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"Standing
on the Promises" The first thing I want to say about
hope is this: We were made, we were created for hope. Hope is
bred in our bones. I. Our spirits were made for hoping Our spirits cannot live without hope
anymore than our lungs can breathe without air. Hope is the work
of the human heart the way thinking is the work of the human
brain. Let me explain why this is so. God created us with the
magical power to imagine what is going to happen to us in the
future. But He created us with absolutely no power to control
what will happen in the future. Let me say that again: God created
us with the power to imagine the future, but he gave us
no power to control the future. We have the power to imagine all sorts
of good things that may happen to us and to people we love. Good
things we want. Good things we need. But there is no way for
us to guarantee that we are going to get those good things. It
is possible that we may get them, but it is never certain. We
can only hope. We also have the power to imagine all sorts of
bad things that may happen to us or to our loved ones. But we
cannot be sure that they will happen. They could happen. It is
possible. But it is never sure. What we have ahead of us is a field
of possibilities. The tomorrow we can imagine today is chock
full of wonderful possibilities. But it is also full of possibilities
of bad things, even terrible things. So the future that we imagine
is a future with possibilities of blessings and possibilities
of tragedy. When we focus our imagination on the
terrible things that could happen, we fear that they will. When
we imagine and focus on the good things that could happen, we
hope that they will happen. And that is the human condition:
we can live by fear and we can live by hope. Hope energizes us. Fear paralyzes us.
Hope empowers us. Fear weakens us. Hope lifts us up. Fear drags
us down. As human beings who cannot control the future that we
imagine, we are fearful that bad things we imagine will happen,
but we hope that the good things we imagine will happen. The
question of everybody's life is: will we live by hope or will
we live by fear? Will hope empower our spirits or will fear shackle
our spirits? This brings me to the second thing I
want to say to you about hope. II. Hope is power Hope is personal power to strive for
the good things we hope for. As long as our hope keeps the upper
hand over our fears, we have the spiritual energy to strive for
and achieve the good that we hope for. I am talking to you about hope here
today because once upon a time a young Dutch blacksmith, only
twenty-one years old, and a young, plump Dutch farm girl, only
twenty years old, were energized by hope to leave their families,
their friends, their little village, their native land, and book
a place in steerage to steam off to a future in the United States.
What had gotten into them? I can tell you. It was hope that got
into them. Every good thing that any man or woman
has ever been accomplished was begun by the power of hope. No
painter has ever put a brush to canvas without hope of leaving
something beautiful to look at on the canvas. No writer ever
put words to paper without the hope of writing something worth
reading. No builder has ever put brick to mortar without hope
of building a wall. No business person has ever launched an enterprise
without hope of making it work. No addict has ever been cured
without hope of getting better. No evil in the world has ever
been overcome without hope that good could triumph. I am going
to repeat myself: everynot most, everygood thing
that anyone has ever accomplished in our world was begun only
because someone had hope that it could be done. Hope is the fuel that powers the human
engine. But there is a warning label on every package of hope.
Caution: Hope can break your heart. This is the third
thing I want to say about hope. III. Hope can break your heart If we live long enough, we will all
have our own stories of high hopes that crashed on the painful
rocks of reality. This is one that I remember; you must remember
your own. Doris, my wife, and I celebrated our fiftieth wedding
anniversary last month. I can tell you we would never have had
those fifty good years if we hadn't begun with hope and if we
hadn't lived with hope that the present troubles will pass and
better things will come. We know about the power of hope and
we have known the heart break of lost hope. For the first ten
years of our marriage we kept hoping for a child, we kept praying
for a child. Sometimes we feared that our hopes would never come
true but we kept on hopingfor ten years. Then finally,
bless God, our hopes came true. Doris became pregnant and gave
birth to a beautiful baby boy. You see, we said to each other,
let us never give up hope. But less than two days after he was
born, the child of our hopes died. Yes, hope can break your heart. One of the loveliest women ever to grace
my life was Tammy Kramer, our pastor's wife. Tammy was the director
of the outpatient AIDS clinic at Los Angeles County Hospital.
One day she told me about a young man who came in for his weekly
treatment, but this time he faced a new doctor who, without so
much as looking up at him, said casually, "You know, don't
you, that you won't live out the year?" The young man stopped at Tammy's desk
on the way out and wept: "That SOB took away my hope!" "I guess he did," she answered.
