Our Living Hope
The feeling that the promises of Jesus and His presence in your life fade in comparison to life's circumstances can be a common one. Dr. Stanley leads us in a study of Scripture that will empower us to move beyond the tremendous burdens we face and put our hope in Jesus. He is our perfect source of hope for this life and for the life to come.
Dr. Charles Stanley: Jesus Christ said that he would forgive us and pardon us of our sin. How do you know that your sins are forgiven? There's only one way that you know that. The only way we know we're forgiven is the Christ who promised forgiveness destroyed the power of death and made forgiveness a living reality in your heart and my heart.
Guest (Male): The chaos in the world can leave you feeling helpless and hopeless. If that's where you are right now, I hope you'll stay with us for In Touch, the teaching ministry of Dr. Charles Stanley. You'll hear powerful encouragement from scripture that can help keep you trusting your Heavenly Father even in the toughest situations.
Dr. Charles Stanley: When the disciples in the Garden of Gethsemane stood there and watched the soldiers take Jesus and haul him off to Pilate's hall, I believe a sudden sense of fear gripped their hearts. The thing that made them fear was this: there walked away under the guard of Rome their hope of escape and release and liberty from Roman rule.
As they heard and as they watched him tried by Pilate, a mock trial that was unjust, unfair, and illegal, again, all of their hopes were dashed. As they heard and when they saw the Romans nail his hands to the cross and lift him up, sink him into the earth, and watched him hang there, I believe the hope of all that they dreamed for suddenly vanished.
The women who came on Easter Sunday morning came to anoint the body of a dead man. They were hoping somebody would be around in order to move back a stone which weighed hundreds and hundreds of pounds in order that these little ladies could come in and anoint his body and at least one more time express their love and gratitude to him.
When they came and the stone was rolled away, and those women were able to walk in and have the proclamation, "He is not here; he is risen," for the first time since they saw him die on the cross, a little flicker of hope began to flicker in their human heart. Their first impression was that the stone's been rolled away and someone has stolen his body.
They had all kinds of reactions. But when the angel said to them, "Do you not remember that he said he would rise? Go and tell his disciples," they hastened to tell his disciples and to share with them that Jesus Christ was no longer there. And then of course, when Jesus met Mary there in the garden and she went rushing off to say to his disciples, "He's alive! He's no longer there!"
They said upon one occasion it's like an idle tale. But when she said to them, "I've seen him," the scripture says that Peter and John ran to the tomb because before there was no hope. They were hopeless. They knew he was dead. They knew that he was sealed in a tomb. Men who die and whose bodies are wrapped in grave clothes and who are sprinkled with perfume and the stone sealing the tomb, there was no way for him to get out.
I want to remind you, my friend, do you know why the stone was rolled away? It wasn't rolled away for Jesus to get out. It was rolled away for the women to get in to see that he wasn't there. So the little flicker of hope began to be a ray of hope, and a ray of hope began to be a whole tremendous avalanche of hope. He said he would rise. He's gone. No one stole his body. Surely he must be alive.
What seemed to be a hopeless, helpless situation turned into a whole lifetime of eternal hope. When Peter wrote this epistle, he was writing to people who were undergoing persecution. God's people have been scattered because of persecution and hardship. He begins by calling them people who are scattered abroad.
He says concerning them in this first chapter, those who have been scattered abroad are elect according to the foreknowledge of God. Then he gives to them the one reason for which they're to hope. Even though scattered in foreign countries, even though amidst persecution and hardship and heartache, undergoing circumstances and situations of privation that seem to be absolutely hopeless for them, Peter, writing to believers under persecution, said to them, "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a living hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead."
Now listen, there are many, many people today who are living their life without hope. There are some of you sitting here today and so many of you who are out there, and you are living your life and feel some of the same kind of hardship. Notice the phrases he uses here. He says, "Wherein you greatly rejoice, though now for a season..." He says we have a reason to rejoice, but at the present time we're going through a season of what?
A season that seems to be one of heaviness in the heart because of our circumstances, manifold, various kinds of temptations and trials and heartaches and circumstances and situations for which there seems to be no real answer, no real solution, no real hope. Many, many people today are in a similar situation.
