Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of John 14:16
And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may abide with you forever;
16. And I will pray the Father ] ‘I’ is emphatic: ‘you do your part on earth, and I will do mine in Heaven.’ Our translators have once more rightly made a distinction but an inadequate one (see on Joh 13:23; Joh 13:25). The word for ‘pray’ here is different from that for ‘ask’ Joh 14:13-14; but of the two the one rendered ‘pray’ ( ertn) is (so far as there is a distinction) the less suppliant. It is the word always used by S. John when Christ speaks of His prayers to the Father (Joh 16:26, Joh 17:9; Joh 17:15; Joh 17:20); never the word rendered ‘ask’ ( aitein) which however Martha, less careful than the Evangelist, uses of Christ’s prayers (Joh 11:22). But the distinction must not be pressed as if aitein were always used of inferiors (against which Deu 10:12; Act 16:29; 1Pe 3:15 are conclusive), or ertn always of equals (against which Mar 7:26; Luk 4:38; Luk 7:3; Joh 4:40; Joh 4:47; Act 3:3 are equally conclusive), although the tendency is in that direction. In 1Jn 5:16 both words are used. In classical Greek ertn is never ‘to make a request,’ but always (as in Joh 1:19; Joh 1:21; Joh 1:25, Joh 9:2; Joh 9:15; Joh 9:19; Joh 9:21; Joh 9:23, &c.) ‘to ask a question.’ (See on Joh 16:23.)
another Comforter ] Better, another Advocate. The Greek word, Paraclete ( ) is employed five times in the N.T. four times in this Gospel by Christ of the Holy Spirit (Joh 14:16; Joh 14:26, Joh 15:26, Joh 16:7), once in the First Epistle by S. John of Christ (Joh 2:1). Our translators render it ‘Comforter’ in the Gospel, and ‘Advocate’ in the Epistle. As to the meaning of the word, usage appears to be decisive. It commonly signifies ‘one who is summoned to the side of another’ to aid him in a court of justice, especially the ‘counsel for the defence.’ It is passive, not active; ‘one who is summoned to plead a cause,’ not ‘one who exhorts, or encourages, or comforts.’ A comparison of the simple word ( = ‘called;’ Mat 20:16; Mat 22:14; Rom 1:1; Rom 1:6-7; 1Co 1:1-2, &c.) and the other compounds, of which only one occurs in the N.T. ( = ‘unaccused;’ 1Co 1:8; Col 1:22, &c.), or a reference to the general rule about adjectives similarly formed from transitive verbs, will shew that ‘Paraclete’ must have a passive sense. The rendering ‘Comforter’ has arisen from giving the word an active sense, which it cannot have. Moreover, ‘Advocate’ is the sense which the context suggests, wherever the word is used in the Gospel: the idea of pleading, arguing, convincing, instructing, is prominent in every instance. Here the Paraclete is the ‘Spirit of truth,’ whose reasonings fall dead on the ear of the world, and are taken in only by the faithful. In Joh 14:26 He is to teach and remind them. In Joh 15:26 He is to bear witness to Christ. In Joh 16:7-11 He is to convince or convict the world. In short, He is represented as the Advocate, the Counsel, who suggests true reasonings to our minds and true courses for our lives, convicts our adversary the world of wrong, and pleads our cause before God our Father. In the Te Deum the Holy Spirit is rightly called ‘the Comforter,’ but that is not the function which is set forth here. To substitute ‘Advocate’ will not only bring out the right meaning in the Gospel, but will bring the language of the Gospel into its true relation to the language of the Epistle. ‘He will give you another Advocate’ acquires fresh meaning when we remember that S. John calls Christ our ‘Advocate:’ the Advocacy of Christ and the Advocacy of the Spirit mutually illustrating one another. At the same time an important coincidence between the Gospel and Epistle is preserved, one of the many which help to prove that both are by one and the same author, and therefore that evidence of the genuineness of the Epistle is also evidence of the genuineness of the Gospel. See Lightfoot, On Revision, pp. 50 56, from which nearly the whole of this note is taken.
It is worth noting that although S. Paul does not use the word Paraclete, yet he has the doctrine: in Rom 8:27; Rom 8:34 the same language, ‘maketh intercession for,’ is used both of the Spirit and of Christ.
that he may abide with you for ever ] Their present Advocate has come to them and will leave them again; this ‘other Advocate’ will come and never leave them. And in Him, who is the Spirit of Christ (Rom 8:9), Christ will be with them also (Mat 28:20).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
I will pray the Father – This refers to his intercession after his death and ascension to heaven, for this prayer was to be connected with their keeping his commandments. In what way he makes intercession in heaven for his people we do not know. The fact, however, is clearly made known, Rom 8:34; Heb 4:14-15; Heb 7:25. It is as the result of his intercession in heaven that we obtain all our blessings, and it is through him that our prayers are to be presented and made efficacious before God.
Another Comforter – Jesus had been to them a counsellor, a guide, a friend, while he was with them. He had instructed them, had borne with their prejudices and ignorance, and had administered consolation to them in the times of despondency. But he was about to leave them now to go alone into an unfriendly world. The other Comforter was to be given as a compensation for his absence, or to perform the offices toward them which he would have done if he had remained personally with them. And from this we may learn, in part, what is the office of the Spirit. It is to furnish to all Christians the instruction and consolation which would be given by the personal presence of Jesus, Joh 16:14. To the apostles it was particularly to inspire them with the knowledge of all truth, Joh 14:26; Joh 15:26. Besides this, he came to convince men of sin. See the notes at Joh 16:8-11. It was proper that such an agent should be sent into the world:
- Because it was a part of the plan that Jesus should ascend to heaven after his death.
- Unless some heavenly agent should be sent to carry forward the work of salvation, man would reject it and perish.
- Jesus could not be personally and bodily present in all places with the vast multitudes who should believe on him. The Holy Spirit is omnipresent, and can reach them all. See the notes at Joh 16:7.
- It was manifestly a part of the plan of redemption that each of the persons of the Trinity should perform his appropriate work the Father in sending his Son, the Son in making atonement and interceding, and the Spirit in applying the work to the hearts of men.
The word translated Comforter is used in the New Testament five times. In four instances it is applied to the Holy Spirit – Joh 14:16, Joh 14:26; Joh 15:26; Joh 16:7. In the other instance it is applied to the Lord Jesus – 1Jo 2:1; We have an advocate (Paraclete – Comforter) with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous. It is used, therefore, only by John. The verb from which it is taken has many significations. Its proper meaning is to call one to us Act 27:20; then to call one to aid us, as an advocate in a court; then to exhort or entreat, to pray or implore, as an advocate does, and to comfort or console, by suggesting reasons or arguments for consolation. The word comforter is frequently used by Greek writers to denote an advocate in a court; one who intercedes; a monitor, a teacher, an assistant, a helper. It is somewhat difficult, therefore, to fix the precise meaning of the word. It may be translated either advocate, monitor, teacher, or helper. What the office of the Holy Spirit in this respect is, is to be learned from what we are elsewhere told he does. We learn particularly from the accounts that our Saviour gives of his work that that office was:
1.To comfort the disciples; to be with them in his absence and to supply his place; and this is properly expressed by the word Comforter.
2.To teach them, or remind them of truth; and this might be expressed by the word monitor or teacher, Joh 14:26; Joh 15:26-27.
3.To aid them in their work; to advocate their cause, or to assist them in advocating the cause of religion in the world, and in bringing sinners to repentance; and this may be expressed by the word advocate, Joh 16:7-13. It was also by the Spirit that they were enabled to stand before kings and magistrates, and boldly to speak in the name of Jesus, Mat 10:20. These seem to comprise all the meanings of the word in the New Testament, but no single word in our language expresses fully the sense of the original.
That he may abide with you for ever – Not that he should remain with you for a few years, as I have done, and then leave you, but be with you in all places to the close of your life. He shall be your constant guide and attendant.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Joh 14:16
I will pray the Father, and He shall give you another Comforter
The praying Christ, the giving Father, and the abiding Spirit
The and shows us that these words are a consequence of some preceding steps.
The ladder that has its summit in heaven has for its rungs, first, believe; second, love; third, obey. And thus the context carries us from the very basis of the Christian life up into its highest reward. And there is another very striking link. There are, if I may so say, two telephones across the abyss that separates the ascended Christ and us. One is, If ye ask anything in My name I will do it; the other, If ye keep My commandments I will ask. Love on this side of the great cleft sets love on the other side of it in motion in a two-fold fashion. If we ask, He does; if we do, He asks.
I. THE PRAYING CHRIST AND THE GIVING FATHER.
1. I Will ask and He will give seems a strange drop from the lofty claims in the earlier verses. The voice that spake the perfect revelation of God lowers its tones into petition. Now apparently diverse views lying so close together cannot have seemed contradictory to the utterer, and there is no explanation which does justice to these two sides of Christs consciousness, except that He is God manifest in the flesh, who prays in His Manhood and hears prayer in His Divinity. The bare humanistic view which emphasizes such utterances as these of my text does not know what to do with the other ones.
2. His intercession is the great hope of the Christian heart. The High Priest passes within the veil, bearing in His hand the offering, and by reason of that offering, and of His powerful presence before the mercy seat, all the spiritual gifts which redeem and regenerate and sanctify humanity are forever coming forth. Note
(1) Christs quiet assumption that all through the ages He knows, at the moment of their being done, His servants deeds.
(2) He puts the Fathers act in pledge to us, and assures us that His prayer brings ever its answer. Father! I will that they whom Thou hast given Me be with Me. How far beyond the warrantable language of man! And how impossible for a fisherman of Bethsaida to imagine that strange blending of submission and of authority which speaks in such words.
(3) That which puts in motion Christs intercessory activity is the obedience of a Christian man. If you obey He will pray, and the Father will send. So the reward of imperfect obedience is the larger measure given to us of that Divine Spirit by whose indwelling obedience becomes possible, and self-surrender a joy and a power.
II. THE ABIDING GIFT.
1. Comforter means not only One who administers sweet whispers of consolation. We have to look not merely for a vague influence, but a
Divine Person who will be by our side on condition of our faith, love, and obedience, to be our Strength in all weakness, our Peace in all trouble, our Wisdom, Guide, Comforter and Cherisher, Righteousness, the Victor over our temptations, and the Companion and Sweetener of our solitude? The metaphors with which Scripture represents this great personal Influence are full of instruction and beauty. He comes as The Fire, which melts, warms, cleanses, quickens; as the rushing, mighty Wind, which hears health upon its wings, and sometimes breathes gently as an infants breath, and sometimes sweeps with irresistible power; as the Oil, gently flowing, lubricating, making every joint supple, nourishing; as the Water of Life, refreshing, vitalizing, quickening all growth. He comes fluttering down as the Dove of God, the bird of peace that will brood upon our hearts. He is the Spirit of holiness, truth, wisdom, power, love, a sound mind, sonship, supplication, etc.
2. And this Strengthener and Advocate is to replace Christ and to carry on His work. Another Comforter. All that that handful of men found of sweetness and shelter and assured guidance, and stay for their weakness, and companionship for their solitude, and a breast on which to rest their heads, and love in which to bathe their hearts, all these this Divine Spirit will be to each of us if we will.
3. This strong continuation of Christs presence will be a permanent companion. He was comforting the disciples who were trembling at the thought of His departure. Here is the abiding Guest, that nothing but your own sin will ever cast out from your hearts.
4. And Christ tells us how this great Spirit will do His work. He is the Spirit of Truth, not as if He brought new truth. To suppose that opens the door to all manner of fanaticism, but the truth, the revelation of which is all summed and finished in the person and work of Jesus Christ, is the weapon by which the Divine Spirit works all His conquests, the staff on which He makes us lean and be strong.
III. THE BLIND WORLD. There is a tone of deep sadness in Christs words. A savage stares at the sunshine and sees nothing. And worldly men, who are bound by this visible diurnal round, lack the organ that enables them to see that Divine Spirit moving round about them. Whether you have put your eyes out by fleshly lusts, or by intellectual self-sufficiency and conceit, you are stone blind to all the best realities of the universe; and if you look out upon the history of the Church, or upon the present condition of Christendom, and say, I see no Divine Spirit working there; well, then, the only thing that is to be said to you is, Go to an oculist, your sight is bad. Perhaps there is solid land, as some of us see it, where you see only mist.
IV. THE RECIPIENT DISCIPLES. Observe that the order of clauses is reversed. The world cannot receive, because it does not know. The disciple knows, because He receives. Possession and knowledge reciprocally interchange places, and may be regarded as cause and effect of one another. At bottom they are one and the same thing, Knowledge is possession, and possession is the only knowledge. He dwelleth with you now, and He shall be in you hereafter. There is a better form of possession opening before them, which came at Pentecost, and has lasted ever since. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
The gift of the Spirit and the gift of the Son compared
(text and Joh 3:16):–It is a much overlooked, but nevertheless true, fact that the Divine love is as much displayed in the gift of the Spirit as in the gift of the Son.
I. THE SPIRIT IS AS INTRINSICALLY GREAT AS THE SON. The same attributes, prerogatives, words belong to both.
II. THE SPIRIT IS AS ACTIVELY ENGAGED FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE WORLD AS THE SON. Did He not strive with the old world? Did He not inspire the prophets, etc.? Has there ever been a soul regenerated without His agency? Has there ever been a conscience that He has not touched? In every solemn thought and expression is He not working?
III. THE SPIRIT HAS BEEN AS WICKEDLY TREATED BY THE WORLD AS THE SON. The people of Judaea alone personally ill-treated Christ; the population of the whole world do always resist the Spirit. About thirty-three years measured the period of the Saviours personal ill-treatment, but that of the Spirit extends over well-nigh twice that number of centuries.
IV. THE SPIRIT IS AS NECESSARY TO MANKIND AS THE SON. Two things are necessary to mans salvation: deliverance from the guilt, and from the power of sin. Christ was necessary for the first, the Spirit for the second. It is said that man wants nothing but sufficient evidence and the free use of his faculties to believe.
1. But there are circumstances antagonistic to faith which need to be removed. There is
(1) Moral habit. The habits contracted by most, before the gospel comes fairly under attention, are such that the whole tenor of its truths condemn, and when assailed marshal every power of the soul to their defence.
(2) Servile fear. The man who feels that he is hastening to insolvency is frequently reluctant to go into his accounts. Nothing but sheer urgency will induce him to open his ledger. Is there not something similar to this in a mans soul in relation to the Bible. Often has conscience whispered that a fearful debt has been contracted, and that there is nothing to pay, and the Bible which confirms that is shunned.
(3) Social influence.
(4) Satanic agency. The god of this world blindeth the eyes of men.
2. All this being true, the Spirit is necessary, in a sense, apart from truth, and apart from His dwelling in the truth. He is a personal power, using the truth and making it effective in the minds and hearts of men. (D. Thomas, D. D.)
The parting promise
Among the many sources of trouble which disquieted the disciples we can distinguish four. And for each of these our Lord provides an adequate consolation.
1. The pang of separation from a beloved Master. For this His consolation is, that such separation shall not be forever (Joh 14:2-3).
2. The fear lest, in proclaiming their message, they should not be able to appeal to those mighty signs and wonders with which our Lord Himself had demonstrated the Divine origin of His mission. For this He gives them the assurance that they should even perform greater wonders (Joh 14:12).
3. That they should not have their Divine Master to fly to when they might require protection and provision. The answer to this was that our Lord would secure to them a perpetual access to God in prayer (Joh 14:13).
