It is simply one of the amazing words there is. It flies into the capricious face of loss, pain and tragedy and says, “This is not the end.”
Hope
gives us reason to live, a reason to hold on through our painful and
sometimes seemingly pointless circumstances, it is a knowing that there must be
something at the end. Hope is seeing through the eyes of faith that there is
indeed a point to all this, though at present the darkness be so thick
we can barely see a foot in front of us...
Hope
goes beyond our current circumstances and believes against all odds
that the situation, no matter how dire, how bleak, how painful, unfair
or evil, that it WILL NOT have the final say.
It is the golden thread
permeating every great tale, every great adventure or epic fable and it is this thread of hope that causes the hero or the focussed few to go on, to push through, no matter what comes their way.
For those who have eyes to see, or moreover those who are willing for God to show them, this
golden thread of life permeates every one of life's difficult situations. Especially those that would otherwise cause us to give up, to
give in, to surrender, to die broken and unfulfilled. Or worse yet, to give in and to become something we were never meant to be, a human animal using
whatever means necessary to survive at any cost.
Because
even faced with death Hope gives us assurance, it gives peace and calm and when faced with it, allows us to die with dignity. It teaches us that
death is not the end; it allows us to see that so much more is taking
place than we had ever imagined, that with our faith and life secure in
the arms of Christ (the author and finisher of our faith), death is only the transition from our earthly life
to our spiritual one.
The
absence of Hope (being despair) is what drives people mad, into the
dark, endless pit of madness, into insanity and eventually suicide. I have been gripped
by despair a few times in my life and it is a dreadful thing. To be
standing on the precipice of that echoing chasm of darkness, of
nothingness and to have your soul gripped with a cold emptiness with no hope of return... is a fearful experience and one I would not
wish upon my worst enemy. Luckily for me the love of God went deeper and pulled me out,
set me in a safe place and held me secure, were it not for His hand,
who knows where I would have ended up?
Sometimes in life we lose hope because of pain, loss or tragedy, but God wants to offer us HIS hope so he can use it to bring about something wonderful, something amazing in our lives.
All throughout his long and unjust sentence he somehow never lets the walls or the sytem break him, though incarcerated and robbed of most of his rights he somehow lives outside the walls that hold him.
This is seen by a select few, with those who have eyes to see, mainly by his friend Ellis Boyd "Red" Redding played by Morgan Freeman. By the end we find out it is hope that causes his peace, his assurance, his calm amidst the pain and chaos in the cage he is contained in. It is his hope which eventually breaks the walls around him and in which he finds his freedom at the end of his most unjust circumstances.
It contains one of my favourite quotes, Andy has penned a letter to Red after he has gained his freedom, "Remember Red, hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things and no good thing ever dies."
It contains one of my favourite quotes, Andy has penned a letter to Red after he has gained his freedom, "Remember Red, hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things and no good thing ever dies."
If
you’ve given up hope, then Hope one day that you will hope again and through
it God will sustain you and bring about something beautiful in your
life. Because as the Good Book says, “Every
good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the
heavenly lights, who does not change like the shifting shadows.” So if you’ve lost hope… ask Him for His.
And as a dear friend and mentor once told me, “Even when it seems like there is no hope... there's still hope.”
Tim Everton is a youth worker and child carer from South East Melbourne. In his off-time he pursues graphic design, photography and enjoys the beach and seeking out Melbourne's next best cafe latte both in equal measure.
Tim Everton is a youth worker and child carer from South East Melbourne. In his off-time he pursues graphic design, photography and enjoys the beach and seeking out Melbourne's next best cafe latte both in equal measure.

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