Now may the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, that you may abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.
Romans 15:13
Romans 15:13
To start this new year, I had decided to write on the theme of hope and as I did some research, I encountered and wrote about various interesting stories in the Bible that exemplify this attribute. To end the month off, I want to look at the book of Ruth where we find the story of Naomi and her daughter-in-law, Ruth. When Naomi and her family are faced with famine in their home town of Bethlehem, they decide to go to Moab in hopes of having a better life. Unfortunately, Naomi’s husband dies there. After his death Naomi’s two sons marry Moabite women but after about ten years, her sons die also. Naomi is left alone with her two daughters-in-law. Upon hearing that the Lord had provided bread for His people in Bethlehem, she returns there. Although she encourages both her daughters-in-law to return to their families in Moab, one of them, Ruth, stubbornly insists on going with her to Bethlehem. She renounces her own people and gods and chooses to embrace the people and God of Naomi. Naomi is bitter upon her return to Bethlehem. Yet, God chooses to favour Naomi and Ruth. Ruth encounters one of her father-in-law’s kinsmen and finds favour with him. They marry and through him, Naomi and Ruth are delivered from a life of destitution and shame. I love this story of Ruth and Naomi. It is truly a story of hope and redemption. After the loss of the men in her life through death, Naomi must have felt forsaken and alone. They had come to this country to find relief from their situation and although they may have found it, the loss she endured was greater than any relief her family may have found. And sometimes, that’s the challenge we must face in life. We may make decisions that seem to bring an answer to a desperate situation but in the end we may find that we have lost more than we had hoped to gain. This is probably how Naomi may have felt. Thankfully, hope arose once more when she heard that the famine had ended in Bethlehem. Now she could return home, maybe not the same way she had left, but it was still home. All along the way, Naomi and her family held on to hope. After all, it was what was driving their decisions. They went to Moab in hopes of a better life. They did find it but then tragedy and loss also came. When Naomi heard the famine had ended in her country, she was once again driven by hope that she could return to familiar surroundings, especially after losing her family. She may not have expected much but at least it was home. In life, we will be faced with setbacks and disappointments. I don’t think they can be avoided. Yet, in the midst of them, God knows how to provide hope. Even though Naomi could not see it, God was still writing her story and He had a beautiful ending planned. God was still her source of hope. He knew all the tragedy and loss she had faced but He also knew it was not over for her. It’s the same with us. Like Naomi, at times all we may see is the tragedy, the hurt, the disappointment. But, God sees the bigger picture and He knows the good He is going to bring out of those tragic circumstances. He doesn’t stop writing our story when tragedy strikes, but rather continues straight through to the end, the end that He has planned for us. When you think about it, that’s why it’s so important to keep our eyes, our focus on God. It’s difficult to see clearly when problems arise, but God’s vision is not blurred like ours. He knows the beautiful plan and purpose He has for us and that the negative we are going through is temporary. As He continues writing our story, things become more and more clear and we are able to be grateful for both the good and the bad. So, be encouraged today. No matter how hopeless and tragic things may look, like it did for Naomi, the God of hope is still writing your story. He has an ending planned that may be totally unexpected, but it’s the kind of ending that only God could write. God knows how to bring beauty out of ashes, hope in the midst of despair, good out of any bad situation that may come your way. If you have not accepted Jesus Christ into your life as your personal Lord and Saviour, I encourage you to do so today. God knows how to turn even the most negative situation around for good. When we put our trust in Him, we can expect that He is scripting a story that will bring honour and glory to Him. Be encouraged!
