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HopeA curious warning is given to us in Peter’s first letter. There he tells us to be ready to give the reason for the hope that lies within us to everyone who asks (3:15). Now, what’s strange about that passage is this: no one ever asks.

When was the last time someone stopped you to inquire about the reason for the hope that lies within you? You’re at the market, say, in the frozen food section. A friend you haven’t seen for some time comes up to you, grasps you by both shoulders and pleads, “Please, you’ve got to tell me. Be honest now. How can you live with such hope? Where does it come from? I must know the reason.” Has this ever happened to you? Under any circumstances? Anything any vaguely similar?

Yet God tells us to be ready, so what’s wrong? To be blunt, nothing about our lives is worth asking about.

  • There’s nothing intriguing about our hopes, nothing to make anyone curious.
  • Not that we don’t have hopes; we do.
  • We hope we’ll have enough after taxes this year to take a summer vacation.
  • We hope our kids don’t wreck the car.
  • We hope our favorite team goes to the World Series.
  • We hope our health doesn’t give out, and so on.
  • Nothing wrong with any of those hopes; nothing unusual, either.

Everyone has hopes like that, so why bother asking us? It’s life as usual. Sanctified resignation has become the new abiding place of contemporary Christians. No wonder nobody asks.

Do you want the life of any Christian you know? Clearly it doesn’t have to be that way. I don’t want it that way for myself or my family. Jesus is in the business of turning despair into hope. Jesus is the “hope Master”.

If with heart and soul you’re doing good, do you think you can be stopped? Even if you suffer for it, you’re still better off. Don’t give the opposition a second thought. Through thick and thin, keep your hearts at attention, in adoration before the Messiah, your Master. Be ready to speak up and tell anyone who asks why you’re living the way you are with such hope, and always with the utmost courtesy. Keep a clear conscience before God so that when people throw mud at you, none of it will stick. They’ll end up realizing that they’re the ones who need a bath. It’s better to suffer for doing good, if that’s what God wants, than to be punished for doing bad. That’s what the Messiah did definitively: suffered because of others’ sins, the Righteous One for the unrighteous ones. He went through it all—was put to death and then made alive—to bring us to God. 

1 Peter 3:18 The Message (MSG)