Posted May 19, 2026

This is an article about hope. However, hope is not an independent entity. Like friendship or love, it requires an object. We do not hope—we hope “in.”
So, let’s consider some options in the day’s news.
By now, you probably expect me to encourage you to put your hope in Jesus. You’re right, but not for the reasons you might expect.
The German philosopher Theodor Adorno contended that humans often use reason instrumentally, as a means to the ends we want, rather than causally, as our basis for beliefs or actions. We often do the same with faith as well.
Like the crowds who followed Jesus so he would meet their needs (cf. John 6:26), we all want our Lord to heal our hurts and help us with our problems. I’ve heard faith healers promise that he will do just that if we have enough faith. Theirs is an enviable position: If we are healed in response to their message, they get the credit; if we are not, we get the blame for lacking the necessary faith.
I am writing today to contend for the opposite position: The more we follow Jesus, the more we are likely to suffer as a consequence. But the greater our suffering, the more transforming our hope in Christ can become.
Jesus can never be accused of glossing over the cost of discipleship, warning us in stark terms, “If they persecuted me, they will also persecute you” (John 15:20). And for the same reasons: sinners resent being told they need to repent of their sins. I feel the same way. If an oncologist tells me I have cancer, I’d rather reject her diagnosis than endure the treatment she prescribes.
Add the fact that Satan wants to “steal and kill and destroy” us (John 10:10). The more we serve our Lord, the more we threaten our enemy.
Put the two together, and it is unsurprising that Christianity is far and away the most persecuted religion in the world.
So far, you’re wondering if I misplaced the hope I promised.
Here it is: “As we share abundantly in Christ’s sufferings, so through Christ we share abundantly in comfort too” (2 Corinthians 1:5). Consider three ascending facts:
St. John of Avila (1499–1569) wrote:
Dear brothers and sisters, I pray God may open your eyes and let you see what hidden treasures he bestows on us in the trials from which the world thinks only to flee. Shame turns into honor when we seek God’s glory. Present affliction becomes the source of heavenly glory. To those who suffer wounds in fighting his battles, God opens his arms in loving, tender fellowship, which is more delightful by far than anything our earthly efforts might produce. . . .
Can anyone but a man in whom all desire is dead fail to desire him who is wholly lovable, wholly desirable?
What price will you pay to follow such a Lord today?
“The question is not, will God keep his promises, but, will we build our lives upon them?” —Max Lucado
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