4. The painful consciousness that they should no longer have the wisdom of their Master to guide them in their proclamation of the gospel. For this our Lord provided in the text. Consider this blessing
I. IN ITS SOURCE: as it arises from the mediation of Christ Himself. I will pray the Father. This does not mean that the Father is unwilling to bestow, but that in the order of the eternal counsels Christ must ascend up on high to receive gifts for men. Large and blessed as were the results of our Lords personal ministry, yet all the blessings which attend the promulgation of the gospel spring directly from the outpouring of the Holy Ghost, the result of Christs intercession.
II. IN ITS EFFICACY: as able to impart a consolation equal to that of Christ Himself. Large and dreary must have been the void created by Christs departure. But He would not go away until He had provided another Comforter. I will send One to you, who shall achieve for you mightier, more abundant, more lasting benefits. I will send that blessed Spirit, whose office shall be to seal and to hind upon your souls all those comforting promises which you have heard from Me; who shall recall all My discourses to you, and enable you to pour out your prayers to God by reason of His groanings which cannot be uttered.
III. IN HIS PARTICULAR OFFICE OF SPIRITUAL ILLUMINATION we are to have the Spirit of Truth
1. To instruct us in all points of doctrine. It is the office of the Spirit to take of the things of Christ and to show them to the soul; to reveal the mysteries of redemption. Thus we see that this office of the Spirit must be a great comfort to those destitute of human learning. Having One to guide into all truth, the poor and the wayfaring have the assurance that the whole mind of God shall be made plain to them, as much as to the greatest genius that ever tenanted the soul of man.
2. To direct us in all the practical concerns of life. He shall teach you all things.
IV. IN ITS EXCLUSIVENESS: as applying to all true believers. Christ does not say, Whom the Lord will not give; but, Whom the world cannot receive. Why cannot the world receive Him? Because it seeth Him not. Why does not the world see the Spirit? Is it from deficiency of evidence? No, but because they will not see. They close the shutter, and complain of darkness. Every worldly man is permitted to witness the daily operations of Gods Spirit in the world. Let him look abroad and see the transforming power of religion, the revivals in many Christian Churches, the changed habits of many families, and of many souls, brought under the power of Gods Spirit. Seeth it not!–might he not as well say that he seeth not the wind? He sees the ocean roused into tempest, etc.; will he tell us he cannot see the wind?
V. IN ITS PERMANENCE. He is not a stranger to visit; He is not a traveller, to sojourn for a season; but He is a friend, to abide and dwell. (D. Moore, M. A.)
The Paraclete
The etymological meaning of the word is, One called to be beside another. The word is used in classical Greek, and a word of similar etymology, from which our word advocate is derived, is used in classical Latin to denote a person who patronises another in a judicial cause, and who appears in support of him. It was the custom, before the ancient tribunals, for the parties to appear in court, attended by one or more of their most powerful and influential friends, who were called paracletes–the Greek–or advocates–the Latin term. They were not advocates in our sense of the term–feed counsel; they were persons who, prompted by affection, were disposed to stand by their friend; and persons in whose knowledge, wisdom, and truth the individual having the cause had confidence. These paracletes, or advocates, gave their friends–prospelates, or clients, as they were called–the advantages of their character and station in society, and the aid of their counsel. They stood by them in the court, giving them advice, and speaking in their behalf when it was necessary. Jesus had been the Paraclete of His disciples while He was with them. He had made their cause His own. He had taught them how to manage their cause with God. He had taught them to pray; and He had prayed for them. He had taught them how to manage their cause with the wicked one; bidding them watch and pray, lest they should enter into temptation; and He had prayed for them, that their faith should not fail. When the scribes and Pharisees attacked them, He was ever ready to defend them. In the great cause which was at once His and theirs He was their great helper. He instructed them what to say, and how to act. He gave them miraculous powers, and taught them how to use them. Thus He had been their patron–their paraclete. And He was not to cease to be so; He was, in His Fathers house of many mansions, ever living to interpose in their behalf (1Jn 2:1; Heb 7:25). But He was to cease to be their Paraclete on earth; and therefore, knowing how much they needed such a patron and adviser, and monitor and helper, He says, I will pray to the Father, and He will send you another Paraclete. Instead of losing, you are to gain by My removal. They had, in becoming His disciples, identified themselves with His cause. They stood pledged to establish the right which their Masters principles had to be universally embraced and submitted to. And all the resources of Judaism and Paganism, all the subtlety of philosophy, all the seductions of idolatry, all the power of kingdoms and empires, all the craft, and activity, and energy of hell, were against them. And what were they? poor, unlearned, obscure men? Truly, they needed a powerful patron, a wise adviser. And such a paraclete was He whom the Saviour promises. He cannot want power, through whose plastic influence the world was formed; He cannot want wisdom, who searches all things, even the deep things of God; and we know how He guided them, and enabled them to bring to a triumphant issue their mighty litigation. He filled their minds with the pure light of Divine truth, and their hearts with the holy fire of Divine love, and He poured grace and power into their lips; and when brought before counsels and synagogues, and governors, and kings, He gave them a force of reason and a power of eloquence that could not be withstood. They spake with tongues, as He gave them utterance, and proclaimed the mysteries of the kingdom, not in words taught by human wisdom, but in words taught by the Holy Ghost. (J. Brown, D. D.)
The Paraclete
It means one who calls us to his side, as a father does his child when he has some special thing to say. (H. Bonar, D. D.)
The Paraclete
I. HOW THE SPIRIT OF GOD IS THE PARACLETE.
1. The Holy Spirit is to be to us all that Jesus was to His disciples. What a valiant leader is to an army, the shepherd to the sheep, Jesus Christ was to His people. As the Orientals say of the palm tree, that every fragment of it is of use, and there is scarcely any domestic arrangement into which the palm tree in some form or other does not enter, even so Jesus Christ is good for everything to His people, and there is nothing that they have to do or feel or know but Jesus Christ enters into it. What would that little company have been without their Lord? Now, all that Jesus was, the Spirit of God is now. If there be any power in the Church, any light in her instruction, life in her ministry, glory gotten to God, good wrought among men, it is entirely because the Holy Spirit is still with her. And we shall do well to treat the Holy Spirit as we would have treated Christ. Our Lords disciples told Him their troubles; we must trust the Comforter with ours. Whenever they felt baffled by the adversary, they fell back upon their Leaders power; so must we call in the aid of the Holy Spirit. When they needed guidance, they sought direction from Jesus; we also must seek and abide by the Spirits leadings. When, knowing what to do, they felt themselves weak, they waited upon their Master for strength; and so must we upon the Spirit of all grace.
2. The Holy Spirit comforts by His presence and indwelling (Joh 14:17).
3. He comforts us by His teaching (Joh 14:26). We can, so far as the letter goes, learn from the Scriptures the words of Jesus for ourselves; but to understand them is the gift of the Spirit of God. What comfort is there equal to the words of Jesus, the consolation of Israel, when they are really understood?
4. Through the Holy Spirit we obtain peace (Joh 14:27). He who is taught of God naturally enjoys peace, for if I be taught that my sins were laid on Jesus, and the chastisement of my peace was upon Him, how can I help having peace?
5. The Holy Spirit, according to Joh 16:13, guides us into all truth, which is more than teaching us all truth. There are caverns full of sparkling stalactites. Now, it is a good thing, when you are travelling, to be taught where each of these caverns is–that is teaching you truth; but it is a better thing when the guide, with his flaming torch, conducts you down into the great subterranean chambers, while ten thousand crystals, like stars, vicing in colour with the rainbow, flash their beams upon you. So the Spirit of God will convince you that such and such a teaching is truth, and that is very much to know; but when he leads you into it, so that you experimentally know it, taste it, and feel it, oh, then you are admitted to the innermost cave of jewels, where the diamond lights up the secret mine. A great many Christians never get into the truth. They sit on the outside of it, but do not enter in.
6. The Spirit (Joh 16:14) glorifies Christ by taking of the things of Christ and showing them to us. Could infinite wisdom select a sweeter topic for a disconsolate heart than the things of Christ? You may bring me the things of Moses and of David, of Solomon and of Daniel, but what are they to me compared with the things of Christ?
II. THE NATURE OF THE HOLY SPIRITS COMFORT.
1. He never dissociates His comfort from character (see verse 15). The Spirit of God never comforts a man in his sin. See what sin it is that makes you sorrow–obey, and ye shall be comforted.
2. He does not aim at working mere comfort by itself and alone. He does not comfort us as a fond mother who does not teach the child anything, nor cleanse its body or purify its heart in order to comfort it, but who neglects these to please the little one; but the Holy Spirit never acts so unwisely.
When a man is feeling pain he is very desirous that the surgeon should administer some drug which will stop the unpleasant sensation immediately; yet the surgeon refuses to do anything of the kind, but endeavours to remove the cause of the evil, which lies far lower than the pain. Do not expect to get comfort by merely running to sweet texts or listening to pleasing preachers, but expect to find comfort through the holy, reproving, humbling, strengthening, sanctifying processes which are the operation of the Divine Paraclete.
3. His comfort is not founded upon concealment. Some have obtained consolation by conveniently forgetting troublesome truth. Now, the Holy Spirit lays the whole truth open before us; therefore our consolation is not of fools, but of wise men; peace, which age and experience will not invalidate, but which both these will deepen, causing it to grow with our growth and strengthen with our strength.
4. It is a comfort always in connection with Jesus.
5. It is comfort which is always available. It does not depend upon health, strength, wealth, position, or friendship; the Holy Spirit comforts us through the truth, and the truth does not change; through Jesus, and He is yea and amen; therefore our comforts may be quite as lively when we are dying as when we are in vigorous health, when the purse is empty, and the cruse of oil low, as when all worldly store and cheer abound to us.
III. SOME OBSERVATIONS UPON THE WHOLE SUBJECT.
1. To the believer
(1) Honour the Spirit of God as you would honour Jesus Christ if He were present.
2. Never impute the vain imaginings of your fancy to Him.
3. In all your learning ask Him to teach you, in all your suffering ask Him to sustain you, in all your teaching ask Him to give you the right words, in all your witness-bearing ask Him to give you constant wisdom, and in all service depend upon Him for His help. Believingly reckon upon the Holy Spirit.
4. To the unconverted–if thou art ever to be saved, the Holy Spirit is essential to thee. Except thou be born again from above, thou canst never see the kingdom of God, much less enter it. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Another Comforter
I. THERE IS A COMFORTER.
1. So our high festival of the Holy Ghost comes round, and meets the wants which the year has been accumulating. Just as Good Friday came and met another years guilt, Whit-Sunday comes to meet another years grief. Some have wept alone, and have had no earthly solace. Some have had comforters; but their well-intentioned comfortings mocked you. Or, the human comforting was very precious and very true, and you know what that word comforter means; but here is that which exceeds it all, as the fountain exceeds one of its own smallest drops–a Comforter.
2. Christ said, Another Comforter. Who is it? The Father? Yes; for He is the God of all comfort. The Son? Yes; I will not leave you comfortless. Then, a Trinity of Comforters. Is that the way we travel to God is love? Through a Comforter I ask a Comforter to send a Comforter. Or more truly, two Comforters, of themselves, send a Comforter. You are a deep mourner. But see how you are encircled. And can any sorrow outreach that comforting?
II. THE MODE OF HIS COMING.
1. It is the comforting of a Spirit. Therefore He mingles with our spirit. He does not need that there should pass any actual words. Every one who has ever passed through very deep sorrow will appreciate this. There are times when all language is poor and rude. How often have we longed that our minds could throw themselves into anothers mind without speaking. The Holy Ghost does that.
2. And what power there is in that thought, that He is the Holy Ghost! It wants holiness to deal with a wounded mind. Nothing but what is very holy ought ever to come near sorrow.
3. Still, the Spirit uses instruments, and almost always the Word. It is not always a promise. Sometimes it is a doctrine, whose grandeur fills, and raises, and assures the Spirit. Sometimes it is a command, and the comfort is the sense of duty. The Comforter never forgets that He is the Sanctifier, and the Sanctifier never forgets that He is the Comforter. Therefore, if you would be comforted, obey the impulse of the Spirit, and go and be much with your Bible, and be jealous that the first thing you seek is holiness.
4. He does not make you forget, but He draws happiness out of the unhappiness; He makes the subject of your tears the element of your smile; He does not take away the cloud, but He makes a rainbow of the shower; the pain does not go, but gradually the pain has so much of Christ in it that you scarcely wish to part with it.
5. He always displays Christ–makes you find what you want, not in man, but in Christ. If the thought which is presented to your mind does not draw you nearer to Christ–if you are not led to do something for Christs sake–it is not the true Comforter who has been speaking to you. Jesus is thebalm of life, and the comfort of the Spirit is the revealing of Christ. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
Another Comforter
The Divine Spirit is
I. A HOLY COMFORTER. There can be no comfort apart from goodness. There is no peace, saith my God, to the wicked. His name indicates His work. By Him the soul is regenerated. Christians are elect through sanctification of the Spirit, unto obedience.
II. AN INSTRUCTIVE COMFORTER. By His inspiration all Holy Scripture was given for our learning. Not by methods opposed to or ignoring our intellectual nature; not by mere excitement of the emotions; but by conveying truth to the mind, and enabling us to understand and feel it, the Holy Spirit acts as another Comforter. By His help we believe, and then, being justified by faith, we have peace with God, and enjoy that peace which passeth all understanding.
III. A PERSUASIVE COMFORTER. By revealing Jesus to the soul the Holy Spirit produces that love which is the strongest motive to holiness, and which is the fulfilling of the law. The love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us. And the love of Christ constraineth us to live not to ourselves, but to Him who died for us and rose again. The Comforter, as a faithful guide, in places of difficulty takes the traveller by the hand, and in addition to words of counsel, restrains him when he would step into danger, and kindly compels him to proceed when through fear or thoughtlessness he hesitates and may be overtaken by storm or darkness.
IV. A STRENGTHENING COMFORTER. He helpeth our infirmities. He comes to our succour when we are too heavily burdened, and lightens the weight or gives us strength to bear it. We are strengthened with might by His Spirit in the inner man. The result of such strengthening is Christ dwelling in our hearts by faith, the being rooted and grounded in love, knowing the love of Christ which passeth knowledge, and being filled with all the fulness of God. And what consolation can surpass that which must result from such strengthening! Especially are we taught to expect this help in prayer (Rom 8:26). He helps us to obtain comfort by teaching us what to pray for, by enabling us to pray aright, by overcoming the doubts which hinder us in the exercise, by creating within us earnest longings after God, by exciting in us desires which we may be unable to express in words, but which bring down the refreshing showers upon the mown grass, and cause us to say, I love the Lord, because He hath heard my voice and my supplication,
V. AN ASSURING COMFORTER. What consolation can be greater than to know that Jesus is our Saviour and that we are His friends, and that through Him we can look upward and with confidence say, My God! my Father! (Rom 8:14-16).
VI. A HOPE-INSPIRING COMFORTER. We abound in hope through the power of the Holy Ghost (Rom 8:17-19). Practical lessons:
1. Let us regard the Holy Spirit, not with dread, but with loving confidence.
2. Let our actions respond to His methods of help. Does He comfort by teaching? let us be diligent learners; by persuasion? let us yield to His influence; by guiding? let us follow; by promoting our holiness? let us strive against sin; by helping us to know our high vocation? let us give diligence to the full assurance of hope unto the end.
3. Let all be encouraged to seek His help, for If ye, being evil, etc. (Newman Hall, LL. B.)
Another Comforter
I. THE BEING SPOKEN OF.
1. Spiritual (Joh 14:17).
2. Personal. Not a mere influence or energy, as according to the Monarchians, Patripassians, Unitarians, but a Person as truly as Christ was. That Christ taught this is apparent from
(1) The use of the personal pronoun (Joh 14:26; chap. 15:26).
(2) The names given Him.
