Christian Hope: A Resilient Response to Uncertainty

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The secular idea of human progress was based on the idea that as knowledge increases, of course, life will get better, but it assumed that people would use the knowledge properly. It assumed the goodness of human nature. [00:09:28]

Christianity offers a great hope for history. I'm not talking about the afterlife for the moment. I'm talking about corporate hope, social hope, hope for the future. Here's what the four things that offers: it offers a reasonable hope, it offers a full hope, it offers a realistic hope, and it offers an effective hope. [00:19:26]

Only Christianity says here's the guarantee that this is not just an emotional hope, so it's not just wishful thinking. Jesus Christ rose from the dead. That's proof that God is there and that there is going to be an end to history, a good end of history. [00:20:41]

Christianity and only Christianity believes in the resurrection, which is to say that at the end of time, God is not just simply taking us to heaven, but he's going to create a new heaven and a new earth, a new heaven and new earth wherein dwelleth justice and every tear will be wiped away. [00:24:04]

The Christian hope is not a consolation for the life you lost. The Christian hope is resurrection, the restoration not only of the life you lost but the life you never really had. It's gonna be the world we always have longed for. It's the world that we always were hoping for. [00:24:36]

The Bible says that in the end, God is going to make everything right. He often takes us through death in the resurrection. He doesn't just take us to higher and higher levels. It's very unrealistic to believe that every 10 years or every generation is going to have it better than the last generation. [00:26:01]

The Christian hope is reasonable, it's a full hope, it's realistic, and I said it's effective. It actually works. I'll just give you a couple examples very quick because we need to wrap up. Howard Thurman, an African-American writer and author, in 1947, gave a lecture at Harvard on the meaning of what was then called the Negro spirituals. [00:26:53]

Out of these doctrines, this Christian hope, he said all these doctrines, the conviction grew amongst the slaves that this is the kind of universe that cannot deny ultimately the demands of love and longing uniting with loved ones in the future in the afterlife turn finally on the hope of immortality. [00:27:37]

When I was going into a surgery for my thyroid cancer, this is quite a number of years ago, nevertheless, surgery, cancer, scary. Just before I went in, I remembered a little place in the Lord of the Rings, which is the third book in which Sam and Frodo, of course, are on their way to Mount Doom and everything looks so bleak. [00:29:19]

I suddenly realized if what the Bible says is true, then we're all on this little dark blip called Earth and temporarily there's darkness here, but this is in an ocean of light. There's light and high beauty forever beyond the reach of anything wrong in this world. [00:30:25]

The Bible says no, the problems of this world are coming from inside us, and we need help from outside, which is God. But anyway, let's talk about the second, before we move on to what Christianity offers. The second big problem with the secular idea of hope is the problem of ultimate oblivion. [00:14:17]

If ultimate oblivion is where we're going, then ultimately it does render us hopeless. It does mean that the best you can do is do something that'll totally be forgotten. In the long run, nothing you do, whether you're cruel or good, is gonna make any difference at all. [00:18:27]

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