Hope Against Hope

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Sermon Summary

You know the impulse. When everything around you points toward despair, the easy move is to quit, to give up, to assume the future will simply be more of the present. This is exactly where you find Abraham, nearly a hundred years old, holding a promise that every visible fact contradicts.

And yet, hoping against hope, he believed. Not because the evidence was encouraging. Not because things were getting better. He paused in the space between the reality he could see and the promise he could only trust, and there he discovered a God who gives life to the dead and calls into existence what does not yet exist.

That discovery changes how you understand hope itself. Resurrection is not just something God does at the end of the story. It is God’s pattern, always bringing life out of what appears lifeless, always bringing possibility out of impossibility.

But hope is hard to carry alone, and it was never meant to be. Paul wasn’t writing to isolated individuals chasing private spiritual experiences. He was writing to whole communities learning to live by a different story, one that says sharing is better than hoarding, love is stronger than violence, and resurrection is stronger than death. Individual despair can only be healed through collective hope. The powers of fear, greed, and division are simply too large for any one of you to confront alone, but a community gathered around love can.

“Sometimes faith is weak. Sometimes hope runs dry. But love keeps showing up. And perhaps that’s exactly why Paul says that faith, hope, and love abide. But the greatest of these is love.”

This is why you show up. Worship creates a space between impulse and action, a place where you can borrow hope when your own supply runs low and hear a different story than the one the world tells you all week long.

You gather with people who sing when you cannot sing, who believe when your faith is worn thin, who love you when you struggle to love yourself. Faith, in this sense, is not the absence of questions. It is the courage of the heart to keep walking when the easy answers are gone. And none of us has to carry that hope alone.

That is the heart of First Plymouth’s mission: a messy, holy network of loving relationships, gathered around grace, trusting a God who still calls into existence the things that do not yet exist.

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