For example, there are many people who are facing circumstances that are heavy upon them. Many of you who are sitting right here knowing in your own heart if somebody could weigh your heart this morning, you'd say, "Oh yes, I feel that my heart is burdening me down because I cannot survive the circumstances in which I live." I want to tell you, nothing is ever hopeless as long as Jesus Christ is still alive. There is still hope. It makes no difference what your circumstance is. There is still hope as long as Jesus Christ is alive.
As I search this particular passage and begin to visualize in my own heart the kinds of persecution and the kinds of heartache and privations and separations and pain these persecuted believers were going through 2,000 years ago, and thinking about the kind of difficulty and heartache that people face every day, I begin to think about what is the message of hope that Peter is speaking of here. He says it is a living hope.
Now, when all hope is gone, it's dead. Here, for example, in the hospital, there may be some of you lying there this morning and you have heard the doctor say, "I'm sorry, you have an incurable disease." He's named it and he's said to you, "There is nothing else I can do." What you heard him say with your physical ear was, "I'm sorry, there is nothing else I can do." What you really heard him say in your emotions is this: you heard him say there is no hope.
I want to tell you, my friend, that's not what he said. No doctor has the prerogative of announcing to you there is no hope. As long as Jesus Christ is alive, there is hope. Even if you die in this life, Jesus says, "He that believeth in me, though he experience death, yet shall he live." There is not only hope in this life, but there is hope beyond this life. There's something better than living in this life, and that's living everlastingly and eternally in that life.
So when somebody says to you there's no hope, forget it. There is no such thing as no hope for the believer. Now listen to what Peter said to these Christians here. He says, "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ," which is to praise the Father. He says, "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to his abundant mercy hath brought about a new creation, a new birth in your heart and my heart." Whereby he says we have a living hope that is based on what? On the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.
I begin to think about how do you and I relate the resurrection to times of difficulty and heartache that you and I go through. All of us have been through valleys, and all of us are going through valleys now and out on the deserts spiritually in our life. What is it that the resurrection of Jesus Christ says to us that is the very basis and foundation of all of our hope? Well, let's think about it for a moment.
When you and I are going through difficulty, there are at least four things we want to be absolutely assured of. The first one is this: that our sins are pardoned. We want to know in our heart that our sins are forgiven. Sometimes is it not true that you can see the valley coming? You know that you're headed toward a difficulty, you're headed toward a heaviness, you're headed toward a trial in your life, and you're not exactly sure how you're going to face it.
He says because Jesus Christ lives, we have a hope. It doesn't make any difference what you're facing as long as you know that you're right with Jesus Christ. He says our sins have been pardoned by his death on the cross of the Lord Jesus Christ. Our sins have been forgiven. How do I know I'm forgiven? You say, "Well, because the Bible says you're forgiven." That's not all I know. You see, he says if we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
I know that's what it says, but how do I know that works? Jesus Christ said that he would forgive us and pardon us of our sin. How do you know this morning that your sins are forgiven? There's only one way that you know that: because Jesus Christ rose from the dead. You and I have living, eternal proof that God the Father accepted his death on the cross as sufficient payment for our sin, and therefore we are forgiven.
The only way we know we're forgiven is the Christ who promised forgiveness destroyed the power of death and made forgiveness a living reality in your heart and my heart. But as I begin to think about difficulty and heartache, I thought about something else. What is there a second thing that you and I need to know when we go through valleys of heartache?
The second thing is this: that Jesus Christ is going to walk with us every step of the way. Listen, the scripture says what? He says, "I will never leave thee nor forsake thee." How do I know that? When he said, "My peace I give unto you, not as the world giveth give I unto you, let not your heart be troubled," how do I know that? What makes his promise real?
Zoroaster made promises to his followers, Confucius made promises to his followers, Buddha made promises to his followers. You and I can go right down the line of all the great religious leaders in the world. They made tremendous promises, but how do you and I know that Jesus Christ personally will walk with us? Because if Jesus Christ could walk through the stone that sealed him, if Jesus Christ could be resurrected from death that held him, there is no question in my mind that Jesus Christ can walk with me wherever the circumstance and the heartache and the difficulty of life may take us.
