper is yet another Gift for our comfort!
The Greek word that Jesus uses to refer to the Holy Spirit is paraclete. There are a few different ways that paraclete can be translated. âHelperâ is one of them. But this word could also refer to the Spirit as the âCounselorâ, the âComforterâ, the âEncouragerâ, or the âAdvocate.â These translations all point to different aspects of the sort of âHelperâ God the Holy Spirit is to us.
The basic meaning of a paraclete is âsomeone called to a personâs side to help.â Think about that ⊠Someone at your side. That we can understand! We all have times when we need someone at our side. We need someone there with us as weâre going through our medical ups and downs. We need someone at our side when weâve landed in some trouble, or when we need someone to put in a good word for us. We need someone there to walk with us in this Christian faith and to encourage us along the way.Â
Christ Jesus promises that His Holy Spirit is the One at your side, even when our earthly helpers fall through. The Holy Spirit, the Helper, is the lasting gift whom Christ leaves with His Christians. Not only is His Spirit with you, but even better than that, Jesus said in John 14:17, âHe will be in you.â  Jesus has not left us alone! He sends the Helper to be with us and in us âŠ
This Lent weâve been returning to the words of John 13:1 which tell us that Jesus loves âto the end.â Jesus loved us all the way to the cross, to His empty tomb, and to the end of His earthly ministry at His Ascension. But He didnât stop!  So maybe we should say that Jesus is the One who loves us âto the end â and beyond!â because Jesus continues to pour His love into our hearts and lives through His Holy Spirit.Â
As we heard earlier in Psalm 139, no matter where we are, no matter whatâs going on, Godâs Spirit is there with us. You canât outrun Him. The Helper is here. Heâs by your side âŠ
But itâs also worth asking, what exactly does the Holy Spirit do for us? Heâs our âHelperâ, as Jesus has said, but other than being with us, how is the Spirit helping us?  Sometimes people expect the Holy Spirit to work in âsplashyâ, exciting ways. After all, the Holy Spirit came to the very first Christians on Pentecost Sunday with flames and the sound of rushing wind and enabled them to declare the mighty works of God in other languages.Â
That was exciting! The Holy Spirit definitely got peopleâs attention! His coming on Pentecost was a real miracle and one that Jesus had promised would happen, but itâs not the Holy Spiritâs usual way of working âŠ
Another issue is that people have so many different ideas and feelings about âspirituality.â Itâs popular these days to be a âspiritual personâ, but not in the sense that Jesus is talking about. When people talk about being âspiritualâ they could mean any number of things, like feeling the presence of their ancestors, or looking to crystals for healing the soul, or believing in some generic âgodâ or âhigher powerâ and an automatic afterlife.Â
The other thing that happens a lot is a âmix and match spiritualityâ â combining some elements of Christianity with your own ideas about God and maybe with some practices from other world religions âŠ
But when we speak of âspiritualityâ as Christians, weâre talking about the one, true spirituality â the presence and work of God the Holy Spirit! Â And we turn to Jesusâ own words to understand this spirituality and what His Spirit does for us.
In John 15:26, Jesus calls Him âthe Spirit of Truth.â He isnât the Spirit of emotions or the Spirit of any and all so-called âspiritualâ things. The Holy Spirit bears witness only to the Truth revealed to Him by the Father and the Son. Remember in chapter 14 how Jesus said, âI Am ⊠the Truthâ? Clearly, the Truth that the Holy Spirit comes to reveal is that of our Savior Jesus!
Jesus also said that the Spirit âwill guide you into all the Truthâ (16:13).  Jesus isnât promising that the Holy Spirit will help us discover our âown truth.â Again, Godâs Spirit comes to lead us to know and believe Jesus!
Jesus said plainly that the Spirit âwill bear witness about Me, and you also will bear witnessâ (15:26). In other words, just as the Holy Spirit points us to Jesus, He points others to Jesus through our witness!  Are we capable of this witnessing? Not when we rely on ourselves. But when we trust the presence and power of the Holy Spirit, we can bear witness to Jesus as the Truth.  Jesus also said that the Spirit âwill teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I have said to youâ (14:26).
We know from this that the Holy Spirit works through Godâs Word. He uses Godâs Word to convict us, and to encourage us, and to keep pointing us back to Jesus. The Holy Spirit also brings Godâs Word to mind for us, just as He inspired John and the Apostles to record Jesusâ words and deeds for us in the Gospels and letters of the New Testament.Â
If weâre looking for true spiritual âinspirationâ, then we need to turn where Jesusâ promises that His Spirit will inspire us: Â in His Holy Word!
But the Holy Spirit doesnât play âfun and gamesâ when He addresses people through Godâs Word. Jesus says that the Spirit âwill convict the world concerning sin and righteousness and judgmentâ (16:8). This is another thing the Spirit must do for us.  We need to be shown the truth about our sin. Otherwise, we wouldnât know what it means to have a âSaviorâ in Jesus, or why we even need salvation!
So once again, what does the Spirit of Truth do for us? Itâs simple ⊠He shows us the truth. Through Godâs Law, He shows us that we are lost without Jesus. And, through the Gospel message, He shows us the One who is âthe Way and the Truth and the Lifeâ (14:6).
The Spirit helps us believe in Jesus, that He is the One and Only Way and Truth and Life upon which our faith and hope can be built. We could not believe in Jesus apart from the Holy Spirit. And we cannot continue to believe without the Spirit. Through Jesusâ Word and through His Means of Grace in our Baptism and in Holy Communion, the Holy Spirit is keeping us in this one, truth Christian faith.
Thatâs what God the Holy Spirit does to help us. And maybe the Spiritâs work doesnât sound all that exciting or inspiring, but this is the truth about the âSpirit of Truthâ that Jesus has revealed to us!
One last question:  how can we know that something is or isnât the work of the Holy Spirit? Letâs go back to what Jesus said in John 16:14. He tells us that the Spirit of Truth âwill glorify Me, for He will take what is Mine and declare it to you.â  For anything to truly be âspiritualâ, it must glorify Jesus.  It must agree with His Word.  It must point us to the Savior who suffered and bled for us.
Thatâs how the Holy Spirit helped John and the other Apostles â to proclaim the message of Christâs cross for our sakeâŠÂ On His cross, Jesus lifted up His eyes to the hills, but no help came for Him. He was forsaken not only by His own friends but by God the Father. He hung there for us with the weight of this sinful world bearing down on Him.
But Christ and His cross are our life and salvation! Because He endured our punishment, because He took away our sins, and because He rose in victory over sinâs âwagesâ of death and the grave, we now have new life and forgiveness and eternal salvation! And thatâs the faith that the Holy Spirit has led you to, and He is by your side, helping you continue to trust the Truth!
We began with a question from the Psalms, âFrom where does my help come?â Â
Jesus answers. He sends us help! He sends us the Helper, His Holy Spirit.  Turn to the Helper. Seek and pray for the help of God the Holy Spirit as you continue to fight the good fight of faith in Jesus Christ!Â
In His name, Amen.Â