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HOPE our foundation and our life

  • Bishop Michael Hough
  • Feb 15
  • 3 min read

         

 

Hope thrives when darkness threatens



For St Thomas Aquinas Hope is born from the desire for something good that is difficult but possible to attain. There is no need for Hope if we can easily get what we want. Equally, there is no reason to Hope when what we desire is completely beyond our grasp.



 Aquinas also understands that there are far more reasons to be Hopeful when we have friends to rely on, when we are a part of a community of Hope filled believers.   But if the object of our Hope is something we can obtain on our own, then it is not a genuine biblical Hope. It will be limited in its power to endure beyond the present moment of need.  According to Aquinas, we do not Hope alone, we Hope together. Hope requires companions, people who earnestly desire to have God’s goodness flow into our lives, and people who help us along the way.



Christian Hope should never be timid, because when Aquinas spoke of help from others and friends we can rely on, he was talking about God. Like any friend, what God desires for us is our happiness.  He seeks what is best for us.  What God wants for us is the richest and most fulfilling gift of all:  everlasting life in His divine presence.  The best news of all is that like any friend, God walks with us on this sacred pilgrimage, blesses us, guides us, and encourages us so that all we could ever hope for will be ours.


Hope drives us towards God


Despite how hard we might try, Hope is not something we achieve through hard work and determination. Hope more than anything else is a gift. Hope is the gift God bestows on us so that we can reorient our lives towards Him. Hope drives us to the seeking out of God, and so to grow in divine goodness and love.  Best of all, hope enables us to live in perfect communion with God. That is the End towards which Hope is directing us.



Christianity expands our horizons because we are enabled to see ourselves as a part of the story of God’s saving love and power. It is a narrative revealed to us in the scripture, a revelation of what God offers us, gifts well beyond our capacity to achieve under our own steam.


A further aspect of the scope of Christian hope, one that should encourage us, is the way hope is not determined by our power, or by the resources we can apply to our lives, our talents, ingenuity, or anything else. 


Hope permeates our thoughts, and our actions, and all we might ponder or strive to achieve when we enfold our lives more fully into God.   God’s love is inexhaustible.  God’s love floods our very souls, transforming us in ways we might not even notice.



Pope Benedict XVI wrote The one who has hope lives differently; the one who hopes has been granted the gift of a new life. These words remind us that hope is not a fleeting emotion.  Nor is it an attitude that fades when life grows hard and complicated.   Hope makes us resilient in the darkest of moments by filling us with trust, confidence and perseverance.


Hope empowers us to live differently because a Christian understanding of hope is rooted in the unshakable conviction that God loves us and God desires only what is good for us.  Paul understood this as he highlights in Romans…If God is for us, who can be against us? (8:31). To live with hope is to take those words to heart and to allow that knowledge to change our lives.  And God does surprise us.   

                           

What God wants for us is our good



Here is something God has revealed to us: to live in hope is to want nothing less for ourselves than what God wants for us. If we know that and strive to live according to what God wants for us, then in what ways will our lives change?  At the very least, it will liberate us from the fruitless pastime of always comparing our status and achievements with others. This is the key: because God is for us and wants our good, we do not have to be anxious and fearful, calculating, and cautious. Hope means we leave all things in the safe and reliable hands of God. 



Because Hope frees us from the burden of those earthly pastimes, we have time to love our neighbours. We have time to be merciful and compassionate, patient and generous. We have time to listen and to encourage and support others because we know, thanks to the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, that what God’s love has in mind for us will be fulfilled. Absolutely. Fully, in an overabundance of loving mercy.

 

 

Bishop Michael Hough                             No.3                                            January 2025

 
 
 

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