A regular feature at professional sporting events used to be the “oblivious cam.” The camera focused on a fan in the stands who did not know they were being shown on the arena’s big screen. A timer would start and run until the fan noticed and waved. Usually a friend or the crowd around the person woke them up to the gag. But occasionally the clock would run for close to a minute before the oblivious fan finally caught on.
As a follower of Jesus I fear that I’m oblivious to one of the most wonderful gifts in my possession. When speaking of the days after his death and resurrection, Jesus told his disciples about a helper soon to arrive: When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth. The Spirit of truth—the Holy Spirit—indwells the lives of those who follow Jesus. We are followers of Jesus and carriers of the Holy Spirit. But if this is the case, why am I so unaware?
For one, a “spirit of truth” sounds unreal to my Western-trained scientific brain. A phantom guiding me feels like magic to my analytical nature. More to the root of my disbelief is that in the past I’ve asked the Spirit for wisdom, but heard nothing. The silence tamped down my initial experiment in seeking truth. But a few discouraging attempts should not keep me from going back.
If the Holy Spirit indeed dwells within me, and serves at the conduit to all truth, then I can ask him anything I want. I might appeal in matters of faith, but also in family concerns, business opportunities, financial decisions, dealing with neighbors, how I vote, and what book to read next. A constant stream of questions could mark my day.
But the catch is actually hearing what the Holy Spirit says. The voice comes generally in a whisper. I believe there’s an art in listening to the Spirit, a spiritual type of discipline. We hone our ability over time, and get better at it by responding to the Spirit’s lead. The Spirit often speaks through passages from the Bible. If I ignore clear messaging from the Holy Scriptures, then I shut my ears to the whispers of the Holy Spirit. The two go hand in hand.
You might think of the Holy Spirit as divine AI. God knows everything—past, present and future. I don’t want to waste this gift. Rather, I talk to the Spirit all day long, a running conversation, listening as much as speaking. It does sound mysterious, supernatural even. But if one cannot appreciate the supernatural, why bother being a Christian?
John 16:13
Photo by Casey Horner