3. Divine. Christ could not be represented by or commit the interests of His Church to a creature.
4. Distinct, as against Sabellians and Swedenborgians. Another.
II. THE RELATION IN WHICH HE STANDS
1. To the Father.
(1) Ontologically: one with Him, equal in being, wisdom, power, and glory, and yet proceeding from Him (Joh 15:26).
(2) Historically. He is sent (Joh 14:26) and given (Joh 14:16) by the Father.
2. To the Son.
(1) Essentially the Sons as the Fathers equal, He is nevertheless
(2) Historically exhibited as sent forth by the Father at the Sons intercession.
3. To the Truth. Spirit of Truth may signify the Spirit whose essence is the Truth, whose operations concern the Truth, whose office it is to testify of Him who is the Truth (Joh 15:26), and to guide into all the Truth Joh 16:13).
4. To the disciples. A presence
(1) Inward; not with and by, but in them (1Co 3:16).
(2) Permanent; not temporary, as Christs had been.
(3) Helpful (Mat 10:20).
5. To the world (Joh 16:17; Joh 16:8).
III. THE CONDITIONS OF RECEIVING HIM.
1. Loving obedience to Christ (Joh 16:15).
2. Believing recognition of the Spirit (Joh 16:17). The world had closed its eyes and steeled its heart against Him.
Learn
1. That all a saint obtains on earth he owes to the Saviours intercession Rom 8:34; Heb 7:25).
2. That the highest gift a human spirit can receive is the Holy Ghost as a Divine Being, an all-sufficient Helper, a heavenly Teacher, an unchanging Friend.
3. That the worlds unbelief of the Spirit is no proof that He does not exist. (T. Whitelaw, D. D.)
Another Comforter
I. THE WORK OF CHRIST AS IMPLIED IN THE ALLUSION TO HIMSELF. Christ is a Comforter.
1. In the needs He came to meet. To have had no mission for the sorrowful would have been to neglect the most evident of the worlds wants.
2. In the predictions concerning Him–He hath sent Me to heal the broken-hearted, etc.
3. In the nature of His words and works. To alleviate pain, to console bereavement, to meet doubt, to lighten death, He set Himself with all the absorbing interest of a master passion.
II. THE WORK OF THE SPIRIT RESEMBLES THAT OF CHRIST. The life of Jesus is an index of the work of the Comforter.
1. What we read of Jesus doing as a consoler, we read also of the Holy Spirit doing.
2. What men saw Jesus doing in Judaea, we may see and feel is being done by the Spirit now. As Christ led, inspired, soothed, and elevated human hearts, so the Spirit will ever do.
III. THE WORK OF THE SPIRIT TRANSCENDS THE SIMILAR WORK OF CHRIST.
1. In its permanence. Jesus Christ went away. His stay was only for a little while. But the Spirit abides forever.
2. In its universality. Jesus was only known to the comparative few who were around Him. But on every shore, and under every sky, the Spirit dwells with men.
3. In its nearness. Those who came nearest to Christ but kissed His feet or lay in His bosom. This is distant in comparison with the Spirits indwelling. (V. R. Thomas.)
The Comforter
I. OUR NEED OF A COMFORTER. We live in a world of sorrow and suffering.
II. IS THERE A REMEDY? God is love; and it is impossible that He should intend His creatures to sink under such a burden.
1. Shall we seek for it in the influences of nature?
2. Shall we seek for it in our fellow men? Many seem to think so.
3. It may be said, indeed, that there is no need, even if we feel that all these earthly stays and solaces are insufficient, to think of the Holy Spirit as the Comforter. We have consolation in Christ, and we need no other. We need a present Comforter to make them efficacious.
III. HOW, THEN, DOES THE HOLY GHOST COMFORT US? When we first approach the consideration of the work of the Comforter, we meet with certain views of that work which seem to be the reverse of comforting. How can He who convinces us of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment, be a Comforter to us who are sinners? The friend who is found to be the truest and most trustworthy comforter is not he who whispers merely pleasant things in our ears; but he who tells us the truth, who, by telling us the truth, prepares us to understand what is wrong with us and to seek for a remedy. And how does He administer to the necessities which He thus makes apparent?
1. By revealing the fulness and sufficiency of Christ for all our spiritual wants. We say the work of comfort must begin here; for it is plain that, unless there be a supply for those deepest wants of our nature, we can have no real comfort or happiness. How, for instance, can a man be happy, or what kind of comfort can he enjoy, while he is laden with the burden of unforgiven sin?
2. By giving grace and strength in temptation.
3. And as it is in our spiritual trials, so also He comforts us in the ordinary troubles of life. (W. R. Clark.)
Another Comforter
Christ Himself was a Comforter, a true Barnabas, a brother born for adversity. His disciples found Him such.
I. The Spirit is an INDWELLING Comforter. Dwelleth with shall be in you. Most of our comforts are external, outside of us. Our souls are empty, weak, unsatisfied; and we need to look outward for strength and consolation. Even Christs bodily presence was without, and sometimes He and His disciples were separated from each other. But the Holy Ghost is in you; He goes where you go; He dwells with you; He makes your bodies temples of the Holy Ghost; He makes your souls wells of living water; He is the glory in the midst, in the heart, of each of you.
II. The Spirit is an ABIDING Comforter (Joh 14:16). Change is written upon all things here. Health and strength fail, friends die, riches fly away. Even Christ, as to His bodily presence, was only a sojourner on earth. But the Spirit abides; He will never leave the soul of which He has taken saving possession.
III. The Spirit is an UNWORLDLY Comforter (Joh 14:17). He is spirit, and so the world cannot see Him, cannot handle Him. Even if He could become visible and tangible, the world would neither know Him nor receive Him. The world can have no sympathy with Him, for He does not speak of earthly things; it is not with them that He seeks to comfort sorrowful, longing souls. If He spoke of earthly things, He could not be a Comforter to Gods poor, humbled, broken, wearied ones. The true believer has left all for Christ, has sold all to get the treasure, and now nothing but Christ can satisfy him. And so the Holy Ghost, when He wishes to comfort, speaks of Christ (chap. 15:26; 16:14).
IV. The Spirit is an EFFECTUAL Teacher (Joh 14:26). Christ was a Teacher; He was always at work, in public and private. (John Milne.)
The Comforter
I. THE OFFICE OF THE SPIRIT. This term signifies to call to ones self. A person is in distress on account of ignorance, and he calls to him a learned person; a person ignorant in the law, who wants to appear in a court of justice, calls a person learned in the law; a person who is in distress on account of any disease calls a physician.. So the Holy Spirit. In the season of distress He comes to us at our call. The Holy Spirit performs this office
1. By the attestation of pardon.
2. By the production of a new and holy nature.
3. By maturing the Christian character.
4. By the assistance He affords in devotional exercises.
5. By fortifying the mind against the fear of death.
II. THE PERIOD OF HIS CONTINUANCE. His continued residence
1. Constitutes the great distinction and difference between the
Church and the world (Joh 14:17).
2. Gives efficiency and success to the means of grace.
3. Is an assurance of the ultimate triumph of the Church.
III. THE MODE OF HIS ATTAINING THIS OFFICE. We are indebted to Jesus Christ for the gift of the Holy Ghost, because
1. It is the reward of His sufferings.
2. The reward of His intercession, Therefore
3. We have a pledge and an assurance that Christ will pray the
Father. (T. Lessey.)
Comfort by the support of the indwelling Spirit
If you thoroughly exhaust a vessel of the air it contains, the pressure of the air outside will break that vessel into perhaps millions of pieces, because there is not a sufficiency of air within to resist and counteract the weight of the atmosphere from without. A person who is exercised by severe affliction, and who does not experience the Divine comforts and supports in his soul, resembles the exhausted receiver above described; and it is no wonder if he yields, and is broken to shivers, under the weight of Gods providential hand. But affliction to one who is sustained by the inward presence of the Holy Ghost resembles the aerial pressure on the outer surface of an unexhausted vessel. There is that within which supports it and preserves it from being destroyed by the incumbent pressure from without. (T. H.Leary, D. C. L.)
The two paracletes
Their mutual and distinctive relation to the work of redemption, to the life of believers, and to the service of the Church.
I. WHAT DOES THE WORD PARACLETE MEAN? Nearly all the ancient interpreters render it comforter or consoler. This accords with one use of it and its related words in both the Old Testament and the New. It does not cover the whole ground, since the Holy Ghost not only comforts, but does a great deal more than that. In some cases the word is equivalent to master, teacher, interpreter. In other cases it means a pleader or advocate–one engaged to take up a cause and to carry it through. Hence the word comes to mean–one by whose grace and love the entire case and cause of men are undertaken: who will soothe, comfort, advocate, plead, teach, interpret–yea, who will stand by us and render any needed aid whatever! For thisreason the word advocate is, like the word comforter, too restricted. We want a word of wider significance than either. The word helper is the best that we can find.
1. A helper–a large and beautiful word, which, in the fulness of its meaning as here used, nought but the experience of Gods love can unfold to us.
2. A Divine Helper. And we have two Divine Helpers, both working together to make the help complete. But who are they who have causes in hand that need such help? Manifold and complex is our need. We want help in every form. As sinners, we want such help as One can give who has a right to say, Thy sins are forgiven thee. As penitents, we want One who can grant us access to the Father. As learners, we want One who can take of the things of God and show them to us. As suppliants, we want One who can receive and answer our requests. As believers, we want One who can lead, sustain, and inspire. As confessors of Christ and ambassadors for Him, we need One who can convict men of sin, and who can speed our words directly to their hearts. Strong, constant, varied help do we want.
II. Then let us look at our TWO HELPERS AND SEE HOW THEY COMPLETE EACH OTHERS WORK.
1. One Helper is in heaven, is a link joining on heaven to earth; the other Helper is on earth, as a link uniting earth to heaven. Hence one Helper remains for us above; the other remains in us below.
2. The help of the Son is by the appointment of the Father; the help of the Spirit is through the ministration of the Son.
3. By the help of the one Helper we have a great sacrifice for sin; by the work of the other Helper men are convicted of sin.
4. Hence another and not less striking correspondence appears. The Lord Jesus Christ presents Himself to us as the object of faith; the Holy Ghost, working within us, enters into the region of an inward experience, and enables us by the power of a spiritual intuition to verify what we believe.
5. Further: In every detail of Christian truth and life these two Divine Helpers supplement and complete each others work. Christ reveals the Father to us; the Holy Ghost creates the spirit of adoption in us, so that we cry, Abba, Father. Christ gives us, when we believe, the right of being sons of God; the Spirit bears witness with our spirit that such we are. Christ is in Himself the truth; the Holy Ghost gives us the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him. Christ is the object in whom we rejoice, but the joy itself is imparted by the Holy Ghost.
6. One Helper intercedes with the Father; the other Helper intercedes in the children. In one case the scriptural expressions are, We have an Advocate with the Father; He ever liveth to make intercession for us. In the other case, The Spirit itself maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered.
7. But we must not omit to give distinctness to the thought of the advocacy of our two Helpers. The Lord Jesus Christ is the Advocate, Pleader, and Defender of our cause above; the Holy Ghost is the Advocate, Pleader, and Defender of our cause below. Christ above, that sin may not bar us from the throne; the Spirit below, that the world may not put us to shame.
8. One Helper is graciously preparing a place for us; the other Helper is engaged in preparing us for the place.
III. In view of the combined work of these two Divine Helpers, we can see THE COMPLETENESS OF REDEMPTIONS PLAN. Had our Redeemer wrought alone, His work had been unappreciated by man; but let another Helper come, creating men anew, convicting, regenerating, enlightening, educating, and training, then we see the Divine completeness of the Redeemers mighty work, and learn how surely the Redeemer will see of the travail of His soul and be satisfied. On recognizing and laying hold of both these Helpers will depend our completeness as Christians. Our own piety and power in Christ are a prime condition of power for Christ. The degree to which the Spirit of God works by us surely depends on the measure in which He works in us. So also the efficiency of Church life depends on realizing and utilizing this double help. Not merely has soundness in faith to be guarded, but vigour of life has to be carefully watched. On this double help depends the efficiency of private members. It is also, and only, in the full use of this double help that the Christian ambassador is completely equipped. While we hold up Christ as the Light of the world, let us also equally extol the Holy Ghost as the Power of the Church. (C. Clemance, D. D.)
Even the Spirit of Truth
The Spirit of truth
I. THE NEED OF THE SPIRIT OF TRUTH. It was by a lie that evil gained entrance into the world. Satan is both a liar and a murderer Evil first introduced by means of a lie has been continually promulgated through the same instrumentality. Alas! the dominion of falsehood has been almost universally established!–false notions of God, of ourselves, of happiness; false estimates of good and evil; false dealings in the intercourse of life. Who is not conscious of these and other forms of it. It is amongst the most melancholy proofs of our fallen estate, that often, with children, the earliest exercise of the gift of speech is an endeavour at deceiving their parents. And as we grow up, it cannot be denied, that a rigid and unvarying adherence to truth is the most difficult of our duties. Hence the suspicion and mistrust between man and man. We admit, indeed, that a liar is held in general abhorrence. Men have naturally an admiration of courage in whatever way displayed; and therefore they despise a liar as they do the poltroon. And over and above the cowardice which is manifested by a lie, there is the injury which is done to society. Therefore, it may be little more than a consciousness that its own permanence is identified with adherence to truth, which induces society to be so vehement in its rebuke of a lie. But even if the contempt in which a liar is held might be referred to the very highest principles, whatever indignation at falsehood is excited, it exists in a degree which proves this indignation but little efficacious in destroying its empire. There is not the land where false principles are not wielding an influence which should belong only to true. There is not a family within whose circle there is no admiration for false theories in regard of duty and interest. There is not a heart so thoroughly hallowed into a sanctuary for truth that it is always closed against the intrusion of false opinions and false expectations. The whole creation groaneth for the establishment of truth.
II. HOW IN HIS RESIDENCE WITH THE CHURCH THE HOLY GHOST HAS EARNED THIS TITLE.
1. It is curious and interesting to observe how truth of every kind has advanced hand in hand with religion. Not, indeed, that it was the office of the Holy Ghost to instruct the world in natural philosophy. He came to unfold redemption, and so to strengthen the human understanding, that it might be able to bear the vast truths of the Mediatorial work. But, nevertheless, it did come to pass–that the understanding, so strengthened, found itself strengthened also to investigate creation. The Christian era has been distinguished by a rapid advance made in every branch of science; by the emancipation of mind from a thousand trammels; by the discovery of truths which seemed to lie beyond the scope of human intelligence. In the dark ages when Christianity was almost buried beneath superstition, ignorance of every kind oppressed the earth; but when better days dawned; science revived and the arts again flourished. And besides this, there is the same strict alliance between all kinds of truth as between all kinds of falsehood. And it ought not therefore to excite surprise that science and Christianity should have marched side by side. The rushing mighty wind, which swept superstition before it, swept also much of the cloud which had rested on natural things. In clearing the moral firmament, that the Sun of Righteousness might be discovered, it took the mist from the material heavens.
2. But, at the same time, the great business on which the Holy Ghost came was the instructing the world in the mysteries of redemption
(1) The Holy Ghost was the Spirit of truth to the apostles. We do not know that it is more amazing to hear so soon as the Spirit had descended, the twelve speaking fluently all the languages of the earth, than the preacher expounding to the multitude the blessed gospel of Christ. He made good this character by enabling them to preach the truth: and also by enabling them to write the truth. We know too well the treachery of the memory, and might reasonably say, that where the writing had been so long deferred, the narrative would be imperfect. But this is our security–the fact that it was the Spirit of Truth which guided the evangelists.
