When Dr. Gardner Taylor was a young man, he was preaching one Sunday in Louisiana during the Depression. Electricity was just coming into that part of the country, and he was out in a rural, black church that had just one little light bulb hanging down from the ceiling to light up the whole sanctuary. He was preaching away, and in the middle of his sermon, all of a sudden, the electricity went out. The building went pitch black and Dr. Taylor didn’t know what to say, being a young preacher. He stumbled around until one of the elderly deacons sitting in the back of the church cried out, “Preach on, preacher! We can still see Jesus in the dark!” Sometimes that’s the only time we can see Jesus… in the dark. And the good news of the gospel is that whether we can see Jesus in the dark or not, he sees us. [1] As we delve into John 14 today, Jesus and his disciples are facing a very dark time. But in the midst of that darkness, Jesus offers to his first century disciples, and to