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Facing The Future With Hope

There is a bible opened up and it is sitting on a desk with a black background

By: Richard Bargas

November 13, 2023

It is a bright and relatively warm day today here in West Michigan, where often this time of year is cold and dreary. The sun shining brightly will soon enough give way to dark skies, bitter cold, ice, and shorter daylight hours. For a person who has lived his whole life in sunny Southern California, the darkness can feel oppressive at times.

The winters in Michigan can sometimes echo the spiritual and cultural climate we are feeling right now. The darkness and gloom seem to grow, and we are only at the beginning of winter. Certainly, there will be bright days, when the clouds will part and the sun will peek through. But soon enough, the clouds will return and the bleakness will return. Winter must run its course, and so must human history.

Hebrews 6 gives some excellent counsel as Christians think about how to face the future–with realism, and hope. Today I’d like to point out three truths that I found to be particularly comforting:

When facing an unknown future, we must rely on God's certain promises.

“For when God made the promise to Abraham, since He could swear by no one greater, He swore by Himself, saying, “I WILL GREATLY BLESS YOU AND I WILL GREATLY MULTIPLY YOU.” (Hebrews 6:13–14, LSB)

When the Lord spoke to Abram and told him to take his family out of Ur of the Chaldeans, we need to remember that He didn’t tell Abram where he was going. And after the Lord told Abraham that He would make him the father of many nations, He didn’t explain in detail how this would happen. In each step of God’s plan, Abraham was in the dark and was only able to walk by faith and not by sight. God doesn’t owe us a full explanation of His plan and how it will all work out. He often doesn’t give us His plan to review and approve. Most of the time, we just need to step out in faith and go where He sends us trusting that He will work it all out in the end.

In the above verses (Heb 6:12-14), the writer of Hebrews reminds the Christians that he is writing to that all the promises of God are based upon the bedrock of God Himself. Governments, banks, and people make promises every day, but the promises they make are only as good as their reliability and stability. Some government promises are better than others. Some people can be believed more than others. But God’s promises are built upon His perfect, unfailing character and can be completely trusted in every aspect.

For those who trust God, we must wait patiently and avoid the temptation to force our own way.

“And so, having patiently waited, he obtained the promise.” (Hebrews 6:15, LSB)

Interestingly the writer to the Hebrews states that Abraham waited patiently because Genesis seems to show us his impatience at times as well. Abraham tried to “help God” by lying twice about who Sarah was when he feared he would be murdered so the men could take her as their own. So Abraham lied in order to “help” God keep him alive. When he worried about his age becoming an issue for having children (he had none at this point), he gave in to Sarah’s suggestion that he take her maiden Hagar to be their “surrogate” mother to bear a son. Even after the Lord gave the promise and several reassurances, Abraham and Sarah doubted–could a couple that were both nearing a century of age each become first-time parents? Abraham would see with his own eyes that God’s promises–no matter how outlandish they might seem–are never failing.

Many Christians doubt the promises of God toward His Church, and the nation of Israel. How could God possibly save all of Israel (Rom 11:1, 26), and that Christ will usher in His Kingdom in His time? He has given us plenty to do while we await His return, but we cannot force our own way to compel God as if we could do so. The Lord will return, and not a second later or earlier than He has ordained. We must not sit twiddling our thumbs, nor working to do what only He can do.

Even in times of greatest despair and uncertainty, we must not rely on feelings, or what our eyes can see, but on the irrevocable promises of God.

“For men swear by one greater than themselves, and with them an oath given as confirmation is an end of every dispute. In the same way God, desiring even more to show to the heirs of the promise the unchangeableness of His purpose, guaranteed it with an oath, so that by two unchangeable things in which it is impossible for God to lie, we who have taken refuge would have strong encouragement to take hold of the hope set before us.” (Hebrews 6:16–18, LSB)

In this world, we see only dimly, and even what we see is partial. Our feelings as well can be very unreliable and can sometimes betray us or even lead us into sinful responses. The writer to the Hebrews speaks in the above verses of men making oaths in order to support their words. We expect that those who make an oath should keep their promises, but we also know that even the most honest person sometimes has to break his or her word because circumstances beyond our control can force us to do so.

But God, who is not limited in power, and will never lie, has made promises to us that give us “strong encouragement to take hold of the hope set before us.” Yes, difficult and dark times are on the horizon and even among us in the times we are living in. But what we see, and what we feel are not the sole reality. Even more real, and more dependable are the promises of God to us.

These three truths act like an anchor for our souls in our stormy world. Jesus, our Great Captain, has gone before us, and our duty as His children, is to simply follow Him.

“This hope we have as an anchor of the soul, a hope both sure and confirmed and one which enters within the veil, where a forerunner has entered for us—Jesus, having become a high priest forever according to the order of Melchizedek.” (Hebrews 6:19–20, LSB)

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