Convincing the World: Red Letter Year 12/10

John 16.5-16

5 “But now I am going away to the one who sent me, and not one of you is asking where I am going. 6 Instead, you grieve because of what I’ve told you. 7 But in fact, it is best for you that I go away, because if I don’t, the Advocate won’t come. If I do go away, then I will send him to you. 8 And when he comes, he will convince the world concerning sin, justice, and judgment; 9 sin because they do not trust me, 10 justice because I go to the Father and you will see me no more, 11 and judgment because the ruler of this world has been judged.

12 There is so much more I want to tell you, but you can’t bear it now. 13 When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all truth. He will not speak on his own but will tell you what he has heard. He will tell you about the future. 14 He will bring me glory by telling you whatever he receives from me. 15 All that belongs to the Father is mine; this is why I said, ‘The Spirit will tell you whatever he receives from me.’

16 In a little while you won’t see me anymore. But a little while after that, you will see me again.”

Comments

Today’s reading includes one of the more enigmatic passages in the Gospels (v.8-11). So, I devoted about one-fourth of my dissertation to a careful reading of those verses. This means a couple of things. One, I have made heavy modifications to the NLT’s translation of this passage. Their version adds a lot of extra words to “help” with the meaning, but I am convinced the interpretation that led to their translation is deeply flawed, so I have given you as close as English will allow to a word-for-word translation from the Greek. In case you didn’t know already, take a moment to let this fact sink in: every single translation of Scripture (including the venerable KJV and ‘literal’ ones like the NASB) has an embedded theology – an interpretation that sends the translation in a certain direction, even when that direction might be contrary to the meaning (either the original meaning or other possible meanings) of the text. To give one of several examples here, the word I translated as “justice” is dikaiosune. Paul uses this same word in Rom. 1.18 (and elsewhere, Paul liked this word) and Martin Luther built his entire theology on a stylized reading of that verse, leading to what people familiar with Christian lingo call “righteousness,” specifically the “righteousness of God.” I’m not going to argue about the validity of Luther’s reading today (it is somewhat suspect). I only want to point out that the NLT imports Luther’s reading of Paul into this sentence (16.8-11 is all one sentence) in John. This is the only time John uses the word, Luther’s notion is not in line with John’s themes, and the word for God (“theos”) does not appear here at all. So this is not “God’s righteousness” as the NLT has it. Bad translation based on theological commitment, not what the text says. And this is not a rare case. It happens all the time. If you are reading a translation, you are reading someone else’s interpretation. Which is one reason for learning Greek and Hebrew – and also one reason for not building doctrines or moral positions on literal readings of English versions.

So these verses were the basis of my Ph.D. dissertation. The second thing that means (as you can already see) is that I can go on about this passage for a long time. A long time. Like 10,000 words without breaking a sweat. But I don’t want to do that and I know you don’t want me to do that. So I am going to try to sum up as succinctly as possible what I take v. 8-11 to be saying. I am going to leave out all the supporting arguments and most of the ramifications and just give it to you straight. I think this will be good for both of us, you get the ideas and I get to practice brevity. So here goes:

Jesus again brings up this promise to send the Paraclete. Paracletes served as supporting counsel in legal matters of the day, they were always supporters and defenders, never prosecutors. But here Jesus says this supporting lawyer will “convict” – a word that has a range of meanings from persuade to prosecute. Given the decided positive nature of paraceletes, “convince” is probably our best English word. This is a persuasive action, a strong one, but also a positive one.

So Jesus promises to send the Holy Spirit to convince – the whole world. The “world” has been an important word in John (e.g., for God so loved the world). Throughout John, we have seen that God loves the world, that the world is hostile to God, but that God’s love for the world prevails because Jesus comes to demonstrate God’s love for the world. If the action here is convicting, it is a loving convicting.

The Paraclete/Spirit comes to convince this world about three things: sin, justice, and judgment. Sin relates to them not trusting Jesus. Justice relates to the disciples not seeing Jesus anymore. And judgment relates to the fact that the ruler of the world has been condemned (note that only the ruler has been condemned, not the world). The world is the object of all the Paraclete’s convincing action, but that action either takes three forms or has three motivations, non-disciples not trusting Jesus, disciples not seeing Jesus, the ruler of the world being condemned.

But here we have to note that back toward the beginning of this speech (14.17), Jesus said that the world could not accept or even hear the Paraclete, only the disciples could. How can the Paraclete convince people who cannot hear his message? Put simply, the Paraclete communicates this convincing through the community the Paraclete forms of people who do trust in Jesus. This sentence comes within the context of Jesus explaining the nature of the church he and the Spirit are forming. A key part of that nature is that the church will be the conduit of the Spirit’s mission of convincing the world.

Convincing the world of what? Sin, justice, and judgment. Convincing the world how? Through the agency of the church. In short, people who do not trust Jesus become convinced that they can by seeing people who do trust Jesus and who trust each other. The church lives as a community of trust, where unity trumps doctrinal differences.

People who do not know justice become convinced justice is possible by seeing people who live out the justice that Jesus practiced, hoping for and enacting the good for each other, showing preference for each other (especially the outcast), showing the world that justice was not limited to when Jesus was on earth, but continues among his followers who, even though they do not have his moral example in front of them carry on because the Paraclete/Spirit is reminding them of all Jesus did and taught and empowering them to do the same, so that they still set people free from spiritual and physical bondage, free to pursue life in Jesus.