(2) If the Spirit were thus the Spirit of Truth in regard of apostles, is He not still such in regard of every real Christian? There is naturally gross darkness on the mind, and the most gifted of our race is unable to discern things so long as he is left to his unassisted powers. Mental as well as moral power has been put out of joint through apostacy; the affections strongly biassed towards evil exert a disastrous power over the will, and the will does the same with the understanding. And then the understanding will often reject the clearest evidence and fail to comprehend the simplest truth. It is the office of this Divine person to rectify the disorder of the moral and mental constitution, and thus to communicate that sort of inner light in which alone can be discerned the great truths of religion. And when a man has once submitted himself to the teaching of the Holy Ghost, the Spirit of Truth, guides him into truth, and leads him from one stage to another of knowledge, showing him, successively, the mysteries of redemption, and never allowing him to open the Bible without finding fresh matter for thought and for thankfulness. There remains much, very much, for this Spirit to teach. But observe, our Lord says–He shall abide with you forever. But we are now only in the infancy of being. No marvel then if we master only the rudiments of truth. And if this Spirit is to abide with us forever, why may we not expect the completion of what is thus commenced? He has all Eternity to teach in. (H. Melvill, B. D.)
The Spirit of Truth
The Holy Ghost is the living, personal, Divine unity of complete revelation, and, as such, the Spirit of Truth. He is the Spirit of Truth inasmuch as He makes objective truth subjective in believers, in order to a knowledge of the truth. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
The function of the Spirit of Truth in relation to revealed truth
When a telescope is directed to some distant landscape, it enables us to see what we could not otherwise have seen; but it does not enable us to see anything which has not a real existence in the prospect before us. The natural eye saw nothing but blue land stretching along the distant horizon. By the aid of the glass, there bursts upon it a charming variety of fields, and woods, and spires, and villages. And so of the Spirit. He does not add a single truth or character to the book of Revelation. He enables the spiritual man to see what the natural man cannot see; but the spectacle which he lays open is uniform and immutable. It is the Word of God which is ever the same; and he whom the Spirit of Truth has enabled to look to the Bible with a clear and affecting discernment, sees no phantom passing before him; but amid all the visionary extravagance with which he is charged, can for every article of his faith, and every duty of his practice, makes his triumphal appeal to the law and to the testimony. (T. Chalmers, D. D.)
Willingness to know the truth a condition of the reception of the truth
A celebrated French beauty was smitten with smallpox, and as she became convalescent, her friends, fearing the consequences, would not tell her of her disfigurement. But one day, not getting an answer to her questions, she called for a mirror, and when she saw the calamitous fact that her beauty was gone, in a fit of passion, smashed the glass. It had told her the truth about herself. So the Spirit of Truth tells us about ourselves; and some people, rather than believe His witness, deny His existence. Whom the world cannot receive.
The world–that is, worldly men, minds full of worldliness–cannot receive, cannot see or know the Spirit, because He is wholly heavenly. As a mirror which is unclean cannot reflect clearly the image which is before it, so the heart that is impure, and which clings to the things of earth, cannot see with the eye of faith the Spirit of Truth, and so cannot receive Him. Worldliness receives Him not
(1) Because it does not and cannot see Him intellectually, which is the only mode by which it is accustomed to perceive anything that is not corporeal.
(2) Because it does not see Him corporeally; for such a temper of mind receives only what it sees: sight and the other senses are the instruments of reception, not faith; and hence, since He cannot be apprehended by the senses, such men did not receive Him, and cannot love Him, for the knowledge which is here spoken of includes love. (W. Denton, M. A.)
But ye know Him
The saint and the Spirit
The Holy Spirit, although the most active, potent, and real worker in the world, is not discerned by the mass of mankind, who are affected only by what they see, or hear, or feel. The vital distinction between the man of God and the man of the world is this: the man of God knows the Holy Spirit, for He is with him and dwelleth in him; but the man of the world knows not the Holy Ghost.
I. THE HOLY SPIRIT IS KNOWN TO BELIEVERS THROUGH HIS OPERATIONS IN THEM AND UPON THEM.
1. We have seen the operations of the Holy Spirit in the Church at large
(1) It was the Holy Spirit who at the very first formed the Church; who called out the chosen ones, quickened them, made them living stones fit to be builded together for a habitation of God through the Spirit; who binds these living stones together, for all Christian unity comes from Him as the Spirit of peace, the Holy Dove proceeding from the Father.
(2) The indwelling of the Holy Spirit in the Church is as manifest to many of us as any other great fact can possibly be. Even when we have doubted whether we ourselves possessed the Spirit, we have been charmed to see his work in others. We have seen conversions which nothing but Omnipotence could have wrought; we have seen graces exemplified which unaided human nature could not have produced.
2. The works of the Holy Spirit within a regenerate man find an illustration in the work of the Holy Spirit upon the person of our Lord, our Covenant Head and Representative.
(1) Christ was not born at Bethlehem without the Spirit of God, neither is He born in our hearts.
(2) Although Christ was baptized by man with water, He was also baptized with the Holy Ghost; and it is only in the power of His Divine anointing that we can have power to minister in the Lords house.
(3) Then the power by which Christ wrought miracles, and preached, is ascribed to the Holy Ghost. The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me, etc. Did the Master work in the power of the Spirit of God, and shall not the servants do so?
(4) The resurrection of Christ is ascribed to the Holy Ghost. You are promised that the same power which raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies.
3. If we know the Spirit of God at all, we shall know Him as having convinced us of sin. No one ever came to Christ until he felt his need of Him.
4. If you know the Holy Spirit, you will also know Him as the great revealer of Christ.
5. Since that, have we not often known the Spirit as our helper in prayer?
6. Then, when we rose from our knees, we opened the Scriptures, the Spirit of Truth acted as interpreter. He wrote the book, and therefore He understands it meaning.
7. You know not the Spirit unless you have often recognized Him as the great calmer and quieter of His peoples minds when under distractions.
8. More especially is the Spirit known to believers as their sanctifier.
II. THEY KNOW HIM BY HIS PERSONAL INDWELLING IN THEIR SOULS. The Holy Spirit gives us His operations and His influences for which we should be very grateful, but the greatest gift is Himself, which dwelleth with you and shall be in you. This is
1. Wondrously condescending;
2. Singularly effective. There is no way of doing work well, except doing it yourself; and when the Master comes and gives personal attendance, it is sure to be done.
3. Delightfully encouraging, If God actually dwells in me, then what may I not expect?
4. Potently sanctifying. If God dwell in us, let us not defile these bodies. When Ignatius stood before the judges, they said, You are called the God bearer, Theophorus; what mean you by this? He said, God dwells in me. When the persecutor looked at him and said he blasphemed, he replied that the Holy Spirit dwelt in him. Ah! but Ignatius proved it. If you and I dare to say God dwells in us, we must prove it too; perhaps not by a cruel death, but by what is far more difficult–a holy life.
III. WE SHALL KNOW HIM BETTER SOON. We shall be more instructed; and the instructed disciple knows the Master better than he who is in the A B C class. We shall be more fully sanctified, and the more pure we become, the more clearly shall we see the great Purifier. I do not know what we may be even here. We become warped and crippled by our small conceptions of the possible in grace. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
He dwelleth with you, and shall be in you
The office of the Spirit
I. THE ASSURANCE OF A NEARER RELATION TO THE DIVINE BEING CONVEYED BY THIS PROMISE. The indwelling of the Spirit is declared to be a mere metaphor, as when we say of a philosopher, there is in him the soul of science; or of a poet, that he has the spirit of song. The disciples at this time needed comfort, they were about to lose the support of their Masters personal presence. What mockery to have been told that they should be so inspirited with truth as to compensate them abundantly for all their loss. A literal indwelling, then, being contended for, notice some of the included blessings.
1. It is a standing pledge of the Divine presence and protection. The Divine Spirit dwelling in us is God Himself coming back to that temple. He had dwelt in it once before; but this once living temple lost its purity, and in that same hour lost the presence of God. The rebuilding of this temple, the preparatory step for bringing back God to His forsaken sanctuary, was the awful mystery of the Incarnation. By this one act the human nature became an honoured and noble thing. Through the power of the Spirit it had enshrined Godhead. The indwelling of the Spirit is an abiding pledge of restored and continuing confidence between God and man.
2. It is the vital principle of union betwixt Christ and His people. Our being made one in Christ is one of the great junction facts of the Gospel system. It connects the sinner with his hope, the elect with the covenant, and both originates and effects that vital relation to God which brings the faithful within the reach of the mediatorial designs and purposes. The Spirit initiates that union, for by one Spirit we are all baptized into one body. He assures us of the union remaining unbroken, Thereby we know that Christ abideth in us by the Spirit which He hath given us (Rom 8:11). He that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit.
II. THE PERMANENT INFLUENCE PROMISED AS IT BEARS UPON OUR HAPPINESS AND ADVANCEMENT IN THE CHRISTIAN LIFE.
1. It assures to us a constant supply of enlightening and directing influences. He will guide you into all truth. He enlarges the range of our spiritual knowledge, and reveals, as if by a new spiritual sense, the great mystery of godliness.
2. It influences the moral affections also. This imparted life makes the heart to burn, while it opens the understanding.
3. It gives to all our services a filial and loving character–For ye have not received the spirit of bondage, etc. There is a service which is not happy. It may be sincere, and earnest, and costly, and self-denying; but it is the service not of a son, but of a bondsman. The Spirit in us changes constraint into cheerfulness and duty into happiness, and the restless activities of a self-devised worship into a calm repose and a commanded and accepted sacrifice. (D. Moore, M. A.)
The Spirit with you and in you
I. A MAN MAY HAVE THE DIVINE SPIRIT WITH HIM, BUT NOT IN HIM. The Divine Spirit was with the disciples in the person of Christ. Every man has the Spirit with him.
1. In the operations of nature.
2. In the revelations of the Bible.
3. In the events of history.
4. In the lives of all good men.
II. IT IS A GREAT PRIVILEGE FOR A MAN TO HAVE THE SPIRIT OF GOD WITH HIM. We have one who is ready to
1. Guide;
2. Protect;
3. Strengthen;
4. Perfect us.
III. IT IS A GREATER PRIVILEGE FOR A MAN TO HAVE THE DIVINE SPIRIT IN HIM. Christ had unfolded to His disciples an infinite system of truth, but it lay cold and dead in their memories. He deposited precious seed in the soil; but the soil lacked the warmth and sunshine that the Spirit of God alone could give. Compare the difference between the disciples before and after Pentecost. When the Spirit of God is in you you have spiritual
1. Life.
2. Satisfaction.
3. Power. (D. Thomas, D. D.)
The indwelling of the Spirit
God is said to dwell in heaven; among the children of men; in Zion; among His people; in believers. The Spirit is said to dwell in His Church which is thus a temple of God, and in believers individually, who are severally His temple. It follows, then, that where the Spirit dwells His presence is indicated by certain specific effects.
I. KNOWLEDGE. This is one of the chief ends for which He was promised. This knowledge includes correct intellectual convictions and spiritual discernment. To this are due orthodoxy, love of truth and adherence to it under all circumstances. To this source, also, we are indebted for the unity as well as the preservation of the faith. This is a ground of conviction beyond the reach of scepticism, and unassailable by infidelity.
II. HOLINESS in all its forms.
1. Faith, confidence in God, in His word, promises, favours, etc.
2. Love
(1) To God.
(2) To Christ.
(3) To the brotherhood.
(4) To all men.
3. Temperance.
4. Meekness.
5. Long suffering.
III. HOPE, JOY, AND PEACE. The consolations of the Spirit which sustain the soul under all sorrow; whether from conviction of sin or from affliction.
IV. ACTIVITY IN RESISTING SIN AND IN DOING GOOD. He is the source not only of inward spiritual life, but of outward acts of devotion and obedience to God.
V. GUIDANCE.
1. By the Word.
2. By inward operation on the mind, guiding its thoughts, shaping its conclusions and exciting right feelings; not by impulse or any magic methods.
Duties flowing from this doctrine
1. To cherish the conviction that we in a special sense belong to
God.
2. To reverence and obey the admonitions of the indwelling Spirit.
3. To preserve our soul and body pure as the temple of the Holy Ghost.
4. A grateful sense of this unspeakable blessing and dignity. (C. Hodge, D. D.)
God in us
I. ALL THE CONDITIONS OF THE DIVINE LIFE IN MAN BASE THEMSELVES ULTIMATELY ON THE NECESSARY AND ETERNAL RELATIONS OF THE EVERBLESSED GODHEAD, OF THE TRINITY IN UNITY. The gradualness of Gods revelation of Himself enables us to trace out something of this mystery.
1. For many generations the revelation of the everlasting Father covered the canvas, and that form of awful majesty was shrouded everywhere in clouds and darkness. The utterance was, I am the Almighty God; walk before Me, and be thou perfect.
2. To this succeeded the revelation of the co-eternal Son. At first, wrapped, up in the types and figures of the old law: then struggling like the sun through the mists of the morning, as by the chant of Psalms, and the voice of prophecy, the ever-brightening form was declared to the waiting soul of humanity; until the fulness of the time was come, and the eternal Son stood incarnate upon the earth. Humanity had now reached altogether a new stags; God was manifest in the flesh; yet still God was external to man. The brightness of the uncreated glory shone before his eyes, but his eyes were not quickened to receive it.
3. One mighty further step was yet to be reached, and it is with the promise of this that the Lord here upholds their hearts. The Paraclete shall be in you. The external revelation was to be replaced by the internal. Accordingly, when the coming of the Holy Ghost was perfectly accomplished, all additions to the external revelation ceased. Miracles were but visible attestations of the outward kingdom passing into the inward, and one by one they expired as the inward kingdom was established. Even the external revelation of the heavenly mysteries soon ceased. The canon was closed.
II. FROM THIS FOLLOWS THE PECULIAR CHARACTER OF OUR PROBATION. For though the Spirit of God works as a most free agent, quickening whom He will; yet does He work on humanity according to the law under which God has created it; not destroying its free agency, but, in the mystery of mans freedom, working with his spirit, and not by external force, overpowering its proper action. The energy of the Spirits working is enlarged or restrained as man yields himself to it, or resists it. In the first preaching of the gospel this great distinction of the new dispensation was emphatically declared. Repent, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, that the times of refreshing may come, from the presence of the Lord, and He shall send Jesus. This is
1. A promise to the whole Church. The stirring of the indwelling power was openly manifested, and through all times since the same law may be traced as pervading the Churchs history. It does not set before us one equally prolific age, but times of utter coldness and weariness alternating with blessed seasons of refreshing. Ease, success, quietness, has often bred a deadly lethargy in the Church, and the Spirit seems to have left her; but when danger, or persecution, has brought her back to repentance, at once the Spirit stirred within her, and the times of refreshing were restored. This has been, all along its history, the distinctive criterion of the Church. No dead empire has ever lived again; no exhausted school of philosophy has ever revived; no sect has ever recovered again its early strength after falling into decrepitude. The Church of Christ alone has thus renewed her strength, and mounted up from her decay with wings as eagles, because in her only is this hidden presence of God the Holy Ghost, and therefore for her only these times of refreshing are possible.
2. The law of the life of separate souls. With what energy does it awake when the heart turns really to God. Who has not known hearts, which seemed dead, the mere slaves of selfishness, burnt out,–like exhausted volcanoes buried in their ashy scoriae,–which have suddenly revived, under the breathing of the Spirit, and put forth again, like the earth in the blessed spring-time, the manifested glories of an irrepressible life?
III. FROM THIS GREAT MYSTERY THERE FOLLOW SOME PRACTICAL CONSEQUENCES.
1. As this is the characteristic of the dispensation of the Spirit, how do they lose the glory and the blessedness of life who do not know it in its fulness? What earthly joy can be compared with these Divine refreshings? How different a life is this from the cold, doubting, questioning, colourless life which the greater number of those who call themselves Christians are leading. What know they, alas! in life or in death, of this word of promise, He shall be in you?
