Hope is Not an Accident
“I hope we get to go swimming today.” “I hope the Avalanche win the Stanley cup.” I have said phrases like this all my life. I began to wonder about where does this hope come from? Hope is not an accident. Hope is an indicator, it is a bi-product of something going on within. When we refer to hope based on a circumstance or a specific context it reveals our affection, our hearts attention. It is normal and good to look forward and to anticipate things in our life that we enjoy. However most of those things are temporary. Hope that is robust, sturdy and eternal is something a bit different. Developing a hope that you can build a framework to live by is a process that takes time and begins with suffering.

Romans 5: 3-4
“Not only that, but we rejoice in our sufferings knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope.”
Discipline is the path that leads us to hope. Another word for discipline is routine. I am a creature of routine. I love it. It brings order to my life that seems to be teetering on the edge of chaos all the time. Routine helps me prioritize my values and make sure the “easy path” does not become my default. My routine involves consistently doing things that are initially hard and cause suffering. As time goes by, and the routine becomes ingrained, the suffering turns into anticipation and even joy. Endurance and me do not get along. The longer I am in ministry the more I understand that endurance is an emotionless essential in the journey to hope. I’ve heard so many quotes on character and so much of my world is built around developing character in others. I’m thinking that character is revealed. Who you are, your character is revealed in tough circumstances, in mundane and easy seasons of life. Your character is who you are. Something goes wrong, do you look to blame or take responsibility? When facing a conflict, do you avoid it or move towards it? When facing an obstacle do you quit and give up, or do you try and find a way around it? Do you give excuses or find solutions? I believe it is in the little things day after day that reveal our character. These daily opportunities can help us discover where we have placed our hope. Hope is not an accident. It is the bi-product of a process that reveals either a reliance on self or Jesus Christ.
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