After Easter, Hope
Romans 5: 1 – 11
Introduction
We had a great Sunday last week. After all, it was Easter Sunday…And Easter is
supposed to be a big deal. Easter 2014
did not disappoint…Baptism, Great music, Powerful Message of Cross and
Resurrection, and the biggest crowd since I came here in 2006.
A couple of years ago, I started keeping a
document with Easter Sunday attendance for our church and our three mission
churches. In 2007, we had a high
attendance…then the following years fluctuated up and down staying close to
625. This year was a big bump. We had 717 in worship!
When you add 717 in our worship service to 319
at Cross Timbers Cowboy Church; 95 at La
Casa del Alfarero and 205 at New Beginnings Baptist Church, we had a total
of 1,336 people at First Baptist Church and her missions! That’s a great day! But, there’s a problem. How do you follow Easter Sunday?
The Sunday after Easter can be a letdown. Of course, it shouldn’t be a letdown. Instead, it should be a reminder that Easter has
changed everything. Because of the
crucifixion and Resurrection of Jesus, we have a new life…And, we live in a
world which has been changed forever. In
one word, we live in a world of Hope.
Romans 5: 1 – 11… 1 Therefore, since we have been justified through
faith, we have peace with
God through our Lord Jesus Christ, 2 through whom we have gained access by
faith into this grace in which we now stand. And we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God. 3 Not only so, but we also
rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering
produces perseverance; 4 perseverance, character; and character, hope. 5 And hope does
not disappoint us, because God has poured out his loveinto our
hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom he has given us.
6 You see, at just the right time, when
we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly. 7 Very
rarely will anyone die for a righteous man, though for a good man someone might
possibly dare to die. 8 But
God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners,
Christ died for us.
9 Since we have now been justified by
his blood, how much more shall we be saved from God's wrath through him! 10 For
if, when we were God's enemies, we were reconciled to him through the death of his Son, how much more, having
been reconciled, shall we be saved through his life! 11 Not only is this so, but we
also rejoice in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have now
received reconciliation.
“Religion is the opium of the people.”[1]
This quote is famously attributed to the
atheist philosopher Karl Marx. The quote
never mentions the word “hope,” but “hope” is exactly what Marx was criticizing. Marx believed that humans could create a
better society by getting rid of religious belief and religious expression and
what he thought was false hope. His
views led to the uniquely Twentieth Century phenomenon we call Communism and
its ultimate expression in the Soviet Union—a society and government built on
atheist foundations.
Marx’ beliefs about religion were
complex. On one hand, he considered
religion to be oppressive and dreamed of a society in which people were no
longer held back by the teachings or authority of the organized church. On the other hand, Marx labeled religion as
an opiate—a drug which had the power to mask the pain of suffering or to induce
dreams of a fantasy world.
Legendary psychologist Sigmund Freud held a
similar view of religion as an opiate.
Freud claimed that religion was nothing more than wishful thinking that
there was a God, who could accomplish all our unfulfilled father issues. Since our earthly fathers are the ones who
provide for us and give us protection when we are children, Freud suggests that
we imagine that God is our Heavenly Father who does for us what our earthly
fathers never could.
These two views of God are similar in the way
they describe religion and belief in God as nothing more than a crutch for
weak-minded people. They are also similar
in the fact that they reject “hope.”
Faith and hope are illusions.
Religion is a crutch. God is
something we have created and not Someone who created us. There is no reason to hope for anything other
than the physical world we can perceive with our senses.
The biggest problem with this theory is the
way it contradicts universal human experience.
We can illustrate this in two significant ways.
First, there is the historical evidence that
religious belief has been widespread throughout human history. People from many different cultures and
historical eras have almost universally acknowledged that there is a God. When I say “God,” I am referring to a
supernatural Being who is worthy of reverence and worship. This belief has taken on many different
expressions—Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, nature worship,
etc… Not every culture has gotten this
right, but every culture has entered into a search for meaning (and a search
for hope) through a search for God. This
leaves us with an important choice.
Either, the vast majority of humanity in every culture and every
historical era has been wrong to search for God. Or, they haven’t. The most rational choice is that they have
not been wrong to search for God.
Therefore, the most rational choice is to believe that God exists, and
we are correct to search for meaning (and search for hope) by searching for
God.
Second, we can argue that there is a natural
and innate human desire to find God. Of
course, we know that every innate desire has some real object which can satisfy
that desire. For example, hunger is a
desire for food—and food is real. Being
tired is a desire for sleep—and (believe it or not) sleep is real. Thirst is a desire for water—and water is
real. Loneliness is a desire for
companionship—and other people are real.
Someone might argue that they have desires
which can never be satisfied. Some
people desire to drive a fancy sports car but realize they will never have
enough money to buy a sports car. Other
people desire to fly through the air like Superman but realize none of us will
ever have the ability to fly. Some
people even desire for the Baylor football team to win the national
championship. But these are not natural,
innate or universal desires. Not
everyone wants to drive a sports car, fly like Superman or for Baylor to win a
football championship. These desires are
conditioned by advertising, societal influences or where you went to
school. Desire for food, water and God
are experienced universally.
I cannot say this better than C.S. Lewis:
“Creatures are not born with desires unless satisfaction
for these desires exists. A baby feels
hunger; well, there is such a thing as food.
