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- Section 277. Promise Of The Holy Ghost. -Concluding Words Of Comfort To The Disciples. (John, Xvi., 7-33.
Section 277. Promise of the Holy Ghost.--Concluding Words of Comfort to the Disciples. (John, xvi., 7-33.
Christ had many things to say of his doctrine which the disciples were not then in a condition to understand. But he was just about to leave them; and therefore he pointed them to the Spirit of Truth, which was to unfold all the truth he had proclaimed. It was not to announce any new doctrine; but to open the truth of his doctrine; to glorify Him (v.14) in them, by developing the full sense of what He had taught them. Again he passes from the giving of the Holy Ghost to his own communion with them; repeating what he had before said: "A little while, and ye shall not see me, and again a little while, and ye shall see me, because I go to the Father" (inasmuch as his "going to the Father" was to be the ground of the new spiritual communion). [745] And, again, some of them expressed the surprise of their contracted minds at his words (v.17). Jesus, seeing their uncertainty, developed the thought still further. He told them they should be sorrowful for a season, but their sorrow would be turned into permanent joy. Their transient pains, like those of a woman in travail, would be the birth-throes of a new creation within them. "And ye now, therefore, have sorrow; but 1 will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice, and your joy no man taketh from you."
"And in that day ye shall ask me nothing;" they would no more need his sensible presence to ask of him as they had been wont. "Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name (in conscious communion through Christ's mediation), he will give it you." (The Father would reveal all things needful to them through Christ's mediation; clearing up all obscurities, and supplying the place of his corporeal presence.) Up to that time (v.24), not having yet obtained confidence of communion with the Father through Christ, they had asked nothing of Him; but then they should ask, and receive, that their joy might be full. Then, too, would Christ no more speak unto them in figures or parables, but would openly unveil all he had to say to them of the Father. "But," says he, "I say not unto you that I will pray the Father for you;" in their conscious communion with Him they would be sure of the Father's love, and in His name would address them selves directly to the Father.
At last a ray of light beamed into the souls of the disciples. They felt the impression of the high things which Christ, in confident Divinity, had just announced to them. Yet, as their language shows [746] that they did not fully understand him, it was rather a feeling than a clearly developed consciousness. Christ cautioned them against trusting it too far; that the hour was at hand when a faith of this kind would give way to a powerful impression of another nature; that they should be scattered, and leave him alone: "Yet not alone," said he, "because the Father is with me."
The aim of the whole discourse had been to impart to the minds of the disciples a spring of Divine comfort amid their struggles with a hostile world for the advancement of the kingdom of God. He closed it with a few words of farewell, embracing its whole scope: "These things have I spoken to you, that in (communion with) me ye might have peace. [747] In the world ye shall have tribulations; be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." [748]