Do you know in this morning in your heart by reality of experience, can you say, "Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, today, and forever"? How do I know that? How do you and I know that he's the same yesterday, today, and forever? How do we know that the promise of his presence is just as real today as it was then? There's only one thing, and that is the fact that he came up out of the grave, a living reality by the supernatural power of God, that Jesus Christ could keep his promise: "I'll never leave thee nor forsake thee."
What did he say to his apostles? And can't you imagine how they must have felt when he said to them? He sent them out two by two. Then on one occasion he said to them, "You're to go to this particular place and you're to avoid these." He gave them specific directions. But the last thing he said to them, which was the most encouraging of all, is he said, "And lo, I am with you always, even to the end of this age."
Has it ever dawned on you that we are still living in the age that Jesus referred to when he told his apostles, "I'll be with you even to the end of this age"? I don't know what circumstance, what heartache, what burden, what valley, what difficulty, what barrier you may be facing, but this I know: as long as you know in your heart that you're right with Jesus Christ, as long as you know in your heart that it makes no difference if everybody leaves you, everyone rejects you, everyone turns his back on you, that walking by your side is the omnipotent, omniscient presence of the Lord Jesus Christ. If he goes with you, what difference does it matter if you go alone?
And you see, there are some of you who are watching this morning, and the doctor's already said to you and you've interpreted there is no hope, and you're already thinking about dying. You're saying, "I'm not really afraid to die, but every once in a while I get gripped with this awful sense of fear. What lies beyond this life?"
I want to tell you, the same Christ that lives within your heart has promised he'll take that next vital, eternal, irrevocable step with you once you pass from this life to the next. You see, as long as we feel and are aware of his presence, what difficulty, what hardship, what heartache? What really matters as long as we know that he's there?
But there's a third thing that I noticed in this passage when he says in verse four, "To an inheritance incorruptible, undefiled that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for you who are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time." If I know that I'm pardoned from my sin, and if I know in my heart that Jesus Christ's presence goes with me everywhere, and if I know the third thing, that his power is accessible to me in every circumstance, what real difference does it make?
When he came up out of the grave, what did he do to us but give us everlasting assurance that the Christ who lives within us has made us accessible to his supernatural power so that you and I will never face a circumstance that we'll ever have to say it is hopeless. You can erase that from your vocabulary. You can remove that from your thought pattern. Nothing is ever again hopeless if Jesus Christ rose from the dead because with what did he come? He said, "All power is given unto me and I will be with you every step of the way."
But there's one more thing that I want to be sure of when I walk through valleys of heartache and difficulty and I don't know which way or how long or how far, like some of you are going already. I want to know that I'm pardoned; his resurrection affirms that. I want to know I have his presence; his resurrection confirms that. I want to know that I have accessibility to the supernatural power of God; and his resurrection assures me of that. I have confidence about that.
There's one last thing I want to be sure of when I walk through valleys of heartache and difficulty and may be tempted to believe that things are hopeless: I want to be sure of the promise of life after death. Because you see, one of these days we're going to die. You say, "Well, doesn't that bring it all hopeless?" No. You see, if Jesus Christ is living within our heart, our sins are forgiven, we have accessibility to his power, and we know that it doesn't really make any difference whether we die today, tomorrow, next year, twenty years.
The thing that really matters is this: do you have assurance that when your heart beats its last time and life flows from this body, that that eternal life that has existed within you since the moment you were saved takes over and takes you into the presence of the Lord Jesus Christ, whose resurrection gives you hope? You remember what Paul said in 1 Corinthians chapter 15, the whole chapter about the resurrection. He said about Jesus, "But now is Christ risen from the dead and is become the first fruits of them that slept."
Now, what does he mean by that? He means that Jesus Christ is the first person who ever died and was buried and rose again never to die again. He says Jesus Christ is the first fruits, and then he says and those who follow him, which means that every single believer, every single believer has the promise of life everlasting.
