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When I was a kid, well-meaning adults informed me that Jesus lived in my heart.
Naturally, I pictured my ticker with a front door, a welcome mat, and bell that chimed “Achy Breaky Heart”. When it cracked open—there stood Jesus—well, a miniature version of himself.
Yet he wasn’t alone for long.
After my grandfather died, these well-meaning adults told me grandpa lived in my heart too. Then my grandma died. Then my uncle and aunt. It was sure getting crowded in my cardiovascular system.
As ridiculous as this sounds, our childhood perceptions of faith matter.
If I view Jesus as a tiny lego figurine as a child, I may struggle to comprehend God’s almighty power and limitless love as an adult.
The same is true for the Holy Spirit. Most Christians treat the third person of the Trinity like he is our imaginary friend.
We don’t tell anyone about him.
We’re embarrassed to acknowledge his presence.
Sometimes we whisper to him late at night when we say our bed time prayers.
But deep down, we don’t believe he exists.
Yet Jesus thought the Holy Spirt was so important that he said something crazy to his best friends right before he went to the cross:
“It’s best for you that I go away…” (John 16:7)
Can you imagine encountering Jesus face-to-face, witnessing limbs grow out, blind eyes opened, corpses coming back to life, going for strolls on the water, until Jesus looks at you and says, “I should leave. You’d be better off if I wasn’t around.”
What would possess Jesus to make such an outlandish statement?
He understood something we do not. Jesus didn’t view the Holy Spirit as an imaginary friend void of power but as the third person of the Godhead. The Spirit is necessary for us to do all we are called to do. Without the Holy Spirit, the disciples would still be hiding in the Upper Room. Jesus explained that unless he left, the Holy Spirit could not come.
Without the Spirit empowering us, we would all be weak, pathetic Christians showing up at Jesus’ door and texting him every night for advice. Jesus would have to hire a personal assistant to field all our calls and the waitlist to grab a latte with the King of Kings might be extremely long.
When Jesus was on the earth, he chose to limit himself to human form. He could only be in one place at one time, performing one miracle. He did this to model for us how to live in obedience to God the Father. But after he conquered death and rose again, it was now time to send his Spirit.
In John 14:12 Jesus says, “I tell you the truth, anyone who believes in me will do the same works I have done, and even greater works, because I am going to be with the Father.”
I used to wonder how we could top Jesus in the miracle department? How could we possibly do greater works than Jesus himself? But take another look at the second half of the verse. Jesus said the reason we will do greater works is because he is going to be with his Father. And who comes when Jesus leaves? The Holy Spirit.
It’s really just simple math:
Jesus living on the earth filled with the Spirit = 1 Jesus
Every believer on the earth filled with the Spirit = 2.56 billion miniature versions of Jesus
Those who were part of the early church had a nickname, they were referred to as “little Christs” or “Christians” because of how much they resembled Jesus. May you too be a miniature version of Jesus where ever you go as we witness firsthand the multiplication effect of his Kingdom.