Acts 17: 22-31
John 14: 15-21
May 14, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate, to be with you forever.”
Prayer: Holy One, in you we live and move and have our being. We are always in your Presence. May we feel you as you feel us. In Christ we pray, Amen.
I think we’ve all heard the slang expression, “I feel you,” or the question-version, “Do you feel me?” It means basically ‘I get what you’re saying.’ Or, ‘I understand where you’re coming from.’ Or in the question-version, ‘Do you relate to what I’m saying?” It can be about agreement. Having the same understanding. Or depending on the context, it could even be about empathy. Someone who has a lot going on, like moving, and starting a new job, while saying good-bye to familiar places and relationships. If you’ve done that before, to say “I feel you,” means I empathize with you. I know what you’re going through.
As I was researching this, I ran across a song that I’ve never heard before called “Do You Feel Me?” by Anthony Hamilton from the soundtrack of the movie American Gangster.” The song is about a person in a relationship who is not really sure what level of commitment the other person has in the relationship. And the chorus has these lyrics:
Do you feel me? Do you read me?
Tell me am I gettin’ through to you
I wanna know, are you with me?
Are you listening?
Baby, is my message gettin’ through?
Do you feel me baby, oh babe, cause I can feel you.
Several years ago I used to teach a Faith Formation class called “Sounds of Faith Today.” The class was about listening for the way God is Stillspeaking, through lyrics of songs on the radio heard outside of church. So, if we re-focus the lyrics of the song to a God-focus, I bet some of us can see ourselves in that chorus… like when we sometimes feel that God is not present? Like how many of us have said in our prayers a some point on the journey, Do you feel me, God? Do you read me? Am I getting through to you? Are you listening? In other words, are you there? God, can you feel me now?
And I wonder if the reverse is also true? That God might be asking the same thing to us? My children, my beloved, can you feel me now? Do you read me? Am I gettin’ through to you? Are you listening? Do you feel me, cause I can feel you. What if God is saying those same things to us? “Can you feel me now?” God asks.
Because God sends the Holy Spirit. Jesus promised to ask God to send another Advocate, the Holy Spirit of God’s Truth to be with his disciples (and us) forever after he was gone. Jesus promises not to leave us stranded. Orphaned. Abandoned. Without a guide in life. Instead the Holy Spirit that lived in Jesus not only would be with us but is promised to be IN us!
And believe me, I think we need the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of Truth, the Advocate, the Helper, the Comforter to be in us. Because we need help keeping what Jesus taught. Jesus commanded people to love one another. He taught justice and fairness for all. That peacemakers are blessed. So are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness. He taught that we should care for the earth. And a whole bunch of other things. It’s a sure sign that we love Jesus—when we work hard at keeping what Jesus taught.
But that’s difficult. Because the world doesn’t feel God. We’re surrounded by people of the world whom I think don’t get God. We see that in big government. In big business. In our broken immigration system. In racism. In growing homophobia. In school boards that pass laws against transgendered people trying to live with authenticity. These are just some of the places where people of the world often disregard the truths of God that Jesus taught.
And I’m willing to bet that these kinds of problems would be much less severe if most people of the world knew God and lived by God’s ways and practiced keeping what Jesus taught. If that happened, I wonder if God would then say, “How about it? Yeah! Can you feel me now?”
I think we also need the Advocate, the Holy Spirit to be in us so that we can become the ones whom God can use to help another person in need. Last Wednesday, in our Melodies and Discoveries class, we were examining the phrase “God helps those who help themselves.” And we discovered that the phrase has a stronger biblical foundation if it is re-worded to say “God helps those who cannot help themselves.” Which is all of us at some point in time, right?
The author Adam Hamilton tells a story of a couple who lost their 35-year old son and were caught in the deep despair of grief. They tried helping themselves for a long period of time. Finally, they went to their pastor, who rallied others in the church family to reach out to them. It was those other people who visited with them, who sat with them, who brought them meals, who ate with them, who empathized with them. God worked through those other people and brought that couple through the crisis. The couple now wonders how people manage without a faith community.
And God I think said, “I have come to you. Can you feel me now?”
Here’s another idea. There are times on our journeys through life when we know that a “Come to Jesus” moment is coming. Sometimes when negativity builds up in the workplace, or when an intervention is the only way to address an alcoholic’s problem. Or when tough love is needed. Parents need to do that with youth sometimes. Adult children need to do that with aging parents sometimes, when difficult decisions need to be made. In those moments, I think God is saying, “I’m reaching out to you. Can you feel me now in these tough moments?”
Or how about when sometimes we feel like we made a mistake and someone got hurt or offended? Or we reacted adversely and our guilty conscience sounds the alarm in our hearts. I think it quite likely that God is Stillspeaking through our guilty conscience saying, “Can you feel me now? Is my message getting through?” It’s then time to listen and revert back to what Jesus taught and practiced. Make amends. Seek forgiveness. Learn and grow.
So, in our world there are so many things going on all at once, so many places to get waylaid off the faith journey. But, no matter what we face day in and day out, God is always sending us the Holy Spirit. Indeed, God is not far from each one of us. And through God in Christ we live and move and have our being.
And God asks, “Can you feel me now?” May it be yes. For every one of us. Amen.
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