When Waiting is Weighty
/This isn’t casual waiting. This is deep, soul-level endurance, and it call to us to wait well by embracing the wait rather than pushing it away, rushing it, or merely distracting ourselves from it.
Read MoreThis isn’t casual waiting. This is deep, soul-level endurance, and it call to us to wait well by embracing the wait rather than pushing it away, rushing it, or merely distracting ourselves from it.
Read MoreThere’s hope in the hard
Good things to pursue
So hold on to hope
When the hard has a hold on you
Life has a way
Of being brutally unkind
Stealing your joy
Clouding your mind
But a life in Christ
Can know of the hope He brings
And hold on to that hope
In the midst of all the hard things
So remind yourself today
And in the days ahead
Hope is not lost
Joy and peace are not dead
They are alive and active
Because He is faithful and true
So hold on to hope
When the hard has a hold on you
“May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope.” (Romans 15:13, ESV)
“Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful.” (Hebrews 10:23, ESV)
Read MoreHope and peace.
Interchangeable in a way.
Interdependent on The Way.
Impossible by my way.
We can try to muster them up, but hope and peace can’t be produced by physical means. We can’t pep talk our way to peace or hold on to hope by our our strength. Peace comes from the presence of God, and hope is found in Christ alone.
We’re reminded in these lyrics from “What a Friend we have in Jesus,”
“Oh, what peace we often forfeit
Oh, what needless pain we bear
All because we do not carry
Everything to God in prayer”
We forfeit peace when we forget the source of peace. When we carry the weight of pain and hurt, we have no grip strength left to hold on to hope.
I’m not saying we won’t suffer, but Jesus in the Gospel of John reminds us that even in the midst of hard times in a hurting world, He is our peace. He is our hope.
“I have said these things to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33, ESV)
One of my favorite Christmas movies is a great illustration of what happens when we forfeit peace and defer hope.
Home Alone. The McCallisters were gone while Kevin was left home alone. As soon as his mom discovered he was missing, she went into panic mode. She frantically made her way back home to him. She switched flights, she hitchhiked, she was up all night. And the irony is that she made it home at the same time as the rest of the family, who weren’t frenzied and frantic.
I would have likely responded the same way Kevin’s mom did, but the point still remains — the destination was the same, but the journey could have been vastly different had Kevin’s mom been traveling with peace and hope instead of panic and hurry.
Hope and peace are great companions for our journey “home.” This world is not our home. It’s not our final destination. As we travel heavenward, let’s not defer hope or forfeit peace.
Read MoreJune 25th. Day 25 of walking through “Reasons to Rehearse the Gospel Daily” — Part 1 of “A Gospel Primer for Christians” by Milton Vincent.
Today’s reason — Hope of Heaven.
Oh how this reason resonates in a way that has my heart living in the tension of longing for heaven and loving others into heaven while on earth. The most loving thing we can do is give others the truth of the gospel, plain and simple. Yes, we must live it out, but we desperately need to speak it out, too. Everyone longs for the Hope of Heaven.
I LOVE the way Vincent explains this reason to rehearse the gospel in today’s reading...
“The more I experience the riches of Christ in the gospel, the more there develops within me a yearning to be with Christ in heaven where I will experience His grace in unhindered fullness. {Philippians 1:23, 1 Peter 1:13} The reason for this yearning is simple:however great may be the present blessing of salvation, they are but the ‘first fruits of the Spirit,” the first installments of an unimaginably great harvest of glory which I will reap forever in heaven.” {Romans 8:23}
He continues by saying...
“The apostle Paul could not rehearse gospel blessings in Romans 5-8 without being reminded of his anxious longing for the future glories awaiting believers in heaven. {Romans 8:18-23} Likewise, the Apostle John could not speak of his and his readers’ status as children of God without also relishing the beautification they will experience at the revelation of Jesus Christ. {1 John 3:1-2} Neither will I be able to think long upon gospel blessings without thinking also of the infinite glories which will be mine to enjoy in heaven.”
Vincent goes on to say...
“Such a gospel-generated heavenward focus yields enormous benefits to me while on earth. The mere hope of seeing Christ in glory releases the purifying influence of heaven upon my life from day to day. {1 John 3:3} Also, knowing of the future love that God will show me in glory enables me to love my fellow-saints with a heaven-inspired love even now. {Colossians 1:4-5} I love others out of the fullness already given to me in Christ, and also out of the greater fullness that will be given to me in glory!”
He continues...
“Hope of eternity with Christ in heaven also enables my heart to thrive during the most difficult and lengthy of trials here on earth. When looking at the sheer weight of unseen glories to come, my troubles seem light by comparison; and when looking at the staggering length of eternity, my troubles seem fleeting by comparison. {2 Corinthians 4:16-18} It is only against the backdrop of a glorious eternity that my circumstances can be seen in such a manner; and the promise of this glorious eternity is part and parcel of the gospel itself.” {Colossians 1:5}
And the author concludes by saying
“Preaching the gospel to myself every day is a great way to keep myself established in ‘the hope of the gospel,’ {Colossians 1:23} so that I might experience the practical benefits that such hope is intended to bring me here on earth.”
Read MoreIf God has called you to it, He will see you through it.
Lots happened between Palm Sunday and Good Friday. The cries from the crowd went from “save us” to “crucify him,” and yet in the instability of the in between, Jesus stayed the course, trusting God for the greater thing.
He was a man on a mission, to carry out His Father’s vision — a plan for eternity that would impact humanity.
He stayed the course.
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