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John 16:12-15
12I have yet many things to tell you, but you can`t bear them now.
13However when he, the Spirit of truth, has come, he will guide you into all the truth, for he will not speak from himself; but whatever things he hears, he will speak. He will declare to you the things that are to come.
14He will glorify me, for he will take from what is mine, and will declare it to you.
15All things whatever the Father has are mine; therefore I said that he takes of mine, and will declare it to you.
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John 16:12-15 refuses respectability—God isn’t impressed by polish, He’s moved by justice—today, not someday.
John 16:12-15 calls for personal faith—repent, believe, and follow Jesus with a clear conscience—today, not someday.
John 16:12-15 comforts the repentant: Christ receives those who come sincerely—today, not someday.
In John 16:12-15, God’s covenant faithfulness outlasts human failure and calls forth obedience—today, not someday.
In John 16:12-15, God forms a people who carry peace into conflict—today, not someday.
John 16:12-15 declares that oppression is not permanent when God is present—today, not someday.
In John 16:12-15, grace is not abstract; it breaks chains and confronts unjust power—today, not someday.
In John 16:12-15, salvation is a journey: justified by grace and formed through faithful practice.
In John 16:12-15, compassion isn’t optional—it’s the shape of faithful discipleship—today, not someday.
John 16:12-15 invites a living faith—God still speaks comfort and courage—today, not someday.
In John 16:12-15, the ancient gospel meets today’s anxieties with steady mercy—today, not someday.
John 16:12-15 challenges spiritual passivity—grace is not an excuse to stay unchanged—today, not someday.
In John 16:12-15, Christ stands at the center: promise fulfilled, mercy embodied, kingdom revealed—today, not someday.
In John 16:12-15, God meets us through word and sacrament with steady, sustaining mercy—today, not someday.
John 16:12-15 insists that faith means following Jesus, even when it costs—today, not someday.
John 16:12-15 comforts the weary: grace holds you when your grip is weak—today, not someday.
In John 16:12-15, the text presses one question: will we trust God’s Word and live it?
In John 16:12-15, God meets ordinary people and turns them into carriers of hope—today, not someday.
John 16:12-15 draws us into mystery—truth tasted through worship, not merely analyzed—today, not someday.
John 16:12-15 offers holy endurance: God gives strength for the long road and joy for the weary.
John 16:12-15 invites a pilgrim’s heart: return, receive grace, and keep walking with the saints.
When John 16:12-15 is read aloud, hope gets a voice and fear loses the microphone.
John 16:12-15 comforts the accused conscience: the verdict in Christ is mercy, not condemnation—today, not someday.
If John 16:12-15 never disrupts comfort, it may be tradition pretending to be fire—today, not someday.