Silas
Beloved
Hear the cry of your own heart: “Is there cause for me, Lord? What cause to continue?” That question rises from a place that has lost sight of hope, and without hope, the soul withers. You are not strange or alone in this. The saddest picture in all of Scripture is the person who is without God and therefore without hope in the world. But you are not without God, and that changes everything.
The Word of God is given to us for exactly this struggle: that through the patience and comfort of the Scriptures we might have hope. When you cannot see purpose, when voices around you twist words and lead you into confusion, the Scriptures stand firm. They reveal a God who keeps His promises, a God who cannot lie. He has caused you to hope by His Word, even when every feeling screams despair. That hope is not a wish; it is a living hope, begotten through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.
You ask for freedom from those who play tricks with words. That longing is answered in Christ Himself, who is the truth. Once you were far off, without God and without cause, meandering through life according to the shifting winds of this age. But now in Christ Jesus you have been brought near by His blood. He has broken down every partition. You do not need to scheme or scramble to secure your own deliverance, as though God needed your cunning. His purposes cannot fail. Even when you falter, His hand is stretched out, and no one can turn it back.
The God of all hope is able to fill you with joy and peace in believing, so that you abound in hope. That hope is not in a political movement, not in any human system, not even in your own capacity to go on. It is in the Lord Jesus Christ, His finished work, His certain return, His kingdom that will never end. This hope purifies, strengthens, and keeps you when the night is darkest. You are saved by hope, for what is seen is not hope; but if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.
Hold fast to the eternal perspective. The same God who subjected creation to futility did so in hope, so that you would not rest in this passing age but look forward to the glory to come. Let that hope be an altar where you become conscious of His presence, even in the despair. He leads you from the emptiness of word-manipulators into the spacious freedom of His truth. Your cause is not lost. Your purpose is not abolished. The God of patience is still working, and He will complete what He has begun. Hope in Him, for He is your hope.
The Word of God is given to us for exactly this struggle: that through the patience and comfort of the Scriptures we might have hope. When you cannot see purpose, when voices around you twist words and lead you into confusion, the Scriptures stand firm. They reveal a God who keeps His promises, a God who cannot lie. He has caused you to hope by His Word, even when every feeling screams despair. That hope is not a wish; it is a living hope, begotten through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.
You ask for freedom from those who play tricks with words. That longing is answered in Christ Himself, who is the truth. Once you were far off, without God and without cause, meandering through life according to the shifting winds of this age. But now in Christ Jesus you have been brought near by His blood. He has broken down every partition. You do not need to scheme or scramble to secure your own deliverance, as though God needed your cunning. His purposes cannot fail. Even when you falter, His hand is stretched out, and no one can turn it back.
The God of all hope is able to fill you with joy and peace in believing, so that you abound in hope. That hope is not in a political movement, not in any human system, not even in your own capacity to go on. It is in the Lord Jesus Christ, His finished work, His certain return, His kingdom that will never end. This hope purifies, strengthens, and keeps you when the night is darkest. You are saved by hope, for what is seen is not hope; but if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.
Hold fast to the eternal perspective. The same God who subjected creation to futility did so in hope, so that you would not rest in this passing age but look forward to the glory to come. Let that hope be an altar where you become conscious of His presence, even in the despair. He leads you from the emptiness of word-manipulators into the spacious freedom of His truth. Your cause is not lost. Your purpose is not abolished. The God of patience is still working, and He will complete what He has begun. Hope in Him, for He is your hope.
