Hope and Presence: Embracing Advent's True Meaning

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When you and I talk about hope, there's lots of ways we could define it. And the Bible has lots of sort of layers to hope as we kind of even kind of get into it. But just at least the sort of the baseline sort of minimum idea of what it means to have hope across all... There's more to it than this, but just at least the baseline looks like this. Hope is kind of envisioning a future, like having a picture of a future that's different than the present. So we have a present where something's missing or broken or out of sorts, and we can picture that in our minds. An idea where those problems are resolved, that's where we sort of begin to have at least a picture of hope. [00:35:15] (33 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)


And when people are confused about anything, almost everything, the most common reaction when people are confused about something is they say, I don't have the words. Something incredible happened. I don't have the words. Something confusing happened. I don't have the words. Show of hands. How many of you have ever gotten a gift that was either so good or so confusing that you did not have the words? Just come on, show your hands. Yeah. Some of you, everybody. Apparently, a lot of you guys got every gift you've ever gotten was exactly as you had the words. Way to go. What was it like to live like that? But for the rest of us, there have been moments where we're like, I have no idea. I have no idea what this is about and why I have this. [00:36:32] (43 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)


Instead, maybe what we have to think about is that hard stuff is actually something else. It's where God forms us. It's not the only place God forms us. And please understand, there's other ways in which that God does work into forming us. But to say it really clearly, when hope is built by facing hard stuff, and hard stuff is where God forms us, is to say this, God doesn't waste the pain and the suffering that you and I have. He can take it and do something with it that is not wasted. And I wish it wasn't true that this was the case. But it's richer than just teaching us a lesson. A lot of people say, I've been going through a tough thing. God must be trying to teach me something. And I'm not saying that's not true. I'm just saying, it's a little deeper than that. [00:46:41] (40 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)


The truth is that good people do unavoidably experience really difficult things, really hard things. Now, our own experience and research and the Bible will tell that apparently the enemy of hope isn't hardship. Because apparently hope is sort of built in hardship. When our resilience goes up, so does our own sort of experience of hope. But also the enemy then of hope, if that's the truth, then the enemy of hope is actually loneliness is what we try to, what we figure out. The enemy of hope is actually loneliness. People do really hard things. And that's not why they lose their hope. They lose their hope when they feel like they're alone. [00:49:07] (39 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)


And hope does not disappoint us because God's love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us. In other words, for people who are Jesus' followers, apparently, this invisible dimension of our own faith, not just sort of a new morality. A lot of us sort of have an idea about Jesus and his sort of call to living as a particular, just a sort of, the whole thing is a sort of a new morality. It's bigger than that. It's that God's spirit dwells within our hearts. That means that God himself is never far away from us, which means that people who are connected to Jesus always have this experience of the nearness of God to them. [00:50:44] (39 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)


The ultimate expression of this, of course, is Jesus who suffers with us. The bible describes him repeatedly as having compassion. His compassion went out toward people. That compassion, of course, is made the clearest on his own death on the cross on the night of his own or right before his own arrest, the night of his arrest. Jesus was with his disciples, He's at a meal, which could be no more person. That's the most being with of anything. He's with his disciples, and after he'd given thanks, he takes the bread, and he breaks it, and he gives it to his disciples, and he says, this is my body. It's given for you. My very presence is going to be given for you. [01:02:17] (40 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)


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