0 Comments
“Now may the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, that you may abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.” (Romans 15:13) In Romans 15:13, Jehovah God is described as the God of hope. One definition of the word hope is - a person or thing that may help or save someone. This definition so aptly describes the God who is able to deliver us from impossible situations. Psalm 46:1 also describes Him as an ever-present help in trouble. In Acts 27 we read the account of Paul’s journey by ship to Rome, Italy. He is on his way there to stand trial before Caesar for his belief in Christ. Along the way, a storm arises. The crewmen find themselves having to take various life-saving measures to save both the ship and the people on board. The storm becomes so fierce that they finally give up any hope of being saved (v.20). After going for a long time without food, Paul stands before them and encourages them. He shares with them that the night before, an angel of God had appeared to him and told him that he would indeed stand before Caesar and that all those in the ship with him would be saved (vv. 23-24). He then told them to take courage because he had faith in his God and believed that what God had told him would come to pass (v.25). Paul’s hope was in his God. He believed that God would deliver them all no matter how bad things looked. Life will at times throw us into negative situations - the kind of challenges where you can see no way out and your back is against a wall. That was how the people on Paul’s boat must have felt. They saw no way out of that storm except death, and they lost all hope of being saved. But it was at that point that God showed up and gave them hope when they felt all hope was lost. God may not always show up at the beginning when things are fairly bearable. Many times, He may choose to show up when we are at the end of our rope and we have just about given up. Let’s be real. If we can solve the problem ourselves then we would not need God. It may seem as if He is always late but He knows exactly when to show up and even though we may feel like it’s over, when He steps onto the scene it’s not over at all. Unfortunately, the boat was shipwrecked but all 276 people on board were saved - just as God had promised (v.22). The thing with God is this: when He gives us His Word, we can be assured that He will bring it to pass. Numbers 23:19 says: “God is not a man that He should lie, nor a son of man that He should repent. Has He said and will He not do or has He spoken and will He not make it good? God is a God of His Word. He always keeps His promises to us. This is what affirms Him as the God of hope, a God in whom we can trust and expect to help us when we need it. So, no matter what you are already facing at the start of this new year or what you may face as the year progresses, God is still the God of hope and He does not and will not change. He is the God we can rely on when all hope is gone and we feel like giving up. I encourage you, don’t give up on God because He will not give up on you. If you have not accepted Jesus Christ into your life as your personal Lord and Saviour, I encourage you to do so today. God desires to deliver us, help us, save us. He will always be there and choose to be our help when we need it. He doesn’t go back on His Word and it is in this reality that we can have hope. Be encouraged! What if the hope in your heart is bigger than the negativity surrounding you? Have there been times when the situation you were facing was so challenging that even family and friends encouraged you to give up? Not because they didn’t want a breakthrough for you but because they just couldn’t see your deliverance. Maybe it wasn’t family and friends, but the situation itself was so negative, so hopeless, so discouraging that you made the decision to give up. You know what God’s Word says and God may have even spoken a Word to you but that giant just seemed too big for you to handle. Maybe so much time had elapsed that you made the decision to give up, believing that maybe God wasn’t going to do it after all. Whatever your situation, the reality is that God did not create this life without including hope. Even from the very beginning when Adam and Eve sinned, God had already made provision for man’s redemption: “And I will put enmity between you and the woman and between your seed and her Seed; He shall bruise your head and you shall bruise His heel.” (Genesis 3:15) There are many stories in the Bible about hope. In fact, when you think about it, the Bible is God’s gift to man, reminding us that we have hope in Him to face whatever comes our way. One of the many stories that come to mind is the story in the New Testament about the woman with the issue of blood (Mark 5:25-34; Luke 8:43-48). She had suffered with a blood issue for twelve long years. She had used up all of her financial resources trying to get help from various doctors but at the end of it, she still could not be healed. It can be a difficult thing when you use up all of your resources trying to help yourself but nothing works. It’s discouraging when no one or nothing you turn to seem to have the answers you need. I imagine this is how that woman felt - discouraged. Every time hope glimmered through a doctor or medication she was told could help her, it was devastating, I am sure, when nothing worked. To see her finances dry up must have been the last straw. Let’s face it, when you have the money or the material resources to help yourself, you feel encouraged. But when things don’t work out and all your resources are used up, that can be devastating. It can be difficult at that point to hold on to hope, especially when your hope lay in what you had in your hand. But when your hands are empty and options are non-existent, what do you do? It was at this point, that Jesus entered the picture. When the woman thought she had no hope