The signs of new life are beginning to appear in the gardens and countryside. How encouraging it is to see the delicate snowdrops, the crocuses and the first of the daffodils. They stir in us the anticipation of the coming of Spring, and the end of another winter. Winter can be a difficult time with the long dark days, frost and the snow, floods and violent storms. But now the days are getting longer, the mornings are lighter and each day sunset is a little later. These things give us hope; something to which we can look forward.
Hope is in short supply today. World leaders are struggling to cope with many crises which seem to be beyond their power and skill to resolve. There is little hope for the future. Economic prospects are not good, even for the more prosperous countries of Europe. In parts of Africa, South America and Asia poverty blights the lives of millions of people. They live in basic homes, eat one meal a day and find it hard to pay school fees for their children. Life is very fragile and uncertain for many in the face of various diseases. The threat of extremism and terrorism is growing. The war in Ukraine is entering its fourth year. The conflict in Sudan continues to claim many lives. There is an uncertain peace in Gaza, and the Iran is becoming unstable.
Hope comes from God, even when we are passing through the darkest of situations. The apostle Paul wrote a letter to Christians living in Rome. They were already experiencing persecution and within a few years would face terrible persecution under the evil Emperor Nero. Near the end of the letter Paul writes, “May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.” What a wonderful view of the living God; he is “the God of hope!” He can “fill us with all joy and peace”, so that we “overflow with hope.” He gives us power and strength by his Holy Spirit to face the future with hope.
This hope becomes real in our lives as we look to God and “trust in him.” In Psalm 146 the psalmist writes, “Do not put your trust in princes, in human beings, who cannot save. When their spirit departs, they return to the ground; on that very day their plans come to nothing. Blessed are those whose help is the God of Jacob, whose hope is in the Lord their God.”