Are You Hoping or Wishing?
“But now, Lord, what do I look for?
My hope is in you.” - Psalm 39:7
The late Eugene Peterson, who
translated The Message Bible, pointed out that what a lot of people call
“hope” is really something different. It's wishing, not hoping: and wishing and
hoping are not the same thing.
He said, “Wishing is something all of us do. It
projects what we want or think we need into the future. Just because we wish
for something good or holy we think it qualifies as hope. It does not. Wishing
extends our egos into the future; hope grows out of our faith. Hope is oriented
toward what God is doing; wishing is oriented toward what we are doing.”
“Hope,” he continued, “means being surprised,
because we don't know what is best for us or how our lives are going to be
completed. To cultivate hope is to suppress wishing – to refuse to fantasize
about what we want, but live in anticipation of what God is going to do
next.”
When
Christ came into the world, He was the Messiah people hoped for, but not the
one many wished for. If most people had their way, Christ would have been born
in a grand palace – a place fit for a king. But God had other plans – plans
that included Christ being made low, born in a humble stable.
But isn’t that so much better? We don’t have a
Savior who looks down on us from high. He became like us so that He could save
us. What a wonderful blessing that Christ fulfilled hope, not a wish!
Prayer Challenge:
Thank
God that Christ came exactly as He planned – not in splendour but in humility.
Questions for Thought:
Why
do you think Jesus was born and lived much of His life in such humble
circumstances?
What does Christ’s humility teach you about
putting aside selfish ambition?