I want to ask you something. If Jesus was dead and remained dead, what hope do you have this morning of forgiveness, of his accompanying you? What hope do you have of supernatural power in your life and what hope do you have of life beyond this one? Hope is defined by the world as desire with expectation. The New Testament word hope means a confidence that supersedes and vanishes all doubt and uncertainty. The fact that he's alive vanishes all doubt and all uncertainty that whatever circumstance you and I face, we will never have to say again it is hopeless. But as long as he lives, there is hope.
Guest (Male): If you've been on the brink of despair, hang on to the concluding thought from today's edition of In Touch. Because Jesus lives, there is only hope. If you'd like to know that kind of hope, log on to intouch.org to find easy-to-understand explanations of who Jesus is and what he's done for you. And to listen again, follow the link on our homepage to "Today on Radio."
If you'd like to have a copy of Dr. Stanley's complete message, you can order over at the bookstore. The title is "Our Living Hope." Again, you'll find these resources at intouch.org. To call or text, the number is 1-800-IN-TOUCH. To write to us, address your letter to In Touch, Post Office Box 7900, Atlanta, Georgia 30357.
Coming up, you'll hear Dr. Stanley's hope-filled prayer. Stay with us for today's "Moment with Charles Stanley."
Guest (Female): In our spiritual journey, we often have questions. How do I know God's will for my life? Does God hear my prayers? Why do bad things happen? The answers are found in the word of God, but how do we know where to start?
The free In Touch devotional can help point you in the right direction with biblically-based content from Dr. Charles Stanley. You'll get insight and wisdom through daily devotionals, Bible studies, and more. The In Touch devotional, delivered monthly to your mailbox. Subscribe for free at intouch.org/daily.
Have you ever forgotten something God taught you when you were reading the Bible? When we take note of what God reveals to us, it helps us to apply it to our lives. With the Charles F. Stanley Life Principles Journal, you can keep track of your spiritual journey and be transformed by God's truth.
This journal features artwork of Dr. Stanley's 30 life principles, lined pages for writing, a prayer journaling section, and more. To order, call 1-800-IN-TOUCH or go to intouch.org/journal.
Guest (Male): You're listening to In Touch. If you know Jesus as Savior, life is never hopeless. With a prayer for you, here's a "Moment with Charles Stanley."
Dr. Charles Stanley: Heavenly Father, we thank you for the promise of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, but most of all, we thank you for the reality of it. Thank you for the Christ who sits at your right hand, for the Holy Spirit who bears witness of his presence in our heart. Thank you for the love that you shed abroad in our hearts by giving us him, alive, living within us today.
And I pray, Father, that somebody who does not know him as Savior, Lord, would accept him today. But to accept him is not merely to accept a person, but to be reassured of hope and confidence that no circumstance in life is hopeless, but full of hope, full of joy, that regardless of the consequences of our environment, we still have living, abiding, eternal hope that is to be found in our relationship to the resurrected, living Lord. We thank you and praise you for that, and we ask it in Jesus' name.
Guest (Male): You can learn more about how to have lasting hope through Jesus Christ when you visit us at intouch.org. And if today's program has encouraged your relationship with Jesus, we'd love to hear from you.
Tomorrow on In Touch: Are you trying to impress God, the creator of the heavens and the earth? It's basically impossible. Learn more about that Thursday on In Touch, the teaching ministry of Dr. Charles Stanley. This program is a presentation of In Touch Ministries, Atlanta, Georgia, and remains on this station through the grace of God and your faithful prayers and gifts.
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With In Touch monthly devotional, you’ll have a consistent guide for your daily time with God. Each issue includes daily scripture readings, a Bible reading plan, and devotions from the biblical teachings of Dr. Charles Stanley. Always free!
