James 1:17-21 * John 16:5-14
“EVERY good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with
whom is no variableness, neither shadow
of turning,” writes Saint James in today’s Epistle. These words are more than a
profoundly beautiful piece of prose; these words speak of the unchanging and
unchangeable will of God. In God is no variableness,
and not only no turning, but not even a shadow of it. “God is not a man that he
should lie, neither a son of man that he should repent.” God wills, God speaks
and He acts. But never does He react. The revelation that God has given
of Himself in scripture has been given through language that can speak to the
human mind, and as such that language is inherently iconographic. The
limitations of the human mind cannot comprehend God, and so we are given words
about God that must come short of a full description. We read of Divine mercy,
or we read of Divine wrath, and we picture these things in human terms; we imagine
how the mercy or wrath of men comes across. Such things come across as emotion,
as reactions which must, by their nature, be both variableness and a shadow of turning. For that
is how we experience these things.
But where man comes closest to God, and where His image is most clearly
perceived in the very nature of what we are, is the highest of the virtues,
namely charity. This is that love that never fails, that is shed abroad in our
hearts by the Holy Ghost. With or without the element of reaction, always with
the constancy of feeling but never dependent on the whims of emotion, this love
motivates us to labor for the people most dependent on our untiring efforts.
Even anger does not erase this love, because it is deeper than any passing
emotion. Saint John told us that “God is Love.” So, the words “no variableness neither shadow of turning”
naturally move into the next phrase in today’s Epistle of James: “Of his own
will begat he us with the word of truth,
that we should be a kind of first-fruits of his creatures.” The love of God for
us, the love of the Father that begat
us, never depended on how He felt at the time, how He reacted, on whim, fancy
or any changeable thing. When we say that God is Impassible, not subject to the
changes and reactions of emotion, it is our very hope itself of which we speak.
His will for us runs deeper; it is the true Love itself; love that takes human
nature into the Godhead, so that Jesus Christ is that one Person both fully God
and fully man, who suffered and died for our sins. The old problem of whether
or not God could have suffered on the cross is answered for us by saying that
Jesus Christ suffered for us, and that He did so as One Person in two complete
natures. And, in that depth that is love, stronger because it is deeper and
higher, beneath and above all we know of mere emotion with its changing whims
and reaction, we see the will of God carried out. In Christ we died to sin, and
in Christ we rose to new life, born again because we are begotten from above by
the Word of Truth.
The will of God is not capricious. For a mere human being, the will is subject
to what side of bed he gets out of on a given morning. God’s will, however,
does not change, unlike the unstable will of a man who, upon getting bored,
undergoes a change of tastes; or who, upon being taken by emotion at a given
moment, changes his mind. In the news a few years ago, I heard of a family
suing some well-known sex symbol celebrity, because a rich man had married her
and had rewritten his will. If I heard it correctly, the rightful heirs, that
is the children, were left desolate because the rich man had, in what passion
he could muster or in what vanity had taken him, married a woman several
decades his junior; and his children no longer could expect his promise, which
was the expectation of their inheritence,
to be fulfilled. This kind of unstable behavior takes place among sinful men;
but our Father in heaven will never be moved to forget us. He will not break
His promise. Once we are in Christ we are never forgotten. In the words
of the prophet Isaiah: “But Zion said, The LORD hath forsaken me, and my Lord
hath forgotten me. Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she should not
have compassion on the son of her womb? yea, they may forget, yet will I not
forget thee. Behold, I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands; thy walls
are continually before me (Isa. 49: 14-16).”
Understand that when we speak of Divine mercy or of Divine wrath, we are not
speaking of some reaction in God. God remains constant. Whether we
experience mercy or wrath depends upon where we decide to stand, what side of
that unmlovable line he has laid down in
His commandments. His love for us will not be satisfied, however, with our
laxity. He commands us to grow in holiness and virtue because that is part of
His will for us in Christ. He knows what he wants to make of us, the kind of
people we are meant to be. Whatever Hell is, that place of darkness about which
our Lord Jesus Christ warned us many times over, it is not a place we might
enter due to God’s reactions. It is a place we may enter by choosing to stand
on the wrong side of His love, the side where we shut out His will for us in
favor of any wilful sin. God does
not change, and so, if we refuse to turn from our sins, we will be lost. For
God cannot compromise: it is against His very nature. God does not negotiate or
bargain. He does, however, forgive when we turn to Him.
In today’s Gospel we see that Jesus said, about the coming of the Holy Ghost-
that event we will remember shortly on Pentecost- “And when He is come, He will
reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment: of sin,
because they believe not on me; of righteousness, because I go to my Father,
and ye see me no more; of judgment, because the prince of this world is
judged.” Look at these things closely. The world remains in sin because it
refuses to believe in Jesus Christ. This is put in very personal terms. The
choice to be given over to sin and death is the refusal to believe in this one
Man: Jesus Christ, the Son of the Living God. Why? Because only He is the
remedy for sin and death. “Neither is there salvation in any other; for there
is no other name given under heaven among men whereby we must be saved (Acts
4:12).”
The Holy Spirit convicts the world of righteousness by Christ’s ascension into
heaven. He must sit on the throne of God with the Father; as long as the world
is fallen and sinful, His presence here as the Incarnate God was extraordinary,
something that the world could not long endure. Until the world is ready to be
made new by his coming, His presence remains hidden and mysterious. His
ascension to the throne of His Father vindicates His righteousness, even though
the world treated Him as a sinner and a criminal.
The Holy Spirit convicts the world of judgment because the prince of this world
is judged. The cross appeared to be the condemnation of Jesus; but it turned
out instead to be the condemnation of the whole order of sin and death. Christ
bore the wrath of God, and this was in fact the mercy of God at work. The one
who was cast out and defeated was the Devil, the serpent’s head bruised by the
bruising of the heel of the Seed of the Woman, the Son born to the Virgin (Gen
3:15, John 19:26). The entire system of sin and death was judged. The prince of
this world was cast out. Now, the Holy Spirit convicts the world of the defeat
and condemnation of its evil ruler, the prince of darkness, and of everything
he had achieved by deception.
How does the Holy Spirit do these things? He works through the Church. So the
Lord continues, in today’s Gospel, with these words: “I have yet many things to
say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now. Howbeit when He, the Spirit of
truth, is come, He will guide you into all truth.” Indeed he has guided the
Church of the Apostles into all truth. It began with the writing of the New
Testament, with bringing to mind, after His resurrection and ascension, the
words of Jesus that would have been impossible to hear while He walked among
them. It began with the teaching we find in the words of the writer to the
Hebrews, in the Epistles of the Apostles, Saints, Peter, Paul, John, James, and
Jude. It began as they came to understand what Jesus had done in fulfillment of
the Old Testament prophecies. And, the Holy Spirit continued to guide the
Church throughout the years of persecution; and He guided the Church when it
emerged from persecution in the first Millennium, as the successors of the
Apostles met in those seven Ecumenical Councils and agreed together about the
meaning of the Word of God for all people for all time.
This ministry of the Church, to speak with the voice of the Holy Spirit to the
world, is the will of the Father who has begotten us to new life in the Person
of His Son, Who guides and empowers us by His Holy Spirit, sending down every
good gift and every perfect gift. In Him is no variableness
neither shadow of turning.
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