When the facts of the world offer little cause for celebration, you might wonder what it means to kindle a flame of hope. This Advent reflection draws you into the tension between troubled times and expectant waiting, weaving together the ancient prophecies of Isaiah with the earthy wisdom of poet Wendell Berry.
You encounter a world not so different from our own, marked by political instability, economic fear, and the fading of old certainties, yet from that very soil emerges a bold vocabulary of transformation. Isaiah looked upon armies marching and politicians faltering, and he began to dream of weapons reshaped into pruning hooks, of nations streaming together in mutual understanding.
The sermon challenges you to reimagine hope not as a feeling you summon but as a practice you embody. Through stories from an academic conference from Latino pastors ministering in immigration prisons, to congregations in Arizona supporting families torn apart by deportation, and a Palestinian theologian speaking of children who still dare to dream, you witness hope lived out in the most unlikely circumstances. This is hope that cannot remain a hollow sentiment on a holiday card.
“We labor in the present under the sign of the future. We work now to make a dream possible tomorrow. And we call that work hope. We say that hope is an investment—an investment not in ourselves but in everything that will follow after us.”
Like planting a sequoia knowing you will never see its full height, you are invited to break open the soil of the present for the sake of generations you will never meet.
The fallen leaves of your faithfulness will add their thin layer to the earth, creating the conditions where something new can grow on the far side of turmoil. In this Advent season, you join a long procession of those who have passed through suffering and uncertainty, discovering that the hope you live out today makes possible the dreams of children yet to come.