Where Do You Place Your Hope?
This weekend I was asked to teach third, and fourth-grade kids about
Hope from a Bible passage found in 1 Thessalonians 4. This particular passage is commonly used to
encourage Christians about the hope we have in Jesus Christ, which leads us
home after we pass away.
It is an interesting passage to
teach to young people whose thoughts are often far from death. As we age, it is more common to contemplate
death as we have much more experience with losing loved ones. In the Thessalonian passage, believers concerned
themselves with the location of their loved ones once they died. These early believers thought Jesus was returning
soon, so they were perplexed by why Christians were dying before his return as
Paul taught that Jesus conquered death.
It was customary for Paul to write letters to encourage the churches
that were planted during his three missionary trips, and the book of first Thessalonians
represented one of his many letters called epistles.
The children in my Sunday School room were given activity sheets to
color, which would reveal the hidden word ‘hope’ when they used various colored
pencils to fill in shapes according to instructions given. We talked about what hopes they had for their
futures. As with any Sunday School
setting, you can guess they were trying to give me the Biblical response. I encouraged them by steering them gently
into conversations about their upcoming school year. Did they have hopes for a specific
teacher? Did they hope that certain
classmates would be assigned the same classroom? Did they hope that certain activities would
occur during their summer break from school?
If we are truthful regarding the things we hope for, it is more likely
that we will see that we are possibly more ‘earth-bound’ when defining our hope
for the future, and less likely to think about heavenly aspirations. It is not until we place our thoughts
intentionally on eternity that we lift our sights beyond the here and now with
the understanding that this life is but a vapor in comparison to the forever we’ve
been promised. If it weren’t for
tremendous persecution, the Thessalonians might not have sought comfort from
Paul regarding their future hope in salvation.
They feared death, which is to be fully human.
I am many decades removed from the age of eight and nine-year-olds, so I
needed to consider how to share this passage with them. I shared with them that I had been given three
exposures to the topic of death this week, which was highly outside the normal
thoughts I entertain. I told them that
because of this, I found it easy to relate to what the Thessalonians must have
felt.
My first exposure to death was when I was encouraging a friend who is
about my age, whose mother is very ill.
My friend is greatly comforted by her mother’s faith example. My friend credits her mother with much
fruitfulness for God’s Kingdom. Her mother
is suffering greatly, so death would bring relief to her tired body. This kind of death gives us hope for their
future even when we know that we will miss them greatly. We also have hope that we will rejoin them
someday in heaven and have a great reunion.
My second exposure wasn’t so lovely.
I learned of an acquaintance who after battling a rapid decline in health
had passed away in his early forties.
It is very difficult to learn about the death of someone so young, but
what was even more tragic was concerns for his ultimate destination. He had been in an accident as a young man which caused him to struggle with his faith. His relationship with God had been shattered because of the accident. He had drifted away from his devotion to God suffering possibly due to the faulty logic that bad things shouldn't happen to good people. His family, deeply concerned for his
salvation, had spent much time while his body grew weaker to reason with him
about God’s ways. I am not aware of his
ultimate decision but know that even if he returned to God before his final
breath that God would be faithful to him.
My daily Bible passage that I read just before teaching these
young kids was in James 5:19-20 which says, “My brothers, if anyone among you
wanders from the truth and someone brings him back, let him know that whoever
brings back a sinner from his wanderings will save his soul from death and will
cover a multitude of sins.” It is of utmost
importance that we consider our responsibility as Christians as we relate to
this verse. What is the loving response
we are to have as we invest ourselves in the life of others?
My third exposure came to me as a history lesson and how I would choose
to look at future opportunities to speak about the plan of salvation. A few weeks ago, I was traveling with my
family in northern Michigan. We found
ourselves in Traverse City, where we have many fond memories of prior
excursions. While talking about memories,
I found myself pondering memories of traveling there on business in the late 1990s. Two of my past co-workers were from that area,
and I was thinking about all the great people I use to know. One of these co-workers surfaced on my
Facebook feed last week. I had just been
speaking to my husband about this young man who had been in his early twenties
but now in his mid-to-late thirties appeared to be married. I was happy for him. Through God’s providence, I would make
another connection to a co-worker whom I had been much closer with, we shared
office space and had traveled extensively together while installing software at
maybe thirty or forty locations. I had
also been great friends with his wife, who worked for the same company. We had invited them to our wedding reception seventeen
years ago. When life takes on a new
direction, it is easy to have old ties drift off our radar. Rather than connect to my office mate, I
decided to connect with his lovely wife.