But then she asked: "Do you have another one? Do you have
a hope to fall back on?" Is there another one? Is there a hope
that can live even when our fondest hope dies? Is there a hope
that survives the heart break of lost hope? This question is my cue for the fourth
thing I want to tell you about hope. IV. There is hope that stays alive
when our fondest hope dies Ordinary human hope that we can't live
without is born of a faith that good things are possible. When
God gets into our hoping, hope goes beyond a faith that good
things are possible. Now, please listen to me carefully. When
God gets into hope, hope becomes a faith that good things are
not only possible, but that good things are promised. The Maker
of the Universe has promised good things for us to hope for.
This is the essence of a faith that is rooted in God. Hope moves
beyond a belief that good things are possible. Hope becomes a
trust that good things are promised. A promise is a lot better than a sheer
possibility. When a person makes a promise, he says, "You
can count on it. I will be there with you and I will make it
happen." So when your hope is based on promises made by
the Maker of the Universe, you have hold of the hand of the One
who has the whole world in His hands and He has the will and
the power to make good on His promise. I remember an old gospel hymn we used
to sing at our church when I was a boy: "Standing on the
promises of God; Standing, standing, standing on the promises
of God." My friends, you and I have both been through times
when that was all we could dojust keep standing on the
promises of God. That is what you do when God gets into your
hoping. You stand firm on the rock of His promises. So the fifth thing I want to say to
you about hope is this: V. Hope is trust that God will keep
his promises What did He promise? He promised that
He would be under us, that he would be over us, that He would
be ahead of us and behind us, that He would be a circle of love
around us and a spiritual power of hope inside of us. He promised that when we are losing
control and are falling off the edge, He will be there to hold
us up. He promised that when we are walking into a spiritual
darkness and can't find our way, when we fear that we will fall
and break our necks, when we fear that someone out there in the
dark will assault us, He will be there with us and lead us through
the darkness. "I will be there with you."
This is the promise of God. This the hope that lives when other
hopes die. But He promises much more. For me, the biggest promise of all is
that He will one day make all things good again, all things new
again. The Bible puts it this way: "What we look forward
to is a new heaven and a new Earth where everything is right."
So the last thing I want to say about hope is this: VI. Hope is faith that God will make
the whole world work right one day When God gets into hope, we have hope
for a world where little children can play on city streets at
night without being afraid; hope for a world where no mother
ever watches her baby starve; hope for a world where nobody ever
points a gun at anybody else; hope for a world where no adult
ever abuses a child or child abuses an adult; hope for a world
where all God's children of all races and all tribes and nations
join hands and praise the Lord, the Maker and the Redeemer of
the world. VII. When you are on God's side,
you are on the winning side God is going to win. The resurrection
of Jesus tells us that God can win. When you are with God and
with your hopes, you are on the winning side. Love is going to
win. Peace is going to win. Justice is going to win. Life is
going to win. God is going to win. So this is why I say to you: never give
up hope. Never, ever give up hope. Keep hope alive. As long as
you keep hope alive, hope will keep you alive. Interview with Lewis Smedes
Lydia
Talbot: Lew, a profound message on hope, people of faith and
people of hope. The alternative: despair... Lewis Smedes: When people despair, they lose all energy, they
lose all positiveness, they lose all outlook. Hopelessness is
hell. Talbot:
We began the program with lines from Emily Dickinson's poem that
conveys hope through the metaphor of a bird and that appears
in your book on hope. How did you come to choose her words? Smedes:
I have always loved that poem. It is such a fancy-free, life
lifting metaphor. Talbot:
"Hope is the thing with feathers that perches on the soul
and sings a tune without the words and never stops at all."
A kind of unconditional gift that keeps going. Smedes:
As long as we let it go. I think the biggest task in the whole
world today is to bring people hope. I'm told that twenty percent
of the world's population today that live without any hope at
all. Talbot:
When hope broke your heartwhen you and Doris lost your
baby of two daysthere was a back-up hope. Smedes:
I call it a "fall back" hope. Talbot:
A hope which resulted in three more beautiful children. Smedes:
Three adopted children who are wonderful, wonderful kids. Talbot:
And now two grandchildren that will give you joy. We thank you
so much, Dr. Lewis Smedes. |
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