2. This indwelling of God must, with all its unspeakable blessedness, be accompanied by correlative perils. So the word of God distinctly teaches us when it speaks of sin against the Holy Ghost as marked with such a peculiar malignity of charity, and leading to so terrible and hopeless an end.
(1) For other sins are committed against God as external to the soul, these are committed against Him within us.
(2) But beyond this. He who did not believe in the Son of Man, great as was his guilt, might under the power of the Holy Ghost be won to penitence; but he who blasphemes that Holy Spirit, on whose presence within us depends the faculty of seeing, destroys in his soul the very power of vision itself. He can never see the truth; he can never be won to repentance, and so he hath never forgiveness, neither in this life, nor in that which is to come.
(3) Again, the progress of this deadly sin is from its peculiar character preeminently insidious. Every external act of wickedness has of necessity about it some note of warning. But the separate actings of these sins against the Holy Spirit are so inward and secret, that men may pass through the whole series without any external sign awakening their alarm.
(4) The end of such a course, and the secret history of that spiritual decay, may sometimes be read in those terrible cases of what seem to be the sudden falls into gross iniquity of those who have long stood upright. The evil has, we may be sure, been long festering within. There may, perhaps, be no very marked outward change in the conduct, It is but that they are colder than they were in all the religious life: that is, God the Holy Ghost has left them. Then some sudden gust of temptation falls suddenly upon them, and their utter failure under it reveals to light and day the fearful secret. Conclusion: With such capacities of ruin involved in the very blessedness of our regenerate life, surely the lesson of lessons is for us the need of perpetual watchfulness: of guarding jealously that secret indwelling of God within us which is our glory, but which we can make our destruction, (Bp. S. Wilberforce.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 16. I will pray the Father] After having made an atonement for the sin of the world, I will become the Mediator between God and man; and through my mediation and intercession shall all the blessings of grace and glory be acquired.
Another Comforter] The word signifies not only a comforter, but also an advocate, a defender of a cause, a counsellor, patron, mediator. Christ is thus termed, 1Jo 2:1, where the common translation renders the word advocate. Christ is thus called, because he is represented as transacting the concerns of our souls with God; and for this cause, he tells us, he goes unto the Father, Joh 14:12. The Holy Spirit is thus called, because he transacts the cause of God and Christ with us, explains to us the nature and importance of the great atonement, shows the necessity of it, counsels us to receive it, instructs us how to lay hold on it, vindicates our claim to it, and makes intercessions in us with unutterable groanings. As Christ acted with his disciples while he sojourned with them, so the Holy Ghost acts with those who believe in his name.
For ever] As the death and atonement of Christ will be necessary to man till the conclusion of the world, so the office of the Holy Spirit must be continued among men till the end of time: therefore says Christ, he shall continue with you for ever, teaching, comforting, advising, defending, and interceding for you and for all my followers to the end of time.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
This verse containeth a new argument by which our Saviour relieveth his disciples under their affliction for the want of his bodily presence; that is, the mission of the Holy Spirit,
another Comforter, as our translation reads it. For this he saith that he
will pray the Father; not that himself had no concern in the mission of the blessed Spirit; for himself telleth us, Joh 16:7, that he would send him; only for the attestation,
1. Of his human nature;
2. Of himself, as our Mediator; and:
3. Of his Fathers concern, as well as his own, in sending the Holy Spirit; he here saith, I will pray the Father, and he shall send you another Comforter.
That term
another, signifieth the personal distinction of the Third from the First and Second Person in the blessed Trinity. And the name here given to the blessed Spirit, , (which we too narrowly translate comforter), is a term exceedingly proper to signify all the operations of the blessed Spirit in and upon the souls of his people. The same word, 1Jo 2:1, where it is applied to Christ, (as here it is to the Spirit), is there much better translated Advocate; and it is most probable that our translators here translate it
Comforter, because he is here promised to the disciples troubled, as fitted to their present distress. The verb from whence the word derives, signifies not to comfort only, but to exhort, and to be an advocate for another. Now it belongs to the office of an advocate to suggest to his client what may be for his advantage; which is also the office of the blessed Spirit: if he seeth his client in an error, to reprove and to convince him; which is also the work of the Spirit, Joh 16:8; if he seeth him weak and discouraged, to uphold, strengthen, and encourage him; this is also the Spirits work, Eph 3:16; if he seeth him running into an error, to restrain him; if he findeth him dull and heavy, to quicken him; if he seeth him ready to be run down, to defend him; if he hath any thing to do in the court, to prepare and dram it up for him, and, as occasion serveth, to speak for him. All these things (as might be largely showed) fall within the office of an advocate, and under the comprehensive term here used. And (saith our Saviour) he shall
abide with you for ever: I shall be with you but for a while, but he shall abide with you to eternity (as some observe this word is constantly used by this evangelist). So that the promise of the Spirit is not to be restrained only to the apostles and their successors in the ministry, or to be understood only of those extraordinary gifts bestowed on the apostles and first ministers of the gospel; but to be extended further, both with reference to persons and influences: and without doubt the influences of the Spirit, both as to gifts and graces, both upon ministers and more private Christians, are much more plentiful since the sending of the Holy Ghost, after Christs ascension, in the days of Pentecost, than ever they were before: not as to particular persons; a David, a Solomon, or some particular persons, might have greater measures than any or the most have since had; but as to the generality of ministers and Christians. Doubtless, since the pouring out of the Spirit in the days of Pentecost, there have been greater measures of the gifts and graces of the Holy Spirit given out, and will be to the end of the world, than ever was in any age before Christs ascension; which is no more than what was prophesied, Isa 44:3; Joe 2:28, applied to the days of Pentecost, Act 2:17, but not to be limited to that time or age, either for gifts or gracious habits: for as the extraordinary gifts and powers held in some degree after the apostles age, (if we may give any credit to ecclesiastical history), so both in those ages, and ever since, as to the generality both of ministers and Christians, (that is, such as are mentioned Joh 14:15, that love Christ, and keep his commandments), there have been fuller measures of gifts, of more constant, standing use for the church, such as those of knowledge and utterance, &c., and also of inward graces, than ever before was.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
And I will pray the Father,…., Here Christ speaks as Mediator, and promises his disciples, that he would intercede for them with the Father; which is designed as an encouragement to them to ask for what they want, in his name, and to comfort their hearts, which were troubled at the news of his departure from them;
and he shall give you another Comforter. This is no inconsiderable proof of a trinity of persons in the Godhead; here is the Father prayed unto, the Son in human nature praying, and the Holy Ghost the Comforter prayed for; who is the gift of the Father, through the prevalent mediation of the Son, and is another “Comforter”; distinct from the Messiah, to whom reference is here had! One of the names of the Messiah, with the Jews, is u, “a Comforter”; such an one Jesus had been to his disciples; and now he was about to leave them, and for their support under their sorrows, he promises to use his interest with his Father, that he would give them another Comforter, meaning the Spirit, who performs this his work and office, by taking of the things of Christ, and showing them to his people; by shedding abroad the love of the Father, and of the Son, into their hearts; by opening and applying the precious promises of the Gospel to them; by being a spirit of adoption in them; and by abiding with them as the seal, earnest, and pledge of their future glory; and with this view Christ promises to pray for him,
that he may abide with you for ever: not a few years only, as I have done, but as long as you live; and with all those that shall succeed you in the work of the ministry, and with the church, and all true believers unto the end of the world: this is a proof of the saints’ final perseverance. When we consider these words, in connection with the preceding exhortation, to keep the commands of Christ, and as an encouragement so to do, it brings to mind a saying of R. Eliezer ben Jacob w;
“he that does one commandment gets for himself ,
, the very word here used, “one advocate”, or “comforter”; and he that transgresses one command, gets for himself one accuser.”
But though the word signifies both an advocate and a comforter, the latter seems to be the meaning of it here, as being more suited to the disconsolate condition of the disciples.
u T. Hieros. Beracot, fol. 5. 1. T. Bab. Sanhedrin, fol. 98. 2. Echa Rabbati, fol. 50. 2. w Pirke Abot, c. 4. sect. 11.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
And I will pray the Father ( ). for prayer, not question (the old use), also in 16:23 (prayer to Jesus in same sense as ), 26 (by Jesus as here); 17:9 (by Jesus), “make request of.”
Another Comforter ( ). Another of like kind (, not ), besides Jesus who becomes our Paraclete, Helper, Advocate, with the Father (1Jo 2:1, Cf. Ro 8:26f.). This old word (Demosthenes), from , was used for legal assistant, pleader, advocate, one who pleads another’s cause (Josephus, Philo, in illiterate papyrus), in N.T. only in John’s writings, though the idea of it is in Ro 8:26-34. Cf. Deissmann, Light, etc., p. 336. So the Christian has Christ as his Paraclete with the Father, the Holy Spirit as the Father’s Paraclete with us (John 14:16; John 14:26; John 15:26; John 16:7; 1John 2:1).
For ever ( ). This the purpose () in view and thus Jesus is to be with his people here forever (Mt 28:20). See 4:14 for the idiom.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
I will pray [] . See on 11 22.
Comforter [] . Only in John’s Gospel and First Epistle (xiv. 16, 26; 1Pe 14:26; 1Pe 16:7; 1 Eph 2:13. From para, to the side of, and kalew, to summon. Hence, originally, one who is called to another’s side to aid him, as an advocate in a court of justice. The later, Hellenistic use of parakalein and paraklhsiv, to denote the act of consoling and consolation, gave rise to the rendering Comforter, which is given in every instance in the Gospel, but is changed to advocate in 1Jo 2:1, agreeably to its uniform signification in classical Greek. The argument in favor of this rendering throughout is conclusive. It is urged that the rendering Comforter is justified by the fact that, in its original sense, it means more than a mere consoler, being derived from the Latin confortare, to strengthen, and that the Comforter is therefore one who strengthens the cause and the courage of his client at the bar : but, as Bishop Lightfoot observes, the history of this interpretation shows that it is not reached by this process, but grew out of a grammatical error, and that therefore this account can only be accepted as an apology after the fact, and not as an explanation of the fact. The Holy Spirit is, therefore, by the word paraklhtov, of which Paraclete is a transcription, represented as our Advocate or Counsel, “who suggests true reasonings to our minds, and true courses of action for our lives, who convicts our adversary, the world, of wrong, and pleads our cause before God our Father.” It is to be noted that Jesus as well as the Holy Spirit is represented as Paraclete. The Holy Spirit is to be another Paraclete, and this falls in with the statement in the First Epistle, “we have an advocate with God, even Jesus Christ.” Compare Rom 8:26. See on Luk 6:24. Note also that the word another is allon, and not eteron, which means different. The advocate who is to be sent is not different from Christ, but another similar to Himself. See on Mt 6:24. 48 With you [ ] . Notice the three prepositions used in this verse to describe the Spirit’s relation to the believer. With you [] , in fellowship; by you [] , in His personal presence; in you [] , as an indwelling personal energy, at the springs of the life.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
THE PROMISE OF THE SPIRIT, v. 16-26
1) “And I will pray the Father,” (kago eroteso ton patera) “And I will request the Father,” appeal to the Father, my Father in heaven and yours, from whom I came and to whom I am soon returning, Joh 16:17; Joh 16:27-28; Luk 11:13.
2) “And he shall give you another comforter,” (kai allon parakleton dosei humin) “And he will give-you another comforter,” one to strengthen, a paraclete, an helper, one to go along with and beside you, when I have gone to my Father’s residence, He is one who will come into the assembly of you all, and remain there to help you forever, Luk 24:29; Act 1:8; Act 2:4.
3) “That he may abide with you forever.” (hina he meth’ humon eis ton aiona) “In order that he may be with you all forever, – into the age, the heavenly age, when you come to my Father’s house, as my bride, into the ages, Eph 3:21; Joh 16:7; Joh 16:13-14. This is something Jesus could not do forever in His bodily presence. This paraclete (comrade or companion) is also referred to as or translated “advocate,” as a person called to one’s aid or assistance, especially in courts of justice, to represent or defend one, 1Jn 2:1.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
16. And I will pray to the Father. This was given as a remedy for soothing the grief which they might feel on account of Christ’s absence; but at the same time, Christ promises that he will give them strength to keep his commandments; For otherwise the exhortation would have had little effect. He therefore loses no time in informing them that, though he be absent from them in body, yet he will never allow them to remain destitute of assistance; for he will be present with them by his Spirit.
Here he calls the Spirit the gift of the Father, but a gift which he will obtain by his prayers; in another passage he promises that he will give the Spirit. If I depart, says he, I will send, Him to you, (Joh 16:7.) Both statements are true and correct; for in so far as Christ is our Mediator and Intercessor, he obtains from the Father the grace of the Spirit, but in so far as he is God, he bestows that grace from himself. The meaning of this passage therefore is: “I was given to you by the Father to be a Comforter, but only for a time; now, having discharged my office, I will pray to him to give another Comforter, who will not be for a short time, but will remain always with you.”
And he will, give you another Comforter. The word Comforter is here applied both to Christ and to the Spirit, and justly; for it is an office which belongs equally to both of them, to comfort and exhort us, and to guard us by their protection. Christ was the Protector of his disciples, so long as he dwelt in the world: and afterwards he committed them to the protection and guardianship of the Spirit. It may be asked, are we not still under the protection of Christ? The answer is easy. Christ is a continual Protector, but not in a visible way. So long as he dwelt in the world, he openly manifested himself as their Protector; but now he guards us by his Spirit.
He calls the Spirit another Comforter, on account of the difference between the blessings which we obtain from both. The peculiar office of Christ was, to appease the wrath of God by atoning for the sins of the world, to redeem men from death, to procure righteousness and life; and the peculiar office of the Spirit is, to make us partakers not only of Christ himself, but of all his blessings. And yet there would be no impropriety in inferring from this passage a distinction of Persons; for there must be some peculiarity in which the Spirit differs from the Son so as to be another than the Son.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(16) And I will pray the Father.Comp. Note on Joh. 16:26. The pronoun is again emphaticI have given you your part to do. I on My part will pray the Father. The word used for pray is one which implies more of nearness of approach and of familiarity than that which is rendered ask in Joh. 14:14. It is the word which John regularly uses when he speaks of our Lord as praying to the Father, and occurs again in Joh. 16:26; Joh. 17:9; Joh. 17:15; Joh. 17:20. The distinction is important, but it has sometimes, perhaps, been unduly pressed. Both words occur in 1Jn. 5:16. (See Note there.)
And he shall give you another Comforter.The better rendering is probably another Advocate. The word is used of the third person in the Holy Trinity here, and in Joh. 14:26, and in Joh. 15:26 and Joh. 16:7. In each of these instances it is used by our Lord. It is found once again in the New Testament, and is there applied by St. John to our Lord Himself (1Jn. 2:1). In the Gospel the English version uniformly translates it by Comforter. In the Epistle it is rendered by Advocate. But the whole question is of so much interest and importance that it will be convenient to deal with it in a separate Note. (Comp. Excursus G: The Meaning of the word Paraclete.) The word another should be observed as implying that which the Epistle statesthe advocacy of the second Person in the Trinity, as well as that of the third.
That he may abide with you for ever.The thought of the permanent abiding is opposed to the separation which is about to take place between them and the person of our Lord. He would come again to them in the person of the Paraclete, whom He would send to them (Joh. 14:18), and this spiritual presence should remain with them for ever. (Comp. Note on Mat. 28:20.)
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
16. I will pray the Father The prayer of the Son, the ever living intercessor, consists in his wish and will ever going forth, that the work of redemption may be accomplished, by the power of the Father, in all its fulness and glory. And this prayer is a perfect divine sympathy with the wish and will of the Father; so that herein the Father and the Son are one, and the prayer of the Son is sure of fulfilment.
