11 February 2025

How do we Maintain Hope in These Days?

[[ Sister Laurel, given everything that is happening in the country right now, how do we hang onto hope? I know it is supposed to be a jubilee year focused on hope, but how do we do that? I am so scared and depressed that I don't have a drop of optimism left in my body!!]]

Your questions are good ones, thanks for asking! There are two critical things to remember when we think about hope. The first is that hope is not the same as optimism. One can be a person steeped in hope without being particularly optimistic. Given the situation in the country currently, it is really difficult to be optimistic. So many people are being hurt by the completely careless and blind, not to mention the illegal actions of President Trump,  Elon Musk, and his DOGE actors, it is hard to be optimistic about anything that is going on. It gets even more difficult when we consider that working through the situation will take time and become even more critical and complex as that goes by.

The second critical thing to remember is that hope is always based on reality and rooted in truth. It is not about wishfulness. It is the attitude of someone who knows that they stand firmly in something that is strong and certain, even when there is little to be optimistic about. Christians hope in Christ and the victory Jesus won over sin and death. We hope because we know that God's love is stronger than death and that the evil human beings do will never have the final word.  We trust in that!  As you can see, I think, it is possible to have hope and not be particularly optimistic. After all, sin and death are still with us, yet at the same time they have ultimately been defeated and one day will be no more. We look forward to that day and we do so by staying in touch with the sovereignty of God in Christ through the power of the Holy Spirit that is real right here and right now.

As I have written many times over the years, reality is ambiguous. In the days of the Reformation, we heard the reformers speak of Christians as both sinner and justified. We recognize today that heaven and earth interpenetrate one another and at the same time God is not yet all in all. In other words, the world is ambiguous; it is both justified and sinful, both good and flawed, godly and godless until God does become all in all. To be people of hope means to be people who live in light of what God has already done in Christ and who also look forward to what will one day be fully realized. We work toward that reality, not in terms of wishfulness, but because of what is already true. 

So, how do we maintain hope? We do it by staying in touch with the living Christ. We do it by recognizing that Christ is truly sovereign and is rightly treated as the sovereign of this world who, we affirm, is seated at the right hand of God. We do it by remaining aware of the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of Father and Son who enlivens and empowers us in this way. Hope is very much the result of a living faith in a similarly living God. Thus, to be people of hope we must be people of prayer --- not in the sense of asking God to take away our troubles (though we will certainly pour out our hearts to God), but in the sense of allowing a growing intimacy with that God and all a relationship with God brings into our lives. 

To be people of hope is to be people who allow God to love us, and in allowing that, to become ever more aware of the unconquerable power of that love. This is what Jesus knew intimately and exhaustively; he knew his Abba's love in a way that saw it overcoming both sin and death. Granted, Jesus' trust in his Abba's love did not prevent the worst that human beings could do, but it did allow that love's victory over this-worldly realities. That, by the way, also means it is crucial to take all the action we can legitimately do to remain involved and working towards the goals we recognize as supporting our democracy (or in other situations, any of the values we truly support). In other words, we must be persons of love as well as of hope; we must be people who are committed to doing a justice which is rooted in and helps strengthen both of these. As Christians, we continue to act and work toward the fulfillment of the Kingdom of God. No, we don't build that Kingdom ourselves, but wherever the goals of that Kingdom overlap with the goals of this world --- for instance, in making sure our country maintains its focus on the dignity of every person by working for a world where every person is a genuine neighbor whose fundamental needs are met wherever we can assist with this --- we work towards an ethos Jesus would delight in and give his entire life to and for. Maintaining hope requires all of this.