Hope’s eternal springs
Colors this extravagant feed my ongoing musing
about hope. After a long winter of grays and umbers, such
vibrant splashes of purple and yellow, just outside my front door, are the
first heralds of the reawakening that’s about to happen all around me.
Spring is like the
glory of the coming kingdom – beyond expectations, lavish in its intensity,
overwhelming in its beauty and power.
And if spring is the
season of glory, then winter is the time of hope. Of anticipation. Of awaiting.
Each fall, I bring in
plants that I plan to nurture inside until it’s safe to go out again. Some, like this oregano, didn’t make it. Others, like this ornamental pepper, are
holding on, even putting out new leaves.
I have hope that it will make it through.
I want to do more than just hold on until
heaven. I want to grow in my hope. To put out green shoots of anticipation. Yesterday, on a call with some Christian
brothers, we looked at the first few verses of Romans 5. Paul not only teaches how we can have hope
planted in us, he tells us how to have it grow through the winters of our
discontent – through times of suffering.
This morning, I wrote
it into my journal:
We are heading towards
an eternal spring. But hope is not
simply a longing for what is to come.
It’s an open window to the balmy, scent-laden air right now.
Forgive us, Lord, for our
withered hope. Your death and resurrection
have given us access – even now – to your coming kingdom. Remind us, through the beauty of spring, how
rich and glorious that kingdom is.
Comments
Post a Comment