Comforter Rather Advocate. In ancient times there existed the relation of patron and client. The office of patron included the various ideas of protection against arbitrary power, advocacy in law-suits, and consolation in difficulties and trouble. It is this office that the Paraclete, Comforter, or Advocate here mentioned, fulfils.
Abide with you for ever He is not to reascend like me. His mission is to fill the entire space of time until my Second Advent. This is the dispensation of the Spirit.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
“He will give you another paraclete, that he may be with you for ever, even the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive for it neither sees him in such a way as to recognise him, nor does it know him. You know him, for he dwells with you and will be in you.”
So when Jesus goes He will be replaced with another Who will perform the functions for the disciples that He has performed, One Who is sent by the Father. The word ‘another’ means ‘another of the same kind’. And this One will be permanently with them. He will never leave them. For He will be with them for ever. And they will know Him and recognise Him, for He will be with them as a constant companion, and He will indeed be in them. He will be the closest friend and helper anyone could ever have. And He is the Spirit of truth. This idea will be amplified later.
Note that the world cannot receive this Helper. It neither recognises Him nor knows Him. The suggestion of a general activity of the Spirit in world movements is not what Jesus teaches, nor is it the general teaching of Scripture. The Spirit works through His own. Here the world is in contrast to the people of God. The one is outside His kingdom. The other are His kingdom. The Kingly Rule of God is with them and among them, and with and among them alone.
“You know Him, for He dwells with you and will be in you.” ‘Dwells with you’ here refers to Jesus Himself in His Spirit-filled, Spirit revealing life. ‘Dwells in you’ stresses that instead of having an outward knowledge of Him, they will have a deeper inward knowledge through His indwelling Spirit. Thus do they know Him now. So will they know Him in the future.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Joh 14:16-17. He shall give you another Comforter, Or, another advocate. The word , signifies an advocate or a monitor, as well as a comforter; and it is evident that the blessed Spirit maintained each of these characters; yet as the discourse before us is of the consolatory kind, the term comforter seems to have been made use of with great propriety by our translators. Our Lord promises his apostles, that this Comforter shall abide with them, not for a little time, as he had done in his human nature, but for ever; and he calls him The Spirit of truth, to which the world is ever averse; and, blinded with sensuality, will neither discern his operations, nor partake of his joys. “But ye know him, because he is with you, in some measure, already; and he shall be given you much more abundantly hereafter;” alluding particularly to the day of Pentecost; from which time forth the Spirit dwelt in them by a much ampler communication of his gifts and graces.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Joh 14:16-17 . The is in both instances consecutive . On the concession of thoughts, see Joh 14:21 .
] Emphatically introducing, after what He had required of the disciples , what He on His part will do as the Mediator of the divine love. The does not conflict with Joh 16:26-27 , where there is a different relation of time. is in John the standing word in the mouth of Jesus, when He addresses the Father in prayer, Joh 16:26 , Joh 17:9 ; Joh 17:15 ; Joh 17:20 . But there is no difference of meaning from , see 1Jn 5:16 .
] another Advocate (instead of myself), another, who will as counsellor assist you. The word is found in the N. T. only in John, namely, also in Joh 14:26 , Joh 16:7 , 1Jn 2:1 , and the signification given holds good in Dem. 343. 10, Diog. Laert. iv. 50, Dion. Hal. xi. 37, and passages from Philo in Loesner , p. 496 f., both in the proper judicial sense ( Advocate ), and also in general as here (so also Philo, de opif. m . p. 4 E, and Letter of the Church of Vienne in Eusebius, v. 2). With this agrees also the Talmudic . See Buxtorf, Lex. Talm. p. 1843, and generally Wetstein in loc.; Dsterdieck on 1Jn 2:1 , p. 147 ff. Rightly, after Tertullian and Augustine, Melanchthon, Calvin, Beza, Grotius, Wolf, Lampe, and several others, have most of the moderns so interpreted it (see especially Knapp, I. p. 115 ff.). See also Hahn, Theol. d. N. T. I. p. 225. The equally ancient explanation: Comforter (Origen, Chrysostom, Theophylact, Euth. Zigabenus, Jerome, Erasmus, Castalio, Luther, Maldonatus, Jansen, Lightfoot, and several others, including van Hengel, Annott. p. 40 ff.), rests on a confusion with (LXX. Job 16:2 ) in Aquila and Theodotion, Job 16:2 , which, on account of the passive form, is on that ground contrary to usage. [148] Equally incorrect is the rendering Teacher in Theodore of Mopsuestia, Ernesti, Opusc . p. 215, Luthardt, Hofmann, Schriftbew . II. 2, p. 17.
Observe on , that in 1Jn 2:1 Christ Himself might also be designated as , without implying any difference of doctrine (Baur, Schwegler, Hilgenfeld). Nonnus aptly says: .
. . ] in order that He may; not as I now, again be taken from you, but be with you ( i.e . may stand at your side protecting, helping, strengthening you against all hostile powers; comp. Mat 28:20 ) for ever. Comp. 2Jn 1:2 . In the Paraclete, however, Christ Himself is present with His own (Mat 28:20 ); for in the mission of the Spirit, who is the Spirit of Christ (Rom 8:9 ; Gal 4:6 ), the self-communication of the exalted Christ takes place (Rom 8:10 ; Gal 2:20 ), without, however, the Paraclete ceasing to be an , a different although dependent on the Son subject than He; [149] the obscure idea that the Paraclete is “ the Christ transfigured to Spirit ” (Tholuck) is un-Johannean and unbiblical generally. Comp. on 2Co 3:17 . See also, against the mingling together of the idea of the Logos with that of the Spirit, in Reuss; Godet, II. p. 480.
] the Spirit of Truth, i.e . the Holy Spirit, who is Possessor, Bearer, and Administrator of the divine . He is the divine principle of revelation, by whose activity in human hearts the redemptive truth given by God in Christ, i.e . the truth , is transformed into knowledge, made to be vitally appropriated, and brought to powerful moral expression. Nonnus: . Comp. Joh 15:26 , Joh 16:13 . The opposite: , 1Jn 4:6 .
] The unbelieving , as opposed to Christ and His work. These are unsusceptible to the Spirit, because the capacity of inward vision (of experimental perception) of the Spirit is wanting to them, and He is to them something unknown and strange, so that they have thus no subjective point of attachment at all for the reception of the Spirit. Comp. 1Co 2:14 .
, . . .] The presents and (not manebit , as the Vulgate has, and as Ewald also proposes ) are as little to be taken as future as the presents in the first clause of the verse. They denote the characteristic relation of the disciples to the Spirit without reference to any definite time. They are absolute presents: but you know Him, since He has Sis abiding amongst you (not far from you, but in your midst, in the Christian community), and (the discourse now first enters the point of view of definite time) will be in you (in your own hearts). This being the specific character of His relationship to you, how should He be an unknown something to you? Let the gradation be observed: . On the latter, Nonnus: , .
Note, generally, the Trinitarian relation here and Joh 14:26 , and particularly (against B. Crusius and Tholuck) the definitely expressed personality of the Paraclete. See Kstlin, p. 109; Hofmann, I. p. 192 f.; Melanchthon, in loc . But in passages, again, like Joh 1:33 , Joh 20:22 , the presupposition of the personality , whose life and powers are communicated, is by no means excluded.
[148] Certainly it is obvious that the interpreter could not be responsible for this confusion which is opposed to the language; but for this he is responsible, that he should not thrust it upon John, if another use of the word, grammatically correct , is undoubtedly before us. This in answer to Hofmann’s too readily adopted observation in his Schriftbew . II. 2, p. 16. Luther has correctly explained the word itself by advocate , but inconsistently translated it Comforter . The Vulgate has paracletum , the Codd. of It. in some cases the same, in others advocatum . Goth. has parakltu . Were the word not Advocatus , but the active form, it must have been, not , but (Plato, Rep. p. 524 D). Comp. , , and others. The usual designation of counsel in the Greek writers is, moreover, or . On , comp. Hermann, Staatsalterth . 142. 16.
[149] Comp. Wrner, d. Verhltn. d. Geistes zum Sohne , p. 93.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may abide with you forever; (17) Even the spirit of truth: whom the world cannot receive, because it seeth him not, neither knoweth him: but ye know him; for he dwelleth with you, and shall be in you. (18) I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to you. (19) Yet a little while, and the world seeth me no more; but ye see me: because I live, ye shall live also. (20) At that day ye shall know that I am in my Father, and ye in me, and I in you (21) He that hath my commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me: and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, and will manifest myself to him. (22) Judas saith unto him, not Iscariot, Lord, how is it that thou wilt manifest thyself unto us, and not unto the world? (23) Jesus answered and said unto him, If a man love me, he will keep my words: and my Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make our abode with him. (24) He that loveth me not keepeth not my sayings; and the word which ye hear is not mine, but the Father’s which sent me. (25) These things have I spoken unto you, being yet present with you. (26) But the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my name, he shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you. (27) Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you, let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.
We here enter upon the great subject of our Lord’s Sermon, in what Jesus hath been pleased to teach his Church in relation to the person and glory of God the Holy Ghost. And as the whole efficient government and blessings of the Church are in the hands of this Almighty Lord, we never can be too thankful to our dear Lord, for having dwelt so largely as he hath done, in this and the two following Chapters, (which are but a continuation of the same Sermon,) in instructing the Church concerning his person and ministry. The Reader will perceive by what the Lord Jesus hath said of his coming, and the Father’s coming, and the Holy Ghost’s coming, and abiding forever with his people, within the compass of those few verses, (see Joh 14:16-21 ) how needful it must be to have a proper apprehension of God the Holy Ghost, in his person and character. And I hope that he will not complain of my dwelling too particularly on the subject, while I aim to bring before him scriptural testimonies in proof.
That God the Holy Ghost is a person in the Godhead, is a truth to which the whole body of Scripture bears evidence. Indeed it were hardly necessary to go further than to what those words of Jesus afford in confirmation. Christ calls him another Comforter; consequently a distinct person from Jesus. And as he was to be sent by the Father, consequently also a distinct person from the Father, Joh 14:26 . In both Testaments of Scripture, the personality of God the Holy Ghost is fully proved. He was seen in a bodily shape, like a dove, at the baptism of Christ. Luk 3:22 . And there was a visible representation of Him also on the day of Pentecost, when, according to Jesus’s promise of Him, he baptized Christ’s disciples. Act 1:5 compared with Act 2:3 . Many times under both dispensations of Scripture, the Old Testament, and the New, the Lord the Holy Ghost was heard to speak. Compare Isa 6:8-10 with Act 28:25-27 . Probably the voice which Daniel heard on the banks of Ulai might be God the Holy Ghost. Dan 8:16 . But whether in this instance or not, we are expressly told, that it was the Spirit in the Prophets, when they spake of the sufferings of Christ, and of the glory which should follow. 1Pe 1:10-11 And the prophecy came not in old time by the will of man; but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost. 2Pe 1:21 . And we are further told, that when Philip was sent into the desert to preach to the Ethiopian; the Spirit spake to him, and said, Go near and join thyself to this chariot. Act 8:29 . So again the Spirit spake to Peter: behold three men seek thee. Act 10:19 . So again, while the Church at Antioch were waiting upon the Lord, the Holy Ghost said; Separate me Barnabas and Saul, for the work whereunto I have called them. Act 13:2 . Surely these are all personal acts, and which as clearly and fully prove Personal Identity, as the existence and actions of a man demonstrate the reality of the being and nature of a man.
Indeed in addition to those testimonies, by which the certainty of Person is definable; in relation to God the Holy Ghost on this point, it should be further observed, that the qualities ascribed to him, and the affections he is spoken of as exercising; come in proof, to put the matter beyond all doubt. Both actively, and passively, such things are said of him as could never be said but on the certain ground of his being a Person. He is said to create and give life, to uphold, and to destroy. Job 33:4 ; Psa 104:29-30 . He is promised by Jesus, to act as a teacher; as a witness, and to testify of Him. Joh 14:26 ; Rom 9:1 ; Joh 15:26 . And all the affections of joy and grief, of mind, and will, and power; such as being tempted, resisted, having despite done unto him, and being blasphemed; these are all expressly spoken of in reference to the Person of the Holy Ghost, and what higher proofs can be desired in confirmation of his Personality? Eph 4:30 ; Rom 8:27 ; 1Co 12:11 ; Rom 15:13 ; Act 7:51Act 7:51 ; Heb 10:29 ; Mar 3:29 . If the Reader considers the subject in the important point of view in which it ought to be considered, he will think with me, that too great a stress, and especially in an age like the present, cannot be laid upon this momentous article of the faith, of every true believer. The Person of God the Holy Ghost is with many scarcely ever considered; and with many more, denied. And yet nothing is more plain in Scripture, than that the Lord the Spirit is a Person, equal in every point of view, with the Father and the Son, in glory, in dignity, and in every divine perfection: and no less equal in acts of love, and grace, towards the Church. Reader! is it not then our highest concern to give the Lord the honor due unto his name; and daily, hourly to hear what the Spirit who speaketh expressly, saith unto the Churches? 1Ti 4:1 ; Rev 2:29 .
From the clear conviction of the Personality of God the Holy Ghost, our next enquiry must be in relation to his eternal power and Godhead. Having fully shewn, that He is a Being, defined by personal properties; it must follow, that he is God: One with the Father and the Son in the essence of Godhead, over all, God blessed forever. A few of the more prominent Scriptures on this point, will abundantly explain and confirm this doctrine. The several names by which the Holy Ghost is distinguished in Scripture, and which he possesseth in common with the Father and the Son, are very high proofs. He is called the Eternal Spirit; in express reference to himself. Heb 9:14 . And the name of God, is not only his, as One of the Persons in the Godhead, Isa 40:28 ; Joh 4:24 ; but with special regard to the Holy Ghost, he that is called the Holy Ghost in one verse, is in the following declared to be God. Act 5:3-4 , Moses declared that it was Jehovah alone, which led Israel in the wilderness. Deu 32:12 . Isaiah confirms the same truth, and saith, that it was the Holy Spirit which led the people with his glorious arm. Isa 63:10 . The people are said to have tempted the Lord at the waters of Meribah. But the Apostle explains this in reference to the Holy Ghost. Compare Exo 17:2 with Heb 3:7-9 . Jehovah declared concerning prophecy, that if there was a prophet among the people, I, the Lord, (said Jehovah) will make myself known unto him in a vision. But an Apostle explains this, and refers the whole gifts of prophecy into the immediate agency of God the Holy Ghost. Compare Num 12:6 with 2Pe 1:21 . Are not these decisive evidences in proof?
To the names by which the Holy Ghost is declared to be God, must be added, the attributes and perfections which confirm the same: everyone of which is discoverable as being His, in common with the Father and the Son. The Power of Jehovah is manifested in all the departments of nature, providence, grace, and glory. And hence while we are told, that it is God which worketh in his people, both to will and to do of his good pleasure, we are as expressly told , that it is the Spirit which worketh in them, and divideth to every man severally as he will. Compare Phi 2:13 with 1Co 12:111Co 12:11 . The same holds good in the exercise of every other attribute. The Lord’s unceasing and everlasting Presence. Psa 139:1-2 . Wisdom. Jud 1:25 ; Isa 11:2 ; Eph 1:17 . Life-giving, Soul-renewing. Strength, Job 33:14 ; Joh 6:63 ; Eph 2:1 ; Rom 8:11 . In short, there is not one perfection of Jehovah definable of God-head, but what we find in Scripture, ascribed to the Holy Ghost.
