Advent: A 25-Day Countdown to ChristmasSample
How Can We Have Hope?
Is your life going to get better, or will it get worse?
How about the world? Will it get better, or will things spiral further out of control?
Or what about a person in your life who keeps making hurtful choices? Will they change? Or are they doomed to keep causing pain?
Delightful questions to start day two of a Christmas Bible Plan, right?
So why did we ask these questions? Because how you answer reveals your hope.
It’s easy for life to steal your hope, even if you’re naturally a “glass-half-full” kind of person. Tragedies, unrest, division, aging, and natural disasters can make it easy to feel like our best days are behind us or impossible to reach.
But is that true? Or could it be possible that by reflecting on the story of Scripture, we can find real, resilient, and realistic hope? The kind of hope that can keep you afloat, no matter your circumstances.
First, what is hope?
Hope is the wholehearted, evidence-based conviction that God is making the future better than the past or present.
Sounds great, but what evidence? Well, let’s go back in time to over 2,000 years ago.
In those days, in a province of the Roman empire called Judea, people were low on hope. Most of the evidence from the past told them to give up. A handful of powerful empires had steamrolled their people, and it seemed like their story was almost finished.
But God was still writing their story. And through both prophets and ordinary people, His message of hope spread throughout Judea: a promise He wouldn’t leave them alone in the darkness, but would come to save His people when the time was right.
But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. It’s only day two, after all. For today, ask yourself, “How’s my hope?” Ask God to help you renew your hope in Him.
Pause and Pray:
Thank You, God, for making me new in You. When things feel out of control or painful, please help me to remember that You’re working. Help me to build my hope step by step until I have complete faith in You. In Jesus’ name, amen.
Reflect or Discuss:
Where do you feel hopeless? What step can you take today to increase your hope?
About this Plan
Advent is a church tradition to help believers across the globe prepare their hearts for the arrival of Jesus. Over four weeks, we’ll look at themes of hope, peace, joy, and love in the biblical narrative leading up to Jesus’ birth, and how these themes can be applied to our Christmas season this year.
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