left, stories she may have heard about Jesus’ miraculous healings caught her attention. That glimmer of hope rose up in her again. But it wasn’t just a glimmer. This woman was an outcast, considered ceremonially unclean according to Jewish custom, because of her bleeding issue. But when she heard about Jesus, I imagine that that hope became way bigger than just a glimmer. Somehow she expected that her answer had finally come. At that point, her hope in Jesus was bigger than her sickness, than her depleted finances, than her rejection, than the consequences of breaking Jewish custom. And she was not disappointed! Before, her hands were filled with what she could do to help herself but these had failed her. Now, when she touched the very edge of His garment, her hands - and entire body - became filled with all she needed from the One who could do the impossible! When our hope in our God is bigger than what we are going through, bigger than the opinions of others, bigger than the reality of our situation, like that woman, it gives us the motivation to push past everything to reach the One who has the answer we need. In Christ, you are never without hope, no matter how big your giant may be. If you have not accepted Jesus Christ into your life as your personal Lord and Saviour, I encourage you to do so today. God is the God of hope and when we put our trust in Him, He will not fail us! One common thing that many of us do at the start of the year, is to make resolutions. For many, the new year is the opportunity for a do-over, to do better than we did the year before, to create and accomplish goals so that we can live a happy and healthy life. I don’t need to remind us of what actually happens to many of our well-intentioned goals as the year progresses. We may start off enthusiastic and focused but as the days turn into weeks and the weeks into months, we are not as focused and as determined as when the year began. At the end of the day, what drives us at the beginning of the year is hope - the hope that we can do those things that would make our lives better and help us feel more accomplished. The Bible is filled with stories of hope. In fact, the whole story of salvation and redemption is one of hope. In Romans 15:13 we read, “Now may the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, that you may abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.” First and foremost, the verse begins by reminding us that God is the God of hope. It is in Him that we find our hope. I remember a few years ago after becoming ill, when I felt hopeless and wanted to give up. God reminded me that when I have no hope, He is my hope. I did not need to look for hope within myself. God is my hope and would give me the courage and strength I needed to go on. That popular verse, Jeremiah 29:11 says: “For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.” God is the God of hope. When everything around us - or in us - seems to be falling apart, God is the only One to give us the hope we need to keep going, to keep fighting, to keep living. Have you ever reached the point where you are discouraged, you may even want to give up, but you can’t help but acknowledge that God and God alone would get you through this? There are times when we can run to friends, family or some other form of support. But there may also be times when you know that you know that not even these can help. It’s going to have to be God and God alone to do it. There are a number of stories in the Bible of people who were in impossible situations but trusted God to bring them through. Abraham was given a promise by God that he would be the father of many nations. Yet, his wife was barren and they were both well-advanced in age. Yet, in Romans 4:18 it states: “Against all hope, Abraham in hope believed and so became the father of many nations, just as it had been said to him, 'So shall your offspring be.'" Abraham did not look at the reality of his circumstances but at the ability of his God to fulfil His own promise to him. His hope was in his God not in himself or his wife. In Romans 15:13 the hope is that, this same God of hope might “fill you with all joy and peace in believing, that you may abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.” When you put your hope, your trust in God, you can actually experience joy and peace in the midst of negative situations because you know that God’s got you and His grace will sustain you. Have you ever experienced that kind of joy and peace in the midst of a challenge? It’s simply because your hope is in God, the One that you know can do the impossible. Your confidence is rooted in the reality that your God will take care of you and He will see you through. Hope is not based on what you can see or feel but on who God is and His consistently successful track record for sustaining and seeing His people through difficult situations. So, I encourage us today to put our trust in the God of hope, the God who will hold us up when we can’t even hold ourselves up. Isaiah 41:10 says, “Fear not for I am with you. Be not dismayed for I am your God. I will strengthen you, yes I will help you. I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.” That’s God’s promise to us, to sustain and keep us as we navigate life’s challenges. He knows we can’t do it on our own so He has given us the assurance of His presence and His help. This is where our hope lies, in the God who has promised to be there for us when we need it. If you have not accepted Jesus Christ into your life as your personal Lord and Saviour, I encourage you to do so today. God knows that this life can be challenging. He desires to be that hope that anchors us and helps us to make it through whatever comes our way. Just trust Him! |
Archives
March 2026
AuthorThis blog provides inspirational nuggets inspired by the Word of God and serves to encourage and motivate Christians in their Christian walk. |