And what tends yet further to the confirmation of the doctrine, and must, if properly considered, forever silence every doubt, is this, that the Holy Ghost is spoken of as possessing and exercising those Almighty Perfections in the same acts as the Father and the Son. The Father is said to have life in himself. Joh 5:26 . The Son is said to be the life and light of men. Joh 1:4 . And the Holy Ghost is said to give life. 2Co 3:6 ; Psa 105:29-30 . And, as in time, so in eternity; for while eternal life is said to be the gift of God the Father, Rom 6:23 . eternal life is said to be in the Son, 1Jn 5:11 and another scripture saith, that it is of the Spirit, believers in Christ shall reap life everlasting. Gal 6:8 . And what is the natural and unavoidable result of these and the like testimonies, but what the same holy scripture hath elsewhere declared, that there are Three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost, and these Three are One. 1Jn 5:7 . Hence all the blessed consequences which follow. The Church is baptized into the joint name of the Holy Three in One. Mat 28:19 . The Church is blessed in their joint name. 2Co 13:14 . Redemption equally ascribed. 2Co 5:19 ; Eph 1:7 ; Heb 9:14 ; Eph 5:30 . Justified. Rom 8:33 ; Rom 4:25 ; 1Co 6:11 . Sanctified. Jud 1:1 ; Heb 13:12 ; 2Th 2:13 . And the glory to which the Church will be ultimately brought, the result of the whole. Eph 1:4 ; 2Co 8:23 ; 2Pe 1:1-4 .
From all these undeniable testimonies in confirmation of the person and Godhead of the Holy Ghost, may be added the special and personal office of His, in the everlasting covenant, which tends to endear him to the Church, in equal degrees of affection, in common with the Father and the Son, as well as to entitle Him to an equal degree of adoration, love, obedience, and praise, to all eternity. I need not in this place dwell upon those several covenant offices which peculiarly mark the character of God the Holy Ghost, some of which Jesus hath noted in this Sermon, and will meet us in their proper place. I am now simply endeavouring to establish, from scriptural proofs, the certainty of his person and Godhead. And therefore I shall only for the present observe, that the Personal act of the Holy Ghost, in the great work of the regeneration of the Church, be-comes an equal demonstration of love, and power, with those of the Father’s choice of the Church, in giving the Church to his dear Son: and the Son’s taking into union with himself his Church, redeeming her, when in the time-state of her being, she had fallen into sin, and became justly exposed to divine wrath. Until this act of regeneration is wrought, the child of God is unconscious of his high birth, and character. He knows nothing of the Father’s love, or the Son’s grace, respecting the purposes of Jehovah towards the Church from all eternity. And although that everlasting love of God, like the river spoken of Psa 46:3 , had been always running; and in the Person of Christ had passed through his very heart, in love to his people: yet the whole was hidden from every individual of the Church, until by regeneration, the sinner dead in trespasses and sins had his eyes opened, to behold the fountain opened to the house of David and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, for sin and for uncleanness. Then, and not before, the streams of that river are discovered, which make glad the city of God. Eph 1:4 ; 2Ti 1:9 ; Tit 1:2 ; Jud 1:1 ; Tit 3:4-5 ; Zec 13:1 .
The several sweet and blessed office characters of the Holy Ghost, which Jesus hath noticed in this Chapter, I postpone the consideration of, to the succeeding Chapters. Enough, I hope, hath been advanced in this, and from scriptural authority, to establish the certainty of His Person, Godhead, and the part he hath in the everlasting Covenant. Here for the present I rest, to attend to a few other points contained in this Chapter, which must not be wholly passed by. See Joh 15 ; Joh 16 ; Joh 17 .
I beg the Reader to notice, what the Lord Jesus hath here said, in respect to his coming to them again, after his departure. He promised that he would not leave them comfortless, or as Orphans. And though the Holy Ghost would come, and abide with them forever, yet this should not supersede his visits. Reader! do not lose sight of this, for it is very blessed. See Son 2:10 , etc. Rev 3:20 .
And I beg the Reader to notice no less, what a sweet promise follows, in what Jesus hath said, that while men of the world who on his departure would see him no more, his people his redeemed should have a spiritual apprehension of his everlasting presence. Because I live ye shall live also. Not only in his eternal nature and Godhead doth the Son of God live, but as God-Man-Mediator, and as such is the life of his people: for they, as members of his body, live in him, and live from him, and live upon him, and live to him. All the springs of spiritual life are in Him. All the springs of eternal life are in Him also. Yea, said Jesus, as if to intimate somewhat more; At that day, meaning that day when the Holy Ghost should come upon them and open to their minds the clearer apprehension of these things; ye shall know, that I am in my Father, and ye in me, and I in you. What words are here! Who shall undertake to explain the full extent of the oneness and union which they express? Those unions between the Father and the Son, and between Christ as Christ (that is, God and Man in one Person) and his people, had been from everlasting. But in that day, (saith Christ,) when the Holy Ghost shall more fully open to your view my Person and Glory; ye shall know it. Reader! ponder well the subject. Oh! that the Lord the Holy Ghost may unfold the blessedness of it, more and more, to my heart.
I beg the Reader not to overlook with what tenderness God the Holy Ghost hath mentioned the name of his faithful servant Judas, (or Jude), that he might not for a moment be mistaken for the traitor. Not Iscariot! It is in my esteem a very great mark, of the love and regard of the Holy Ghost to his people.
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
16 And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may abide with you for ever;
Ver. 16. And he shall give you another Comforter ] Or, pleader, deprecator, advocate, . Properly it signifies such a one as we send for, when we are in any danger, to advise and counsel us. The devil is called the accuser, , in full opposition to this name and title given here to the Holy Spirit; whose office it is (as this attribute here imports) to make intercession in our hearts to God for us; and upon our true repentance to make our apology, 1Co 7:11 ; to comfort us, by discovering our graces, 1Co 2:12 , and by pleading our evidences, Rom 8:18 , which they that refuse to read over and rest upon, they help Satan, the accuser, taking his part against themselves, and pleading his cause against the Spirit their Comforter.
That he may abide with you for ever ] The Spirit (saith Dr Sibbs) is Christ’s vicar-general, with whom he leaves us, and by whom he is with us to the end of the world.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
16. ] And then the Spirit shall proceed forth upon you. Not , but “familiaris petendi modus,” Bengel: rather perhaps, a manner of asking implying actual presence and nearness , and here used of the mediatorial office in Christ’s ascended state .
] Olshausen remarks that the interpretations of this word range themselves in two classes , which again by no means exclude one another: those of ‘COMFORTER,’ and those of ‘ADVOCATE.’ (“ Teacher ” (Theodore of Mopsuest. and Ernesti) is out of the question.)
The etymology of the word requires the latter as its strict meaning, and in this strict meaning it satisfies 1Jn 2:1 , : but not so all the places where it is used of the Holy Spirit , nor this verse, where of the Son and Spirit both. And therefore the other meaning, Comforter, including as it does in its fulness (see Rom 8:26 , where both, the and the , are united) the Advocate also, has been both here and in Germany ( Troster , Luther) sanctioned by Christian usage as the most adequate rendering. See Archdeacon Hare’s Mission of the Comforter, vol. ii. note J a. He shews that Wicliff, from whom we have our Comforter, often used “comfort” for the Latin comfortari , as e.g. Luk 22:43 ; Act 9:19 alli [194] . Thus the idea of help and strength is conveyed by it, as well as of consolation.
[194] alli = some cursive mss.
It was this office (comfortari) which Jesus had filled to His disciples while with them: and which the Holy Spirit was to fill even more abundantly (and in a higher sense, because their state would be higher) on the removal of Jesus from them.
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
John
THE COMFORTER GIVEN
Joh 14:16 – Joh 14:17
The ‘and’ at the beginning of these words shows us that they are continuous with and the consequence of what precedes. ‘If ye love Me, ye will keep My commandments, and I will pray . . . and He will send.’ Such is the series; but we must also remember that, as we have seen in previous sermons, the obedience spoken of in the clause before my text is itself treated as a consequence of some preceding steps. The ladder that is fixed upon earth and has its summit in heaven has for its rungs, first and lowest, ‘believe’; second, ‘love’; third, ‘obey.’ And thus the context carries us from the very basis of the Christian life up into its highest reward, even the larger gift to an obedient spirit of that Great Spirit, who is the Comforter and the Teacher.
And there is another very striking link of connection between these words and the preceding. There are, if I may so say, two telephones across the abyss that separates the ascended Christ and us. One of them is contained in His words, ‘If ye ask anything in My name I will do it’; the other is contained in these words, ‘If ye keep My commandments I will ask.’ Love on this side of the great cleft sets love on the other side of it in motion in a twofold fashion. If we ask, He does; if we do, He asks. His action is the answer to our prayers, and His prayers are the answer to our obedient action. So we have here these points-the praying Christ and the giving Father; the abiding Gift; the blind world and the recipient disciples.
I. Note, then, first, the praying Christ and the giving Father.
His intercession is the great hope of the Christian heart. His intercession is the great activity of His present exalted and glorious state. His intercession is no mere verbal utterance, nor the representation to the Father of an alien or a diverse will, but His intercession, mysterious as it is, and unfathomable to our poor, short lines and light plummets, must mean this at all events-His continual activity in presenting before the divine Father, as the motive and condition of His petition being granted, His own great work upon the Cross. The High Priest passes within the veil, bearing in His hand the offering which He has made, and by reason of that offering, and of His powerful presence before the mercy-seat, all the spiritual gifts which redeem and regenerate and sanctify humanity are for ever coming forth. ‘I will pray, and He will give,’ is but one way of saying, ‘Seeing then, that we have a great High Priest over the House of God who is entered within the veil, let us draw near.’
But I would have you notice how, as is always the case in all utterances of Jesus Christ which express the lowest humiliation and completest identification of Himself with humanity, there is ever present some touch of obscured glory, some all but suppressed flash of brightness which will not be wholly concealed. Note two things in this great utterance; one, Christ’s quiet assumption that all through the ages, and today, nineteen centuries after He died, He knows, at the moment of their being done, His servants’ deeds. ‘Keep my commandments, and, knowing that you keep them, I will then and there pray for you.’ He claims in the lowly words an altogether supernatural, abnormal, divine cognisance of all the acts of men down the ages and across the gulf between earth and heaven.
And the other signature of divinity stamped on the prayer of Christ is His certitude of the answer. ‘I will ask and He will give’: He puts, as it were, the Father’s act in pledge to us, and assures us, in a tone of certainty, which is not merely the assurance of faith, but the certitude of One who is ‘one with the Father,’ that His prayer brings ever its answer. ‘Father! I will that they whom Thou hast given Me be with Me.’ How strange! How far beyond the warrantable language of man! And how impossible for a fisherman of Bethsaida to imagine, if he had not heard, that strange blending of submission and of authority which speaks in such words!
Then, remember what I have already said, that, according to the teaching of this verse, taken in connection with its context, that which put in motion Christ’s Intercessory activity, as represented in my text, is the obedience of a Christian man. If you obey He will pray, and the Father will send. So the reward of imperfect obedience is the larger measure given to us of that divine Spirit by whose indwelling obedience becomes possible, and self-surrender a joy and a power. And that is not merely because of the natural operation by which any kind of conduct tends to repeat itself in more complete measure, nor is it merely a case of ‘to him that hath shall be given’; as a man’s arm is strengthened by exercise, and any faculty becomes more assured, and swift, and at the command of its owner, by use. But there is a distinct supernatural impartation to every obedient heart of divine gifts which come straight through Jesus Christ to it. He Himself, in this immediate context, says, ‘If I depart I will send Him unto you,’ and the true conception is that in that Spirit’s gift, which is a reality waiting as its crown and reward upon our poor stained obedience, the whole Godhead is present; the Father the Source, the Son the Channel, the Spirit the Gift.
II. And so, secondly, note what our text tells us of that abiding gift.
And, says Christ, this Strengthener and Advocate is to replace Me and to carry on My work. ‘He will send another Comforter.’ Who was the other but the Master who was speaking? So all that that handful of men had found of sweetness and shelter and assured guidance, and stay for their weakness, and enlightenment for their darkness, and companionship for their solitude, and a breast on which to rest their heads, and love in which to bathe their hearts, all these this divine Spirit will bring to each of us if we will.
And further, our Lord tells us that this strong continuer of His presence will be a permanent Companion. ‘He will abide with you for ever.’ He was comforting the disciples who were trembling at the thought of His departure, and knowing that all the sweetness of these three short years had come to an end; and He says to them, and through them to all the ages to the end of time: ‘Here is the abiding Guest, that nothing but your own sin will ever cast out from your hearts.’
And Christ tells us how this great Spirit will do His work. He is the ‘Spirit of Truth,’ not as if He brought new truth. To suppose that He does so, opens the door to all manner of fanaticism, but the truth, the revelation of which is all summed and finished in the person and work of Jesus Christ, is the weapon by which the divine Spirit works all His conquests, the staff on which He makes us lean and be strong. He is the Spirit by whom the truth passes into our personal possession, by no mere imperfect form of outward teaching which is always confused and insufficient, but by the inward teaching that deals with our hearts and our spirits.
But Christ speaks, too, of the blind world. There is a tone of deep sadness in His words. The thought of the immense multitude of men who were incapacitated to receive this Strengthener steals across and casts a momentary shadow upon even the brightness and greatness of His promise. ‘The world cannot receive because it seeth Him not, neither knoweth Him.’ The ‘world’ is the mass of man, considered as godless and separate from Him, and there is a bit of the world in us all; but there are men who are wholly under its influence and dominion. And these men, says Christ, are perfectly incapable of receiving the teaching of this divine Comforter. Of course there are other operations of that Great Spirit of which we shall have to hear as we go on further in this context, in which His work ‘convicts the world of sin and of righteousness and of judgment.’ But what our Lord is speaking of here is the work of that Spirit who comes in response to His prayer which rises in consequence of our obedience, and who, coming, brings with Him strength and purity and peace and wisdom; and that aspect of His operations a heart that is all full and seething with the world is unfit to receive. It cannot see Him. Embruted natures are altogether incapacitated for high thoughts, for the perception of natural beauty, for the appreciation of art; and worldly men, by the very same law, are incapable of receiving this divine Spirit. A savage stares at the sunshine and sees nothing but a glare. And worldly men-that is to say, men whose tastes, inclinations, desires, hopes, purposes, strivings, are all bound by this visible diurnal round-lack the organ that enables them to see that divine Spirit moving round about them. Whether you have put your eyes out by fleshly lusts, or, as many men in this generation have done, by intellectual self-sufficiency and conceit, if the world, in its grosser or in its most refined forms, is your master, you are stone blind to all the best realities of the universe, and you cannot see the things that are. If you look out upon the history of the Church, or upon the present condition of Christendom, and say, ‘I see no divine Spirit working there’; well, then, the only thing that is to be said to you is, ‘Go to an oculist; your sight is bad. Perhaps there is solid land, as some of us see it, where you see only mist.’ This generation needs the preaching of a supernatural power at work beside us, and among us, and until we come to believe that, we do not understand the fullness of Christ’s gift.
III. Then, lastly, note the recipient disciples.
That possession of an abiding and indwelling Spirit is the gift of Christ to every Christian soul, and is to be found by us all upon the path so plainly marked out in our text and its connections-’believe,’ ‘love,’ ‘obey.’ Then the Dove of God will flutter down upon our heads and nestle in our hearts, and brooding over the solemn and solitary sea of our chaotic spirits, will bring up from it a new world glistening in fresh order and beauty, and ‘very good’ in its Maker’s eyes.
Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren
pray. Greek. erotao. App-134. Not aiteo as in Joh 14:18. See 1Jn 5:16, where both words are used.
shall = will.
another. Greek. allos. App-124.
