“Let not your heart be troubled, you believe in God, believe also in me.” Jesus spoke these words. He spoke them to hearts that were troubled. He spoke them so the heart could be comforted. He spoke them so that man might have peace.
The words that followed told of the things He wanted man to know. The words that followed became the balm that healed the troubled heart.
It is hard to understand the words that Jesus spoke. He talked of things that had never been talked about before. He talked to the ears of those that would hear, but the message was to the soul.
The soul was without God. It had no abiding place and it lived in darkness. This darkness was the thing that caused man to be fearful. It caused his heart to be troubled. The yearnings of the soul were a mystery to man; and because of this, he lived in fear of the unknown. His joy, his peace, his security, and his comfort were only in the things he could see and feel and hear and touch.
But there was trouble in his heart. The things he could see and hear and feel and touch were not always the same.
Things changed. And when things changed, fears arose. Man did not know his purpose, or his destiny, or his place, because he did not know the purpose of his soul. His soul was apart from God and had no abiding place. There was no light and there was no life in his soul, therefore, man was troubled in his heart. Yet, he did not know why.
Jesus said: “Let not your heart be troubled, you believe in God, believe also in me.” Jesus lived a unique life. He lived the life of a man, a religious man, one who longed and looked for the coming of the Messiah. He was apart from God, as were all other men, because He was made a man and lived as a man. The unique thing about His life was that a new consciousness came to Him, a new knowledge that no man ever had before. He saw the truth of this knowledge and He lived in it. To say that He was God is to perfectly express what this consciousness was, but to see a progressive revelation of what this meant is to understand God’s purpose for us and our destiny in Him.
Something happened to the man Jesus when He came into this new consciousness. When He was twelve and made His trip to the Temple, He told Mary and Joseph, “Know ye not that I must be about my Fathers business?” When He saw His place in God, it was no longer, “I must be about my Fathers business;” now it was, “I can of my own self do nothing, it is the Father that worketh in me.” This meant that Jesus entered into a new perspective, He saw a new thing. He had not been taught this by man. Man knew nothing of this amazing thing. Jesus saw and understood that He was one with God! What a tremendous revelation! This was His confidence. He spoke in this confidence knowing that the words were not His own. He spoke with authority because He knew that it was the Almighty God expressing Himself. He lived in this confidence because He knew that God was Master of all things.
He saw clearly that physical life and material things were nothing. He saw and understood that the only real Life was in God, all else was false and like the grass of the field, would wither away. So He spoke with confidence, He spoke with authority, “The words that I speak, they are truth, and they are life.” He spoke with authority and He spoke with knowledge, yet He said such strange things as, “Before Abraham was, I am.” Then again, “I and my Father are one.” One time Phillip was confused and he asked, “Lord, show us the Father.” Jesus answered, “He that hath seen me hath seen the Father.” Yet there was a strangeness in His words when He said, “I go to my Father.” “Jesus never made a confusing statement, nor did He ever speak an untruth. The words He spoke become perfectly plain when we receive them with the understanding of God. God had not yet given Himself to anyone but Jesus, so naturally Phillip was confused. It is just as natural that you and I today, unless we have God’s understanding, will be equally confused.
Jesus found a new Life. He found that the Life of God was within Him, and He received it as His own. He became a stranger in the Land of Men. He called no place home. All things of this world have an abiding place--“The birds have their nests, the foxes have their holes, but the Son of man hath not where to lay His head.” Yet, when the Disciples asked Him where He lived, He said, “Come and see.” For three and a half years they could not find His dwelling place--now He was about to tell them; and so, He began, “In my Father’s House are many Mansions.” This was the best way to begin because a man knows that a house is a place of abiding. The Disciples knew that the King’s Palace contained many dwelling places for those whom the King favored, and so they understood that in the Father’s House were many wonderful dwellings.
“I am going to prepare a place for you so that where I am, there you may be also.” These words were exciting because they, too, were easily understood.
A strangeness crept into His next words because they began to intimate a “taking away” of something. “I will not leave you comfortless…” Jesus knew full well that He had been a Comforter to them in the time that was past. He remembered the time on the Sea of Galilee when a storm arose. He remembered their fears and how they needed peace. He remembered how they came to Him and awoke Him, so now, He reassured them.
“I will ask the Father to send you another Comforter that He will abide with you forever.” The Disciples found these words hard to understand. They were face to face with the fact that the One they trusted and loved, the One who comforted them, the One they could see and feel and hear would no longer be around them.
