
I rolled up early one morning last week to one of my favorite running routes on the U.S. Army post where I work. Itโs a fairly straight, flat road lined with mature shade trees next to a huge field. Just on the other side of the trees thereโs a little creek. This particular morning, a light fog blanketed everything. It was the picture of serenity.

However, despite the setting, I started my run brooding over a stressful situation at work that seemed to have no feasible solution. But then I heard something.
Over the hum of the nearby interstate, an unseen group of basic trainees was calling out cadence. I pictured them running in formation as they chanted together at the top of their lungs:
๐ถโEverywhere we go-oh, people wanna know-o, who we are, where we come from, so we tell them who we areโฆโ๐ถ

As the sound of the soon to be soldiers faded into the distance, my sinking thoughts were buoyed by a fresh revelation:
If they can do that, I can do this!
The majority of basic trainees are miles from homeโmany for the first timeโ and dealing with a new โnormalโ, one where drill instructors make ALL the decisions. Homesick and uncertain whatโs coming next, these brave young people must stick together to survive the next 10 weeks. Their Esprit de corps, the devotion they have toward each other and the group as a whole, is literally their life-line.
Perhaps the title of this piece should be, โWhat happened to hope?โ Okay, I already changed it; my first one was pretty lame.๐
Anyway, this is what I heard in the soldiersโ chanting: hope for the future. But for the world at large this idea is no longer in vogue.
Itโs painfully clear these days that (to many) hope is like a wind up toy with an ever-weakening spring. A quick check at thesaurus.com confirms it. Synonyms for hope include, anticipation and expectation, but also foolโs paradise and pipe dream.
However, for the Christian, hope is as certain as the character of God.
Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for He who promised is faithful. And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds.
Hebrews 10:24-25
I love the metaphor, โspur one another on.โ Itโs like every believer is calling out in formation with all their might, โMORE LOVE AND GOOD DEEDS!!โ
These days there are plenty of reasons for a child of God to lose hope, but none of them are good ones.
Now is not the time for swerving, by God! And I mean that literally, not sacrilegiously. ๐๐
Here are a few more of my favorite โhold on to hopeโ scriptures. Please share some of yours, if youโd like.
โThe one who calls you is faithful and He will do it.โ 1 Thessalonians 5:24
“Why are you downcast, O my soul? Why so disturbed within me? Put your hope in God, for I will yet praise Him, my Savior and my God.” Psalm 43:5
“But those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not faint.” Isaiah 40:31

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