It is reported that
several years ago researchers did a study to determine the effect hope
has on those undergoing hardship. Two sets of laboratory rats were
placed in separate tubs of water from which they could not escape
unaided. The researchers left one set in the water and found that
within an hour the exhausted rats all drowned.
The other rats were
periodically lifted out of the water and then returned. These animals
swam for over 24 hours. Why? Not because they were given rest, but
because they had hope! They had come to believe that if they held out
just a little longer, someone would reach down and rescue them. Without
defending what seems to have been a rather cruel experiment, we simply
observe that if this is the effect of hope on unthinking rodents, what
must its power be in the lives of human beings?
There is nothing so
critical to the success of gospel teaching as that it gives genuine hope
to sincere hearers. Any supposed teaching of Christ which drives honest
searching hearts to despair is a subversion of God's gracious purpose.
``Thus God, determining to show more abundantly to the heirs of promise
the immutability of His counsel, confirmed it by an oath, that by two
immutable things, in which it is impossible for God to lie, we might
have strong consolation, who have fled for refuge to lay hold of the
hope set before us''
(Hebrews 6:17-18).
We do not speak here
of the proud, the insincere, the worldly hearers. The gospel is
designed to cause them to stumble in their lusts. But genuine and
humble souls should be made to rejoice at the implications of the story
of the cross. However much tempered with sobriety, the response of such
people to the preaching of Jesus should always, at last, be joy.
This is not to deny
that the gospel begins with a profoundly painful indictment of sin, but
it is easy to say that such should not be the final impact of the
message. If the preaching of Christ begins by driving us to our knees
in repentance, it must end by lifting us to our feet in confident faith
and hope. Paul says that we are saved ``in hope''
(Romans 8:24)
and truer words were never spoken. It is the confidence we feel in
God's gracious promises and the assurance He gives us of our power to
obtain them by faith that keeps us going and growing, serving God
through good times and bad.
And there is every
reason that those who have trusted in Christ should have a bright and
confident hope. The most wonderful thing has already happened. God, in
the cross, has demonstrated His love for us so powerfully that we can
never again have cause to doubt the depth of His commitment
(Romans 5:8; 8:31).
As Paul wonderingly asks, if that is what God is willing to do for His
enemies, what would He be willing to do for His friends
(5:10-11)? It
is beyond imagining!
Other Articles by Paul Earnhart
Sin
Doesn't Work
Who Is Jesus of Nazareth?
Where Do Elders Come From?