Their hopes of a lifetime were being taken away by the very One who had given them hope. Jesus said, when He had begun talking, “Let not your heart be troubled,” so they listened to His Words, “…Even the Spirit of Truth, whom the world can not receive because they see Him not, neither do they know Him.” Then Jesus added words that encouraged the lonesome hearts--“But you know Him because He dwelleth with you and He shall be in you!” Then, He said it plainly, “I will not leave you Comfortless, I will come to you.” The most difficult thing that Jesus had to do was to convey to the hearts of the Disciples that a change was going to take place. He, the Visible, the One they could see, would be taken from their sight. He was going to the Father whom they could not see.
Yet, He plainly said to Phillip, “He that hath seen me hath seen the Father.” This would be only natural because He also said, “I and my Father are One.” Most certainly there is something here that is difficult for the mind of man to comprehend.
But let us get a key to the thoughts of Jesus by hearing His Word. He said, “God is Spirit.” This immediately tears down the concepts of the material world.
God no longer has a form. He no longer will be worshipped in houses made with man’s hands. Nor will He be worshiped in the mountains or in the realm of nature. He will be worshiped in the Spirit or He will not be worshipped at all! Jesus could speak plainly because He received the Holy Spirit when He was baptized. He had the understanding of God. The Spirit began to lead Him and He found Himself in the wilderness, learning of God. He returned from there in the power of the Spirit. He became aware of a new Life, the Life of God. This was His place of abiding. This world was no longer His home. He placed no claim upon it, so He said to His Disciples, “…The Son of man hath no place to lay His head.” He told those who would learn of Him, that they should deny themselves. They would become a new creation; the old things were no longer to be considered. Once, when He prayed to His Father, He thought of those who would believe in Him; and He said, “They are not of this world even as I am not of this world.” Nicodemus was a sincere, religious man. He said to Jesus, “I know you are from God because I can see the things you do.” Jesus answered, “No man can see the things of God unless he is born of the Spirit.” Man becomes Spirit when he is born of the Spirit, just like he is flesh when he is born of the flesh. So He told Nicodemus, “You must be born again.” But Nicodemus didn’t know how to be born again. Neither did Peter or James or John or Phillip or Thomas, so they could only go on believing what they could see and feel and hear and touch.
But now, they were hearing new words. “I am going to prepare a place for you and come again and receive you to myself so that where I am there you may be, also.” And they were hearing about the Spirit--the world wouldn’t know of this Spirit because they could not see it; but the Disciples would know this Spirit because He was dwelling with them right now, and He was going to be in them! Jesus was dwelling with them so He must be the Spirit of Truth, but only the Father was Truth! Could it be? He had said to Phillip, “He that hath seen me hath seen the Father.” Quite obviously Jesus was speaking of something more than mere flesh! Now, listen--Jesus is saying something more. “Yet a little while and you shall see me no more and yet, a little while and you shall see me.” There were other words too. “I am going to prepare a place for you, then, when it is done, I will come to you and receive you to myself so that where I am there you may be also.” It all pointed to some new, strange thing that was going to happen. Some big change was going to take place.
Whatever it was, there were certain truths beginning to be revealed: Something was going to happen to Jesus. He said that He was going to His Father.
He was going to prepare a place for those who believed Him so they could dwell where He dwelt. He said there were many mansions in His Fathers House.
He was going to “come again” and receive them to Himself. He said they would have “another Comforter,” one that would abide with them forever. He called it “the Spirit of Truth,” and said it would be in them. They heard Him say that it would be “another Comforter” so they knew that something would be different.
A new thing was going to take place. This was the fulfillment of the promise of the Father. This would be the place that Jesus prepared. Its readiness was imminent. Man was about to be “born again.” He was about to enter a new realm, the realm of God.
He was about to find a surging life within his innermost being because he was about to be received into that place of abiding that Jesus prepared. Jesus said, “Let not your heart be troubled, you believe in God, believe also in me.” When this happens, at that day you shall know that I am in my Father and He is in me and I am in you.” Jesus was crucified. He was buried. But He arose from the dead and ministered to those who would hear. Then, one day, He was received out of the sight of men to be seen no more.
Then it happened!! Suddenly--to those who believed--a rushing sound, like a mighty wind, and the Holy Ghost, the new Comforter, the Spirit of Truth, descended upon them and filled their life. They were received into the Father’s House--into the place of abiding that Jesus had prepared for them.
That place is prepared, and it is available to all those who will heed these Words of Jesus, “Let not your heart be troubled, you believe in God, believe also in me.”