Power of Hope


It was recently announced that President Obama was this year’s recipient of the Noble Peace Prize. While this is quite an accomplishment, it was a surprise to many, including it seems to the President itself. As an Associated Press article that was written prior to the announcement stated, “U.S. President Barack Obama is thought to have been nominated but it’s unclear on what grounds.” (H/T John Miller). Upon the prize being awarded, many pundits speculated that it was bestowed mostly for the hope of what President Obama would achieve, rather than his actual accomplishments. (A prime reason for this speculation was that the nomination period for the Noble Peace Prize closed February 1, 2009 – only eleven days after President Obama had been in office.)

Now regardless of one’s opinion as to the worthiness of this selection, it’s easy to understand the motivation that hope can provide. Read Facebook statuses for a day and you’ll see this manifest itself many times over. People hope for a good day, a good job, and a good life. People express hope for a thousand things that they want that are seemingly possible to achieve. People want to believe in something greater than themselves and believe that their future will be bright. We want things to be different than they are and hope is the manifestation of this desire.

The rarely acknowledged, but astonishingly wonderful truth for Christians is that we have the greatest propellant for hope known to man. After all, our hope is not in a prize, or even in Earthly standards of determination, but in hope of eternity. We live with the confidence that when everything in this world returns to dust, we will be at our eternal home where there will be no need for a Nobel Peace Prize for the Prince of Peace will reign.

Let us not grow weary in hanging on to this hope. Better yet, let us make sure that we share in with others. It’s only through doing so that we can be assured that their hope will also be rooted in eternity…and that they will know truly noble peace (Romans 15:13).

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The Sacrifice of Others

A good friend of mine just voluntarily extended his contract with the Marine Infantry so that he could go to Iraq. As someone who’s been there before and who’s a leader of younger, less-experienced Marines, he felt that he could do some good by going. So he set aside his dreams for his future, and made a commitment to serve. Remarkably, he’s the second person in my immediate circle of friends to do so. The other returned earlier this year from his 4th tour in the war zone.

In reflecting on my friends’ decisions I was both saddened and amazed. Saddened because it is my desire for those I love to be as far away from danger as possible. Amazed because that type of sacrifice is worthy of our applaud. I find applauding the decisions astonishingly more difficult though when you know the people putting their life on the lines. It’s easier to praise when unknown faces are making the sacrifice. When it’s someone you care about, the pride in their character is mitigated by fear. The selfish part of me is quite willing to read about the sacrifice of others in the news, but doesn’t want her friends to do the same. I want them safe, protected, and able to live out their dreams, not in harm’s way where danger lurks.

And I’ve realized that a lot of life is like this. We want people to be remarkable, to willingly sacrifice and to give up their normal life so that we are protected, but most of us don’t want those to be our friends, our sons or our daughters. We can praise courageous acts more easily when the ones who pay the price aren’t those we love. Which makes God’s sacrifice of His son all the more remarkable. Not only did He shed a life for our sins, but the life of His most loved one was given. It wasn’t the sacrifice of an “other”; the sacrifice was His.

If we were to recognize that God’s sacrifice was complete and total, maybe we’d be more willing to sacrifice ourselves. And maybe, just maybe, we’d applaud a little louder when those we love do the same.

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