Archive for the 'Bible Studies for Life' Category

Our Hope is a Person

How many times throughout the course of a day or week do you hear yourself saying, “I hope…”?

“I hope my son makes it back from the war.”

“I hope my daughter has a safe drive back from college.”

“I hope this surgery goes okay.”

Our normal use of hope often expresses faith that God is overseeing, but it also displays that we are dealing with uncertainties. We cannot control the outcomes of the war, the drive, or the surgery, but we really want things to turn out well. We want good news instead of bad news.

A powerful story

In the New Testament book of Luke, Jesus tells a powerful story. It concerns a son who leaves home to the chagrin of his father. The story, known to most as “The Prodigal Son,” is a beautiful picture of the love God has for those who come to Him.

One day the younger of two sons asked his father for the early dispersal of his portion of the inheritance. Over the course of time, the young man spent every cent of the money wastefully, exploring the depths of a worldly lifestyle. When he ran out of money, he ran out of friends, and found himself performing the demeaning task of feeding pigs. So hungry had he become, he lusted after the slop provided for them.

When he finally got tired of his station in life, the young man purposed to return to his father, willing to be only a hired hand on his father’s estate. The father had other plans. Luke records, “But the father told his slaves, ‘Quick! Bring out the best robe and put it on him; put a ring on his finger and sandals on his feet. Then bring the fattened calf and slaughter it, and let’s celebrate with a feast, because this son of mine was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found! So they began to celebrate” (15:22-14, HCSB).

How this applies to your life

When you think about this story, consider its application to your own life.

In the Spring 2014 unit of Bible Studies for Life, Pete Wilson writes this about this story:

“The best robe meant either the master’s best personal robe or the one formerly worn by this son to denote his place of love and honor in the family. The ring confirmed the son’s return to a place of authority in the household. Only masters and sons wore sandals. These three actions combined would declare to everyone that the father had restored his son to the full honor of sonship.”1

We read this story with joy, but rarely do we fully substitute ourselves into this part of the story. We are quick to refer to ourselves as prodigals, even recounting years in sin wasted. But we are hesitant to embrace the hope of the robe, the ring, and restoration. Yet, this is what God offers.

In Jesus Christ, who is our hope, His atonement for our sin, His personal sacrifice of Himself for our sin, places us in His sonship. Through His Spirit, we are able to call upon Him in an intimate way. In Jesus Christ, we are loved. In Jesus Christ, we are placed into the full honor of sonship.

Our hope is personal

Hope for the believer is not a wish or reckless emotion in a series of improbable events. Rather, hope is a person: Jesus Christ. Our hope of being accepted by the Father is based on what Jesus Christ accomplished in His death and resurrection. It is in Christ our longings for the Father are fulfilled. He is our hope. In Jesus, our hope is personified.

Yours for the Great Commission,

Ronnie W. Floyd

Senior Pastor, Cross Church
General Editor, Bible Studies for Life

1– Bible Studies for Life, Let Hope In, by Pete Wilson.

Hope Found

Last week, we considered what it is like to be without hope. As followers of Jesus, it is our responsibility to continuously point people to the hope that is in Jesus Christ.

False Remedies

We live in a time when all kinds of false hopes are offered as solutions to real problems. In the Spring 2014 unit of Bible Studies for Life, Pete Wilson explains, “We live in a culture that floods us with remedies. We try to mask our ‘lives of quiet desperation’ (to borrow from Thoreau) with pharmaceutical remedies, religious practices, a change in lifestyle, or a calendar full of activities. We can try to mask our need, but we can’t remove it.”1 Like placebos in place of antibiotics, there are plenty of false, ineffective hopes.

The ministry of Jesus on this earth was a ministry of hope. Whether healing people (Matthew 8:1-9), forgiving people (John 8:2-11), or teaching His followers about the kingdom of God, Jesus exuded hope. Real hope. Jesus was and is the hope of Israel and the world. It is little wonder the Apostle Paul related the mystery of salvation to the hope found in Christ: “God wanted to make known among the Gentiles the glorious wealth of this mystery, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory.”2

When we run to the false remedies offered in culture, we receive the worst of all assurances: false hope. False hope is not bad only because the object of the hope is weak, but also because we are deceived into thinking we have real hope. We stop looking for real hope since false hope has settled our hearts and minds.

There is hope for you

What are areas of your life where you need hope? Marriage? Parenting? Ministry? Education? Friendships? Never allow any one of those to become the object of your eternal hope. Temporary solutions never build eternal hope. Look to Jesus and Him alone so that your hope, as the hymn says, will be “built on nothing less than Jesus’ blood and righteousness.”

If you have not yet checked out Bible Studies for Life, I want to encourage you to do so. It is a biblically grounded, ongoing Bible study. It provides practical application in every session so those who use it are not left with head knowledge only. Click here to get more information on the unit studies, and here to friend Bible Studies for Life on Facebook.

Yours for the Great Commission,

Ronnie W. Floyd

Senior Pastor, Cross Church
General Editor, Bible Studies for Life

1– Bible Studies for Life, Let Hope In, by Pete Wilson
2– Colossians 2:27, HCSB