People who are used to the world’s modes of power – hierarchical, domineering, dehumanizing, destructive – become convinced that these modes of power have been condemned by seeing people who relate to each other in altogether different terms. Authority among Jesus’ followers is demonstrated by washing people’s feet. Power is not something held, wielded, or consolidated, it is always and only given away. Worldly power is inverted and subverted; the least are greatest, the last are first, the disenfranchised are empowered. And to be clear, this is no benign dictatorship (as some churches pervert it to be), all consolidations of power, all maintenance and manipulation of others stands condemned. In other words, instead of controlling people, we love them because only in love does the focus and power shift from the one performing the action to the recipient of that action. In love, the lover empowers the beloved. Love creates agency.

The church convinces the world of the sin of not trusting Jesus by being a community of trust expressed in radical unity. Unity shows we trust each other and God.

The church convinces the world of the justice of the Jesus we do not see by being a community of hope expressed in radical freedom. Freedom shows we hope for the good for each other.

The church convinces the world of all its modes of power have been condemned by being a community of love expressed in radical equality. Equality shows we love each other and God.

There you have it. My entire dissertation in less than 1500 words. Not bad, eh?

New Living Translation (NLT) Holy Bible. New Living Translation copyright© 1996, 2004, 2007 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale HousePublishers Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.

Love and Hate: Red Letter Year 12/9

John 15.15 – 16.4

15 I no longer call you slaves, because a master doesn’t confide in his slaves. Now you are my friends, since I have told you everything the Father told me. 16 You didn’t choose me. I chose you. I appointed you to go and produce lasting fruit, so that the Father will give you whatever you ask for, using my name. 17 This is my command: Love each other.

18 “If the world hates you, remember that it hated me first. 19 The world would love you as one of its own if you belonged to it, but you are no longer part of the world. I chose you to come out of the world, so it hates you. 20 Do you remember what I told you? ‘A slave is not greater than the master.’ Since they persecuted me, naturally they will persecute you. And if they had listened to me, they would listen to you. 21 They will do all this to you because of me, for they have rejected the one who sent me. 22 They would not be guilty if I had not come and spoken to them. But now they have no excuse for their sin. 23 Anyone who hates me also hates my Father. 24 If I hadn’t done such miraculous signs among them that no one else could do, they would not be guilty. But as it is, they have seen everything I did, yet they still hate me and my Father. 25 This fulfills what is written in their Scriptures: ‘They hated me without cause.’

26 “But I will send you the Advocate — the Spirit of truth. He will come to you from the Father and will testify all about me. 27 And you must also testify about me because you have been with me from the beginning of my ministry. 16.1 I have told you these things so that you won’t abandon your faith. 2 For you will be expelled from the synagogues, and the time is coming when those who kill you will think they are doing a holy service for God. 3 This is because they have never known the Father or me. 4 Yes, I’m telling you these things now, so that when they happen, you will remember my warning. I didn’t tell you earlier because I was going to be with you for a while longer.”

Comments

There are only two things I want to point out today. First, Jesus uses stark language here: love and hate. Not much room for nuance. Jesus encourages his followers. We have not chosen him, he has chosen us. Chosen us to produce fruit – fruit that is produced when we love each other and invite others into our community of love. But our loving community will also draw the ire of some who will not hesitate to show their hatred for Jesus and for us. Throughout the four Gospels, we have seen people respond positively to Jesus and we have seen people respond negatively. Some receive and reciprocate his love. Others reject his love and return it with hate. We should expect to receive some of both responses if we are living out his command to love each other.

But I suspect that you are familiar with this, that you’ve heard this sort of thing before. For as long as I can remember, Christians (the ones I’ve been around in the USA at least) have busied themselves with creating and maintaining a subculture, the purpose and maintenance of which is an ongoing culture war. It might seem that what Jesus says here plays right into the Christian culture war narrative. It certainly gets used that way by the self-chosen culture warriors. But we can only read this passage as supporting the culture war approach if we completely ignore everything we’ve read all year.

Think about it, Jesus says the people who accepted him will accept us and the people who rejected him will reject us. Who accepted Jesus? Traitors, thieves, prostitutes, homeless, diseased, degenerate, drunk, possessed, destitute, powerless, social deviants. Who rejected Jesus? People with a stake in protecting the dominant culture, those with an interest in maintaining the status quo, the hyper-religious, the privileged, the socially and economically favored, those in power. Now look at those two lists and tell me, which group would today’s Christian culture warriors belong in?

What happens when the love and hate are backwards? When the people who should love us hate us and the people who should hate us love us? It is clear from this passage that followers of Jesus should be loved by some and hated by others. It is equally clear from all we’ve read this year that we have this reversed. The people Jesus said would accept us don’t want anything to do with us because they haven’t seen love from us. The people Jesus said would hate us have become our self-appointed spokespeople and have hijacked our faith for a culture war Jesus never commissioned.

That’s what this passage is about. It is a virtue both to be loved and hated by the proper people. Jesus excelled at this. His followers should do the same.

New Living Translation (NLT) Holy Bible. New Living Translation copyright© 1996, 2004, 2007 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale HousePublishers Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.