I searched throughout Facebook but could not locate her. She was nowhere to be found until I saw this
post, dated September 2018, “She passed away yesterday."
As I continued to read, my heart lodged in my throat. My friend had suffered for four years with a
debilitating condition that removed her from a normal life before she passed
away. I read of the impact my co-worker
had made on his family through his devotion to her through illness and
death. Instantly I found myself saddened
by the news and then anxious. The
anxiety that welled up inside of me was due to my uncertainty. Had she given her life over to Christ? I was comforted by a few memories but
dumbfounded by the recognition of how little regard I had given to conversations
about faith, even when I professed to be a Christian. As this story suggests, I considered my failure,
not of neglecting a friendship, but in avoiding critical conversations. Who do we know where we have not invested in
knowing the state of their beliefs?
With these three exposures, (1) death of a faith-filled-Christian, (2)
death of a back-sliding believer, and (3) death with an uncertain outcome, it seems
worthy of consideration the fruitfulness of my journey. For this, the Bible says Christians will be
judged.
This morning my daily reading took me to a Bible passage found in 1
Peter 1, where Peter is writing to the exiled Christians living away from their
homeland, much like us living here on earth.
He said, ‘Therefore, prepare your minds for action, be sober-minded, set
your hope fully on the grace that will be brought to you at the revelation of
Jesus Christ.’ You can find this passage
in 1 Peter 1:13. I have paraphrased the
verb tense of this passage for personalization.
This passage jumped off the page for my consideration. It doesn’t matter whether a passage begins
with “Therefore,” however if it does, it is worth investigating its
meaning. So I asked myself these two
questions, (1) What does it mean to prepare my mind for action? And (2) How
should I interpret the word 'sober-minded?'
I often investigate the meaning of passages by reviewing what skilled
Bible teachers, like John Piper (Desiring God), have to say. I was thankful for clarity because I am
certain that it will impact my future actions and conversations.
To the first question, What does it mean to prepare my mind for action,
I was doing just that in my investigation.
When we look at how to apply the Truth of Scriptures to our lives, we
are preparing our minds for action. This action helps to secure our confidence
(hope) in the gift of grace that God has provided for us through his Son, Jesus
Christ. To the second question, How should
I interpret the word 'sober-minded,' I discovered that this is not limited to the consumption
of alcohol that dulls our senses but to all mind-numbing activities. How
often do I find myself veggie-out in front of a screen because I am bored or
tired? John (Piper) says that any
activity which promotes a numbing effect that distracts us from our calling to
share the gospel should be under consideration.
When I think of the time I’ve wasted or the opposite extreme, being too
busy, either side of this equation, I miss God’s best. Both fall outside the nature of
sober-mindedness.
So was I able to teach the kids in Sunday School about hope? After gathering many thoughts about hope, we
focused on our ultimate hope to spend eternity with Jesus. We talked about whether we had people in our
lives who didn’t know our Savior. We spoke
about what it meant to be a Christian.
We agreed that we all had people in our lives where we felt uncertain
about their faith in Jesus Christ. We
asked questions about what it meant to be an encourager. We thought about some ways a young person might be an encourager. We reviewed the plan of Salvation; we saw how
the apostle Paul wrote letters to believers and responded with love. Last we talked
about putting our hope on God’s promises and how we should focus on eternity. I felt blessed by the opportunity to share
this message of Hope with young people.
If you have interest in reading what John Piper has to say about 1 Peter 1:13, you can find this article entitled “Girding the Mind to
Guard your Hope” on the Desiring God website.
It is dated November 1993. Truths
found in God’s Scripture never are outdated.
QUESTION:
1.
Review the passage found in James 5:19-20? Does anyone’s name come to mind that you need
to talk to about the hope for eternity?
2.
Who do you know where a gospel conversation would bring clarity to
understanding their beliefs, bringing you less anxiety in their death?
3. What does “setting your hope on
grace” found in 1 Peter 1:13 mean to you? Have you been setting hope in something
different? (Your Faith or Works?) It is
not about what we do, but what God has done on our behalf.
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