Comforter. Greek. parakletos, rendered “Advocate” in 1Jn 2:1. Parakletos and the Latin Advocatus both mean one called to the side of another for help or counsel. The word is only found in John: here; Joh 14:26; Joh 15:26; Joh 16:7 and 1Jn 2:1. So we have one Paraclete (the Holy Spirit) as here, and another with the Father. The Rabbinical writings often refer to the Messiah under the title Menahem (= Comforter), and speak of His days as the days of consolation. Compare Luk 2:25. See Dr. John Lightfoot’s Works, vol. xii, p. 384.
abide. Greek. meno. Same as “dwelleth “in Joh 14:10. See p. 1611.
for ever. Greek. eis ton aiona. App-151.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
16.] And then the Spirit shall proceed forth upon you. Not , but -familiaris petendi modus, Bengel:-rather perhaps, a manner of asking implying actual presence and nearness,-and here used of the mediatorial office in Christs ascended state.
] Olshausen remarks that the interpretations of this word range themselves in two classes, which again by no means exclude one another:-those of COMFORTER, and those of ADVOCATE. (Teacher (Theodore of Mopsuest. and Ernesti) is out of the question.)
The etymology of the word requires the latter as its strict meaning, and in this strict meaning it satisfies 1Jn 2:1, : but not so all the places where it is used of the Holy Spirit,-nor this verse, where of the Son and Spirit both. And therefore the other meaning,-Comforter, including as it does in its fulness (see Rom 8:26, where both, the and the , are united) the Advocate also, has been both here and in Germany (Troster, Luther) sanctioned by Christian usage as the most adequate rendering. See Archdeacon Hares Mission of the Comforter, vol. ii. note J a. He shews that Wicliff, from whom we have our Comforter, often used comfort for the Latin comfortari, as e.g. Luk 22:43; Act 9:19 alli[194]. Thus the idea of help and strength is conveyed by it, as well as of consolation.
[194] alli = some cursive mss.
It was this office (comfortari) which Jesus had filled to His disciples while with them:-and which the Holy Spirit was to fill even more abundantly (and in a higher sense, because their state would be higher) on the removal of Jesus from them.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Joh 14:16. , and I) The twenty-first verse gives the connection of this verse with the preceding verses.-, another) Therefore Jesus Christ is also an advocate [Comforter, Engl. Vers.] Let Zec 9:12 be considered, as to whether it is a parallel in point: for in this very passage He saith, , I will pray.[349] One Paraclete is Himself distinct from the other; and the office too of the one differs from that of the other. Therefore , the advocacy of the Holy Spirit, was intended to have something peculiar in it. Comp. ch. Joh 16:7-8, It is expedient for you that I go away: for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you; but if I depart, I will send Him unto you. And when He is come, He will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment.- [Comforter], Advocate, Paraclete) This word is not found in the LXX., and John alone of the writers of the New Testament has it. is the Latin advocare, to call in to ones help a patron: thence comes the term , one called in to render aid; ones defender, patron (counsellor); one who speaks in a persons behalf, and suggests to him what he ought to say. See Joh 14:26, The Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost-shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you. Comp. Joh 14:13 as to what we ought to say to God: Whatsoever ye shall ask in My name, that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son; ch. Joh 16:8, as to what ought to be said to the world, When He is come, He will reprove the world of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment. The appellations, Paraclete, and, the Spirit of truth, occur conjoined also in ch. Joh 15:26. The former corresponds to the economy of Christ, comp. 1Jn 2:1, If any man sin, we have a Paraclete, or Advocate, with the Father, Jesus Christ the Righteous; the latter, to the economy of the Father, comp. ch. Joh 4:23, The true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and truth; for the Father seeketh such to worship Him. [The largest promises in this passage succeed one after another: as to the Holy Spirit, from Joh 14:15-17; as to the Lord Jesus Himself, from Joh 14:18-21; as to the Father, from Joh 14:22-24; and again as to the Holy Spirit, ch. Joh 16:12-15; as to the Lord Jesus, Joh 14:16-23; as to the Father, Joh 14:23-28.-V. g.]-, that he may abide) So Joh 14:23, If a man love Me, etc., we will come unto him and make our abode (, lasting stay) with him.- , for ever) Not merely for one or two years.
[349] The quotation from Zechariah, though given as it is found both in Modern Editions of Bengels Gnomon and in that of 1759, seems to me a misprint for Joh 10:12, I will strengthen () them in the Lord: and they shall walk up and down in His name, saith the Lord; where the distinctness of the Paraclete-advocacy of the Son from that of the Holy Ghost may be implied.-E. and T.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Joh 14:16
Joh 14:16
And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter,-In response to their love manifested by keeping his words, he would pray the Father and he would send them another comforter. This was addressed directly to his apostles, and had a more direct application to them than to others. Yet it presents a truth and a principle applicable to all servants of God. If these disciples would keep his words, the Father would send them another comforter. Jesus had been their teacher and comforter while he was on earth; he was about to leave them. They felt bereft and disappointed, and to comfort and assure them he makes this promise of the Father.
that he may be with you for ever,-[Not to be with you a few years, as I, and then be taken away. He is to be the perpetual counselor of the church.] The Spirit was to be the guiding, directing power of the spiritual world as he is of the material world. He gave the law; he dwells in and guides through the law. It is the spirit that giveth life; the flesh profiteth nothing: the words that I have spoken unto you are spirit, and are life. (Joh 6:63). The seed is the word of God. (Luk 8:11). The seed is the dwelling place of the life principles. It is the body in which the life-germ abides. The seed is placed in the soil to bring the life germ into contact with the juices of the soil. We take the word in the heart to bring the Spirit that dwells in the word into contact with the warm affections of the heart that the germ in all principle may spring forth and bear fruit in the life. Having been begotten again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, through the word of God, which liveth and abideth. (1Pe 1:23). The word of God in the heart is in the mind, the affections, the will. It leads to prompt action so that its entrance into the heart leads to immediate obedience to Christ. No principle of life is imparted by birth. The principle of life is imparted in the believing [the begetting] or taking the word in which the Spirit which gives life dwells into the heart. The old state is left. The new principle of life, imparted through faith, is brought into a new state by being baptized. In that new state it may develop a higher spiritual life. If the Spirit imparts life, he does it before birth; and without this imparting life there is nothing to be born. Yet without birth there can be no development or manifestation of distinct life. The life that is not brought to the birth perishes.
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
Comforter
G. Parakletos, “one called alongside to help.” Translated “advocate,” 1Jn 2:1. Christ is the believer’s Paraclete with the Father when he sins; the Holy Spirit the believer’s indwelling Paraclete to help his ignorance and infirmity and to make intercession Rom 8:26; Rom 8:27.
(See “Holy Spirit,” N.T. doctrine,) Mat 1:18. (See Scofield “Act 2:4”).
And I will (See Scofield “Luk 11:13”).
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
I will: Joh 14:14, Joh 16:26, Joh 16:27, Joh 17:9-11, Joh 17:15, Joh 17:20, Rom 8:34, Heb 7:25, 1Jo 2:1
another: Joh 14:18, Joh 14:26, Joh 15:26, Joh 16:7-15, Act 9:31, Act 13:52, Rom 5:5, Rom 8:15, Rom 8:16, Rom 8:26, Rom 8:27, Rom 14:17, Rom 15:13, Gal 5:22, Phi 2:1
abide: Joh 4:14, Joh 16:22, Mat 28:20, Eph 1:13, Eph 1:14, Col 3:3, Col 3:4, 2Th 2:16
Reciprocal: Psa 68:18 – received Hag 2:5 – so Luk 24:49 – I send Joh 5:19 – for Joh 7:39 – this spake Joh 14:7 – from Joh 14:17 – but Joh 20:22 – Receive Act 1:4 – the promise Act 2:33 – having 1Co 1:4 – the grace 2Co 1:4 – comforteth 2Co 7:6 – that comforteth Gal 4:6 – God 1Th 1:6 – with joy Tit 3:6 – through Rev 22:1 – proceeding
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
6
This and the next verse contain a promise of the Holy Spirit to be sent to the apostles. This promise was made a number of times in the last hours that Jesus was with his apostles. It pertained to the same Spirit since there is but one (Ephe-sians 4:4), but its work through the apostles was so extensive, that Jesus referred to it in different forms of speech. I shall give the reader the several references on the subject which he may form into a chain if he wishes, as follows: Joh 14:16-17; Joh 14:26; Joh 15:26; Joh 16:7-15. I now resume my comments on the present paragraph. It was appropriate to call the Spirit a Comforter, because Jesus was about to leave his apostles and the Spirit would furnish them consolation in the absence of their Lord. For ever means “age-lasting,” hence the Spirit was promised to abide with the apostles as long as they lived, as a personal guide. It was also to abide in connection with their work to the end of the Christian Age (Mat 28:20).
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may abide with you for ever;
[He shall give you another Comforter.] I. Amongst all the names and titles given to the Messiah in the Jewish writers, that of Menahem; or the Comforter; hath chiefly obtained; and the days of the Messiah amongst them are styled the days of ‘consolation.’ The names of Messiah are reckoned up, viz. Shiloh, Jinnon, Chaninah, Menahem. And in Jerusalem Berac. we are told how the Messiah had been born in Bethlehem under the name of Menahem.
Luk 2:25; “Waiting for the consolation of Israel.” Targumist upon Jer 31:6; “Those that desire or long for the years of consolation to come.” This they were wont to swear by, viz. the desire they had of seeing this consolation. So let me see the consolation.
Now, therefore, bring these words of our Saviour to what hath been said: q.d. “You expect, with the rest of this nation, the consolation in the Messiah and in his presence. Well; I must depart, and withdraw my presence from you; but I will send you in my stead ‘another Comforter.’ ”
II. The minds of the disciples at present were greatly distressed and troubled, so that the promise of a Comforter seems more suitable than that of an Advocate; to their present state and circumstances.
Fuente: Lightfoot Commentary Gospels
Joh 14:16. And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate, that he may be with you for ever. The word here translated in our English Version Comforter, and partially introduced into the English language as Paraclete, means properly, One called to stand by us for our help, our Advocate, Helper, Representative. Comforter is not its meaning. And the unfortunate use of this term, so dear to the Christian amidst the troubles of the world, has tended in no small degree to make believers think less of strength than of comfort, of the experience of a private Christian who needs consolation instead of that of one who has to face the opposition of the world in his Masters cause. The Paraclete is really One who stands by our side, sustains us in our Christian calling, and breathes into us ever new measures of a spirit of boldness and daring in the warfare we have to wage. He is the representative of the glorified Lord with His militant people upon earth. The promise of this Paraclete or Advocate is given four times in the chapters before us (the only other passage in the New Testament where the word occurs being 1Jn 2:1); and in the first two, chap. Joh 14:16; Joh 14:26, it has reference mainly to the preparation of the heart and mind of the disciples; in the other two, chaps, Joh 15:26, Joh 16:7, to their actual work.
The Advocate thus spoken of is further marked out by the remarkable addition of the word another; and the word implies that the first Advocate had been Jesus Himself, whose going away prevented His continuing to be still the Advocate and Helper of His disciples. In this sense we find Him described by the very term here used in 1Jn 2:1 : We have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous. It is in the idea of representation that the two designations meet. Jesus glorified represents us before the Fathers throne; the Holy Spirit abiding with us represents Jesus gone to the Father. This word other is thus full of the most precious meaning. It tells us that Jesus when on earth had been the Paraclete, the Advocate of His disciples. It suggests that what He had been to them during His earthly life, His representative will be after He has gone away, so that every narrative of what He had done for them becomes a prediction of what the Holy Spirit will do for them and for us who come after them. The verb ask of this verse is different from that so translated in Joh 14:13-14; and it can be used only of One who stands in that closeness of relation, in that intimacy of union with the Father, in which Jesus is represented throughout these chapters as standing to Him (comp. chaps, Joh 16:26, Joh 17:9; Joh 17:15; Joh 17:20).
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Christ comforteth his disciples here, with a promise of the mission of the Holy Spirit, to supply the want of his bodily presence.
Where observe, 1. The procurer of this blessing, and that is Christ, by his prevailing prayer, and powerful intercession; I will pray: it runs in the future tense; and so it is a promise of Christ’s continual intercession. As long as Christ is in heaven, a Christian shall not want a supply of comfort and consolation here on earth.
Observe 2, The author and donor of the blessing, and that is, God himself; I will pray the Father, and he shall give. The Father, that is, my Father, your Father, and he that is the Father of comfort and consolation; I will pray, and he will give. It is an expression of great assurance.
Observe, 3. The blessing itself, the Holy Ghost, called here, Another Comforter.
Where note, 1. The divinity of the Holy Ghost; he that will supply the comforts of Christ’s presence, must be as Christ is, the God of all comfort.
Note, 2. The person of the Holy Ghost; he is a divine person, not a divine quality or operation; then we might call him a comfort, but not a comforter.
Note, 3. The office and employment of the Holy Ghost; He is a Comforter; that is, an advocate, an intercessor to sue for us; an encourager, and one that administers consolation to us; and as he is an Holy Spirit, so are his comforts holy comforts.
Observe, 4. The stability of this blessing; That he may abide with you for ever. The best of our outward comforts are sudden flashes, not lasting flames: but the consolations of the Holy Spirit are strong consolations, they are abounding consolations, and everlasting consolations; especially the Holy Spirit will be the comforter of good men in the day of affliciton, in the day of temptation, and at the hour of death, when all other comforts flag and fail.
Observe lastly, The additional title given to the Holy Ghost, he is called the Spirit of truth; partly in opposition to Satan, who is called a lying spirit, partly because he teacheth and revealeth the truth, leadeth his people into all truth, and sealeth and confirmeth truth to the souls of believers: he is the spirit of truth, both in his essence and in his operations.
Learn hence, That as the Holy Spirit is true in his essence and nature, so is he true in his office as a comforter to good men; all his consolations being real and solid, and free from imposture and delusion.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Love for Jesus would result in the disciples’ obedience to His commands. It would also result in Jesus’ requesting another (Gr. allon, another of the same kind) Helper to take His place in His absence from them (cf. Joh 14:26; Joh 15:26; Joh 16:7-15; 1Jn 2:1). The Greek word translated "Helper" or "Counselor" is parakletos. Both of these English words have connotations that are absent from the Greek word. Helper connotes an inferior, which the Holy Spirit is not. Counselor can call to mind a camp counselor or a marriage counselor whereas a legal counselor is more in harmony with the Greek idea. [Note: For further study of the term "paraclete," see Morris, pp. 587-91.] In secular contexts parakletos often referred to a legal assistant, an advocate, or simply a helper (e.g., a witness or a representative in court). [Note: H. G. Liddell and R. Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, s.v. parakletos.] The verbal form of this word, parakaleo, literally means to call alongside and, therefore, to encourage or to strengthen. Muslims typically believe that Mohammed is the fulfillment of Jesus’ promise that He would sent another counselor.
Jesus spoke of the Trinity in the following relationships. The Son would request that the Father send the Spirit to take the Son’s place as the believer’s encourager and strengthener. It was hard for these Jewish believers who had grown up believing that there is but one God to grasp that Jesus was God. It must have been even more difficult for them to think of the Spirit of God as a person rather than as God’s influence. Nevertheless New Testament revelation is clear that there are three Persons within the Godhead (e.g., 2Co 13:14). Most non-Christian religions deny the triunity of God (e.g., Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, et al.).
The Spirit of God had come on Old Testament believers temporarily to give them strength, but normally He did not remain with them (cf. Psa 51:11). What Jesus spoke of here was an abiding relationship in which the Spirit remained with believers for the rest of their lives (cf. Rom 8:9). This new relationship to the Holy Spirit is one of the distinctive differences between the church age and former dispensations. It is a blessing few Christians appreciate as we should.