Tag Archives: hope

When the World Wobbles, Hold Fast

Dear Friends, 

Does it feel as though we are living in strange days? Uncertainty everywhere. A cost-of-living squeeze. Politics that serves to divide rather than unite. And underneath it all – a quiet weariness. Many have lost trust in leaders, institutions, and sometimes even in each other. 

But here’s the thing: moments like this are exactly when the church comes into its own. The church was born in shaky times. The apostle Peter did not walk in calm waters but stepped out into a raging storm![1]Somehow, amidst it all, those first followers became known as people of hope. 

That’s our calling too. Not to stoke the flames of mistrust and fear, nor to escape uncertainty or hide away from it. Rather, when the world wobbles, we are to hold fast, to courageously stand, and even to walk amidst the storms.  

Perhaps this is the time for a rebirth/a renewal of the church.

Faith that keeps pressing on

The book of Hebrews says faith is ‘confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.’[2]It’s trusting that Jesus hasn’t gone to sleep and stopped working[3], even when we can’t make sense of what’s going on. True faith doesn’t deny the ferocity of the wind, the waves and the circumstances, but it chooses not to focus on them; instead, it re-orients its gaze to look upon the wonder and beauty of our Lord Jesus, who calls us to press onwards. 

That’s the kind of faith the world needs to see modelled right now – Steady. Courageous. Honest. Real. A faith that doesn’t flinch at bad news, but that trusts that Jesus is still Lord, and that His Kingdom is still coming! 

A more wonder-filled story

It’s easy to let the world’s distrust and fear creep into the church. We get over-cautious. We assume the worst. Our differences automatically become divisions. We withdraw. But our life together can tell a more wonder-filled story – when we speak truthfully and graciously, forgive freely, serve humbly and above all fix our eyes on Jesus and let his Spirit guide our life together. Then something beautiful can happen – trust grows again, wounds start to heal, fractured relationships start being woven together, and people step more fully into their identity in Christ. Not because God’s people get everything right, but because the grace and love we share make room for imperfect people to belong. 

Jesus said that the world would recognise us by our love, not our polish.[4]  So, let’s be communities where people can breathe again. What binds us – Jesus and his mission – is stronger than anything that might seek to tear us apart. 

Hope that acts

Christian hope is not wishful thinking – it’s a way of life. We believe in the resurrection, so let’s equip and encourage one another to live every part of our lives in ways that demonstrate that we actually do.  Then, when fear drives people to hoard, we stay generous. When we might be tempted to focus on preserving our own entitlements or freedoms, we might instead prioritise a focus on living out our responsibilities. When outrage fills the headlines, we practise gentleness. When loneliness isolates, we open our doors. For hope takes shape in small, faithful choices like a shared meal, a prayer whispered, an invitation to gossip turned down, a friendship rebuilt.

None of it feels headline-worthy, but that’s exactly how light breaks into the darkness. Every small act of grace, every choice to live as resurrection people, serves to push back the despair and proclaims, ‘The story is not over yet!’

Anchored and advancing

The cross is still our anchor. When everything else feels shaky, the cross reminds us that God can bring victory out of death, healing through pain and a renewed identity through loss. Hope doesn’t deny the wounds – instead, it carries them, just like the risen Christ – and just like the risen Christ, hope keeps on walking. 

Maybe God is using this season – all its uncertainty and humbling – to form a deeper, truer, more Christ-like church. A church less focused on image and more rooted in love. Less anxious about its rights and own survival than it is about its responsibilities toward others and being alive to the life and work of the Holy Spirit. Less concerned with buildings and programmes and more about presence – equipping and sending people to be a light on every street and bring grace and truth into every context and conversation. 

That kind of church can withstand any shaking[5], because its focus and anchor is the rock – Jesus, not the circumstances, however tumultuous, that surround. 

So, here’s my prayer…

That we would be a people of credible hope – looking to Jesus, living in the light and life of the Spirit, faithful in worship, steady in trouble, generous in grace and love.

When trust feels fragile, we might seek to rebuild it 

That we will never respond out of a negative place of fear or defensiveness, but rather that we would respond from a place of love and hope, and our belief in a more wonder-filled way…. the humble way of the cross.

So that if the world grows darker, our light won’t flicker, but instead will shine all the brighter 

Not because we are strong, but because Christ is risen!  

For the sake of Jesus and for the sake of the world! 

Amen! 

‘May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.’ (Romans 15:13) 

We don’t know what’s ahead, but we know who goes with us. Let’s keep walking – eyes up, full of hope – not in the world, but in Christ Jesus, the one who is more than able to completely save, even in the fiercest of storms.

With much love and prayer, 

Lindsay


[1] Matthew 14:22-33

[2] Hebrews 11:1

[3] Mark 4: 38-40

[4] John 13:35

[5] Hebrews 12:27

Modelling hope amidst the chaos….

The words below are words that I spoke at our church gathering on Sunday 26th June 2016. This was the Sunday immediately following the E.U referendum. These words are as pertinent today (for me at least) as they were then.

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This week we wake up in new era…there have been some seismic shifts that have taken place politically over the past few days. Some of us here will have been elated at the news that we are going to be leaving the EU. We may feel thrilled that at last our views have been heard. Others may be pretty devastated….some have indeed spoken to me of a profound sense of loss…of feeling like exiles within their own land. Within this church community we will hold a range of views and a range of emotions. 

People on both sides of the referendum have expressed a creeping sense of fear now that the genie is well and truly out of the bottle now. David Cameron has resigned…..we await to see whether Boris Johnson or someone else will be the next (and presumably unelected Prime Minister). The labour leadership is looking distinctly shaky. It looks as if Scotland may vote to declare independence from England, Wales and Northern Ireland….the whole integrity of the EU is being called into question as other nations talk about the possibility of their referenda and there is there is the constant danger of the far right rising up. 

I think that the woeful campaigns by both Leave and Remain and the woeful behaviour since have allowed us to blame the ‘other’ without ever looking at ourselves. Race, religion, class and more have all played their part in the most unpleasant domestic political campaign most of us have ever witnessed.

Whatever our views on Thursday’s vote, these monumental changes are things that we desperately need to bring to God! 

God is still God! God is still sovereign and He is still in control! 

Echoing the words of Psalm 46 are the words of a song we sing to the Dambusters theme tune…..

God is our strength and refuge,

Our present help in trouble;

and we therefore will not fear,

though the earth should change!

Though mountains shake and tremble,

though swirling floods are raging,

God the Lord of hosts is with us evermore!

 

God would say to each of us Peace…‘Be still and know that I AM God!’ 

I would ask that we be gentle with each other? Here in our church gathering, amongst our families, in our work places and our community. It would be easy to gloat in our referendum victory or rage like a spoilt child in our loss, but instead let’s seek to work together to influence the future of the UK so that it doesn’t become isolated and insular. So that we can exercise leadership in the world…so that we can build bridges and not walls, so that we can bring the values of heaven to earth……so that we can bring hope, compassion, justice, mercy and love to the places in this world where love is not!? The church has a key role to play in modelling transformative healing…..and we need to pray over the coming days, weeks and months that God helps us to do just that.