Read: Romans 15:4-6 & 13
Sometimes we come to a place where our zeal for God is
gone. Our soul is stagnant. We don’t have any more strength
to face things.
When we get like this it’s not necessarily because we
committed some gross secret sin or because we’re physically
exhausted. Many times this inner flatness of soul comes
to us simply because we’ve neglected one of the basic
gifts God gave us when He brought us into His Kingdom.
When God brings a man or woman to His Son and causes them
to be born again of His Spirit, that person immediately
is given three gifts — basic to every other gift talked
about in scripture.
First, that person is given faith — the power to see the
unseen and hold on to it. None of us has ever seen Jesus
with these eyes of flesh. Yet, there are people in this
room who are going to willingly die for His name because
they have faith. Of course, to keep this gift you have
to do something with it. If you don’t exercise faith it
gradually fades.
Secondly, God gives to the believer the power to love
other people the way God loves.
Love is of God and he who loves is born
of God and knows God.
What the believer does with this power to love deter-
mines whether he grows up into the likeness of Jesus
Christ or whether he degenerates into an empty shell,
a fruitless branch that will be thrown into the fire.
But there is a third gift, a very important and often
neglected one: the gift of hope.
— The power to look forward and see the goal.
— The power to hold that vision of heaven even
when we have to walk through absolute darkness.
Like the other two gifts, this gift of hope has to be
nurtured, cultivated, exercised.
If you lose your hope, your faith and love
will soon go down the drain too.
Many of us have a shaky faith and a dubious love in our
hearts because our hope is sick, because we have allowed
our vision of the glory that lies ahead to fade.
When Christian, in Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress, got to
the Cross and the burden rolled from his back, he was
given a scroll with writing on it which he was to read
as he traveled to the Celestial City. This scroll was
his hope.
While Christian was climbing up the Hill Difficulty,
he stopped at an arbor half-way up and went to sleep
and the scroll fell out of his hand. He woke with a
start, the day was almost spent and he hurried up the
hill. As he got to the top two men came running toward
him and warned Christian that there were lions up ahead
that would tear him to pieces. It was then that Christian
reached into his coat for his scroll and it was gone.
Without that scroll, without this hope Christian knew that
he couldn’t face the lions. So, he climbed down the hill
to the arbor where he had fallen asleep and looked until
he found his scroll.
This is exactly what many of us need to do. Somewhere
along the road we fell asleep and our hope dropped out of
our hands. We need to go back and find it. We won’t get
anywhere until we do.
Don’t underestimate the gift of Hope which God gave you.
For it’s not hope in some dream that will vanish like
vapor, it’s hope that is anchored to a glory that will
still be shining when the heavens and the earth have
passed away.
Christ in you, the hope of glory.
1. When you have this hope within you, it keeps you from
settling down in this world.
You have seen a vision of God’s Kingdom that makes you
an alien and an exile in this world. Now you see every-
thing in this world as temporary and passing.
— Your home.
— Your job.
— Your family.
— Your own body.
When friends beckon you to come and settle you just have
no heart for it. How can you be content with this vale
of shadows when you have seen glory? So you press on.
You’re on your way to a better country.
You’re seeking a city whose builder and maker is God.
2. When you have this hope within you, it keeps you from
getting discouraged.
You can’t be discouraged when you see glory up ahead.
People think that they are discouraged by their circum-
stances. That’s not true. They are discouraged by the
absence of hope. When we lose our scroll we can be
discouraged by a gust of wind.
On the other hand, when we have that scroll, tragedy
after tragedy can come crashing against our lives and
somehow we keep going.
Many of us have been careless with this gift of hope.
— We have allowed the vision God gave us
to tarnish.
— We have taken our heart off the vision
and let our heart wander around down here
in the shadows.
— We have lost our scroll.
Ah, but how good God is! The minute we start looking,
He helps us to find it. In Bunyan’s story, Christian
knew that it was God who helped him find his scroll so
quickly.
And how quickly Jesus restored hope to the despairing
Peter.
Simon, son of Jonas, do you love me?....
Feed my sheep.
When Stephen was about to be stoned to death, the Spirit
pulled back the veil and enabled Stephen to see glory.
“Behold I see the heavens opened and the Son
of Man standing at the right hand of God.”
And that vision of glory sustained him even as the rage
of an angry mob closed in on him and killed him.
So God sustains our hope by enabling us to taste glory
again and again.
— It’s not a feeling.
— It’s not a matter of sight or touch,
but a beholding with our spirit, in the blazing light of
God’s Spirit, the Christ who is the hope of glory and who
is in us.
1. We need to be tasting glory in the scriptures.
“...that by steadfastness and by the
encouragement of scriptures we might
have hope.”
Many believers haven’t begun to taste glory in the
scriptures. They’re missing the most important reason
why the scriptures have been preserved to us. The
scriptures are the witness of ordinary people like our-
selves, weak people, elfish and sinful people, whose lives
had never- the-less been visited by God’s glory and
changed by that glory.
Whether you’re reading the testimony of Moses, Isaiah,
or the Virgin Mary, or Peter, in every case glory from
beyond this world came to them. The glory of the only
begotten of the Father somehow broke into their darkness
and spoke to them. And when you open this book and read
the witness of these people, their word is confirmed.
The same Christ who shone upon them starts
shining upon you afresh.
You enter their world and you find yourself looking out
across a timeless gulf and beholding the glory of the
living God shining down on His Son and blazing out to
you and quickening your whole being.
When you go to the scriptures daily --- and I doubt if a
person is serious with God who doesn’t go to them daily.
Don’t be satisfied,
— until you start tasting glory,
— until you begin to breathe the atmosphere
of heaven,
as you read the testimony of the prophets and apostles
of the Lord.
2. We need to be tasting glory through harmony with
brothers and sisters around Jesus.
May the God of steadfastness and
encouragement grant you to live in
such harmony with one another in
accord with Christ Jesus.
— Harmony with brothers arid sisters around
Jesus is always a foretaste of glory.
— Disharmony is always a warning of hell.
How few Christian homes and how few fellowships of be-
lievers live in harmony with one another in accord with
Christ Jesus. An occasional half-hour of harmony sand-
wiched between days and weeks of tension,
resentment,
gossip,
bickering,
grudges,
suspicion.
No wonder we lose our vision!
Do you doubt that God will give us the power to live in
harmony if we make the slightest effort to get off our
high horse and repent of our stubbornness?
Do you doubt that God will help us live together and
work together as brothers and sisters under the cross
if we are willing to conform our own lives to the mind
of Christ?
Either we live in harmony with one another in accord
with Christ Jesus or we give up whatever vision of glory
we ever had. We lose our hope.
Now if your brother or sister is hard-headed, that’s their
problem and they will have to do something about it. But
your brother’s hard-headedness will never destroy your
hope. If your hope is being destroyed, it’s your hard-
headedness, your jarring spirit, your evil attitude.
And, it’s not a matter of making pacts with each other,
not a matter of endlessly airing our dirty