George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
December 3
The Living Hope
Blessed be the God and Father of our
Lord Jesus Christ, who, according to his abundant mercy, hath begotten us again
unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead--1Pe 1:3
One of the glorious things in our religion
is the preeminence it gives to hope. There is a radiant hopefulness in
Christianity that is discoverable in no other faith. When the Gospel was first
preached, the hopes of men were practically dead. As one of the old satirists
expresses it, the world had the death-rattle in its throat. And then came the
message of the Gospel, and everywhere, like the blossoming of spring, hope
began to blossom in the world. As Peter puts it here, men were begotten into
hope. The first effect of being born again was the awakening of hope within the
heart. Like little children opening their eyes on the face of a mother bending
over them, men, reborn, looked on the face of hope. Life was no longer dull and
dreary and desperate. Hope touched the bitterest experiences. The song of hope
sounded through the night and could not be silenced even by the grave. It is
difficult for us to realize the tremendous difference that Gospel hope made in
a world whose highest reach was Stoicism.
Begotten Into a Living Hope
Now the interesting thing is that here St.
Peter calls that hope a living hope. And in that word living there is a wealth
of importance that all our thinking never can exhaust. It implies that other
hopes are dying. They grow dim and fade away and vanish. They buoy us up and
lure us on, and, having accomplished that, they disappear. But though that
contrast was in Peter's mind, and in the mind of every reader of his letter,
there was something far more positive than that. A living hope is a hope that
answers life. It is a hope that is commensurate with life. It moves triumphant
through every sphere of life in which the regenerate man may fret himself. Let
life bring with it what it will in the whole range of possible experience, and
the shining of the living hope is there. It is always easy to be hopeful when
we see the glory of a new dawn. There are times when men are as naturally
hopeful as birds are naturally musical. But to be hopeful when things are dead
against us and life is cruel and not a star is shining, that is the victory
which overcomes the world. A hope like that is never natural. It is something
into which we are begotten. It lives in the harshest experience of life. It
moves and has its being in Gethsemane. Thus it is called a living hope because
it interpenetrates the whole of life and brightens even the darkness of the
grave. Such was the hope of Jesus. It shone through every chamber of His being.
It was radiant in the agonies of Calvary not less than among the lilies of the
field. It was a hope commensurate with life in its whole expanse of suffering
and sorrow--and into that living hope we are begotten.
The Certainty of Future Blessedness
Then this living hope, St. Peter tells us,
is based on the certainty of future blessedness, and here we must be careful to
distinguish. Very commonly, in the New Testament, heaven is set as the object
of our hope. It is for that sweet country that the heart is longing; it is the
hope of God's elect as the hymn says. But sometimes as in our present passage, heaven
is not the object of our hope, but the great certainty from which there springs
the new-born spirit of hopefulness in life. Tell me that death ends everything
and that my strivings are never to be crowned, and I may still toil and suffer
on, "with head bloody but unbowed." But tell me that a fuller life is
coming when the broken arc will grow into the circle, and hope sings its music
in my heart. The sea shore is a dull and dreary place when over it is nothing
but the mist. But when the vault of the sunlit heaven over-arches it, the
barren sand becomes a thing of beauty. And only when the mist goes and the blue
of heaven is radiant over life, does glory lie on the path of our pilgrimage.
Every true believer hopes for heaven. He also hopes just because of heaven. He
is begotten into a living hopefulness because some day there is to be a
crowning. He does not struggle on despairingly as if everything were to be cast
into the void. He is the child and heir of immortality.
Because of Jesus' Resurrection
And then St. Peter tells us that we win
that hope by the rising of Jesus from the dead. We are begotten into a living
hope by the resurrection of the Lord. Note that the resurrection does not give
that hope, for it lies latent in the human breast. In every human heart, when
we decipher it, are intimations of immortality. The thoughts that wander
through eternity and the shadows that fall upon our hours of triumph and the
things on board of us "not wanted for the voyage," and the
"forever" graven on the heart of love, all these are stirrings, as of
a babe unborn, in the secret places of our being--all these are hints that
heaven is our home. The resurrection is not a bestowal. The resurrection is a
confirmation. It makes our latent hope a living hope. It brings the struggling
embryo to birth. All our human yearnings are authenticated by the tremendous
fact of resurrection. We are begotten into a living hope by the rising of Jesus
from the dead.
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