A duckling wants to swim; well, there is such a thing as water. Men feel sexual desire; well, there is such a
thing as sex. If I find in myself a
desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable
explanation is that I was made for another world.”[2]
There are really only two ways an atheist can
argue with C.S. Lewis. They might say
something like, “But, I am perfectly happy and satisfied with the material
things in life.” Are they really happy
and satisfied? Universal human
experience and the themes of classical literature suggest otherwise. The search for meaning in life is uniquely
human. Plants do not search for meaning
in life. Dogs, horses and emus do not
search for meaning. To be human is to be
unsatisfied with the material universe.
The other argument is to say something like,
“I might not be happy and satisfied right now, but I will be happy if I could
just have $10 Million, the biggest house in town and a new relationship.” If you think this will bring you
satisfaction, then you are in good company.
Billions of people are desperately searching for satisfaction like this
right now. They will be
disappointed. This is the only gamble in
life guaranteed not to pay off. It has
been tried for centuries and has a proven 100% failure rate.
The good news is that people are beginning to
realize that there is something else beyond the material world. We have been taught by the brightest
philosophers that the only real things in life are the things we can experience
through our senses. However, we are
beginning to rebel against our philosophers.
TV personalities like Oprah Winfrey are teaching us about
“spirituality.” Bookstores are carrying
books about mysticism, reincarnation, and (if you look hard enough) books about
Jesus.
We can agree with the prayer of Saint
Augustine of Hippo, who prayed, “Lord, you have made us for yourself, and our
hearts are restless until they find rest in you.”[3]
In
Romans 5: 1 – 11, the Apostle Paul makes two very important points about
Hope.
First,
Paul connects the dots between suffering and hope. Suffering produces perseverance, perseverance
produces character, and character produces hope.
Suffering
by itself is inanimate. It has no life
of its own and cannot accomplish anything in our lives by itself. Paul tells us to think of suffering as an
instrument or tool, which can be used by God to accomplish God’s good purpose
in our lives. Through suffering, God
teaches us how to persevere. Through
perseverance, God develops our character to become more like the character of
Jesus. Through character development,
God instills hope in us—a hope that does not disappoint. This is a hope that will be fulfilled when God
keeps his promises.
One
way to think of this is to make a very common illustration about the way our
physical bodies grow and develop. There
is only one way to grow your muscles and to make them stronger. Muscles grow when they face resistance. Without resistance, our muscles would become
weak and flabby.
In
the same way, suffering is exercise for our spiritual lives. We grow spiritually to become the men and
women God wants us to become—molded into the image of Jesus our Lord—through
suffering and perseverance. This is the
reason why Paul tells us to rejoice in our sufferings. When we suffer, it means God is using the
difficulties of life to make us stronger in faith and in character. It means God isn’t finished working on us.
Second,
Paul ends this passage by giving us three descriptions of salvation. Salvation is Justification /
Righteousness. Salvation is
Reconciliation. Salvation is Life. I believe Paul is making a connection between
the Resurrection of Jesus and our Resurrection / eternal life in Heaven. If Jesus died and rose again, then we have
hope. If Jesus did not die and rise
again, then we do not have hope. SINCE
Jesus died and rose again, our hope is secure.
When
we read Paul’s words about salvation in the context of Christian hope, we can
form a good definition of Christian hope.
First, we have hope, because God is still working on us…as long as there
is suffering in the world, there are opportunities to grow. Second, true hope has nothing to do with this
world (and this life) becoming a better world.
Instead, our hope is found in God’s salvation—God’s Righteousness;
Reconciliation with God; and the life God promises through the Resurrection of
Jesus.
Conclusion
Back in March, I did something that I have
never done before.
March is the month for the NCAA basketball
tournament—March Madness. The tournament
starts with 68 teams, then 32, then 16, then 8, then the Final Four, then the
Championship Game. I have been filling
out a bracket of winners and losers for a long time. Back in the days before the Internet, I used
to get a bracket from the newspaper, fill it out with the teams I expect to win
and lose, and exchange my bracket with my brother. That way we can laugh at each other and our
picks.
This year, I went on the Internet and filled
out a bracket like I always do. But, I
did something different this year. I
entered my bracket into a contest on the Internet. You can probably guess which contest. I entered the contest that offered $1 Billion
for a perfect bracket.
I never really expected to win $1
Billion. But, hey…it’s worth a shot.
On the first day of the tournament, there was
an upset. Number 11 seed, Dayton, beat number
6 seed, Ohio State…I picked that! Then
there was another upset. Number 12 seed,
Harvard, beat number 5 seed Cincinnati…I picked that one too! I went through the first 24 hours of the
tournament with a perfect bracket.
On the second day of the tournament, number 15
seed, Mercer, beat number 2 seed, Duke.
And, NOBODY picked that one. I
certainly didn’t pick it. My dreams of
having a perfect bracket were over by the second day.
I never really expected to win $1
Billion. But, I went to bed after the
first night of the tournament dreaming about how I might spend $1 Billion. (In my defense, I did plan to set up
endowment funds for every church I have served and to establish a scholarship
at Truett Seminary.)
My dream of winning $1 Billion is what a lot
of people think of as hope. But, that is
not hope. It is nothing more than
wishful thinking. “I wish / hope I can
win $1 Billion.” “I hope it doesn’t rain
on Sunday.” Wishful thinking is dreaming
about a better future with no basis in fact / reality.
Hope is not wishful thinking, because hope is
based on reality. Because Jesus died and
rose again, we know that we have a better future ahead of us. My future does not depend on random chance,
luck or wining a basketball tournament.
My future depends on the accomplished fact of Jesus’ death and
Resurrection. I know that Jesus died and
rose again. Therefore, I know that I will
experience Resurrection / Heaven / eternal life.
Easter gives us hope, because Easter has
changed everything!