Past Episodes
- Back to Basics
- Before Bethlehem
- Biblical Meditation
- Brokenness: The Way to Blessing
- Building Wise Relationships
- Called to be a Disciple
- Complete in Christ: A Study of Col. - Vol. 1
- Complete in Christ: A Study of Col. - Vol. 2
- Complete in Christ: A Study of Col. - Vol. 2-5
- Complete in Christ: A Study of Col. - Vol. 3
- Complete in Christ: A Study of Col. - Vol. 4
- Complete in Christ: Study/Colossians VOL 1
- Complete in Christ: Study/Colossians VOL 2
- Contending for the Faith: A Study of Jude
- Countdown to Judgment
- Facing Life's Obstacles
- First Peter: Living Triumphantly
- Forgiveness: God's Grace Demonstrated
- Forward By Faith
- God Has An Answer for Our Unmet Needs
- God's Promise for Blessing
- Good News of Great Joy
- Grace for Today
- Grace: God's Second Chance
- Growing Strong in Faith
- Healing Damaged Emotions
- Helps to Holiness
- Helps to Holiness - VOL 1
- Helps to Holiness - VOL 2
- Hope for A New Life
- How Grace Changes Everything
- How the Truth Can Set You Free
- How to Choose Your Destiny
- How to Experience Forgiveness
- How to Reach Your Full Potential
- How to Release Your Burdens
- How to Talk with God
- How to Talk with God - Vol 1
- How to Talk with God - Vol 2
- Humility in the Life of the Believer
- Landmines in the Path of the Believer
- Learning to Pray the Bible Way
- Learning to Walk By Faith
- Letting Go of Anger
- Liberated by Faith: A Study of Galatians
- Liberated to Love
- Life Principles - Volume 1
- Life Principles - Volume 2
- Life Principles - Volume 3
- Life Principles - Volume 4
- Life Principles - Volume 5
- Listening to God
- Living in the Power of the Holy Spirit
- Living Life at Its Best
- Living the Extraordinary Life
- Living Triumphantly: A Study of 1st Peter VOL 1
- Living Triumphantly: A Study of 1st Peter VOL 2
- Living Triumphantly: A Study of 1st Peter VOL 3
- Living Triumphantly: A Study of 1st Peter VOL 3.3
- Living Triumphantly: A Study of 1st Peter VOL 3.4
- Living Triumphantly: A Study of 1st Peter VOL 3.5
- Living Triumphantly: A Study of 1st Peter VOL 3.6
- LP - Volume 5
- Passion for God
- Prayer Life of a Ministry Leader
- Pursuing God's Heart - Vol 1
- Pursuing God's Heart - Vol 2
- Pursuing God's Heart - Vol 3
- Pursuing God's Heart - Vol 4
- Sanctification
- Satanic Attack
- Servanthood: The Way to Greatness
- Spiritual Discernment
- Steps to God's Guidance
- Strong
- Success God's Way
- The Awareness Of God's Presence
- The Believer's Impact
- The Believer's Warfare
- The Blood of Christ
- The Book of Books
- The Character of God
- The Character of God Vol 1
- The Character of God Vol 2
- The Character of God Vol 3
- The Coming King: A Study of Revelation - VOL 1
- The Coming King: A Study of Revelation - VOL 2
- The Coming King: A Study of Revelation - VOL 3
- The Coming King: A Study of Revelation - VOL 4
- The Coming King: A Study of Revelation - VOL 5
- The Coming of Christ
- The Convictions by Which We Live
- The Courage to Stand
- The Encouraging Message from the Cross
- The Encouraging Message of the Cross
- The God Who Cares
- The Joy of Obedience
- The Key to the Heart of God
- The Life That Wins
- The Path of Spiritual Maturity
- The Power of Patience
- The Power of Praise
- The Power of the Holy Spirit
- The Privilege of Knowing God
- The Promises of God
- The Reach of God's Love
- The Real War
- The Source of My Strength
- The Spirit-Filled Life
- The Storms of Life
- The Truth About Grace
- The Truth About Sin
- The Ways of God
- The Will of God
- The Words of Our Mouth
- True Peace
Video from Dr. Charles Stanley
Featured Offer
With In Touch monthly devotional, you’ll have a consistent guide for your daily time with God. Each issue includes daily scripture readings, a Bible reading plan, and devotions from the biblical teachings of Dr. Charles Stanley. Always free!
About In Touch Ministries
In Touch Ministries is the broadcast teaching ministry of Dr. Charles Stanley.
About Dr. Charles Stanley
Dr. Charles Stanley
September 25, 1932 – April 18, 2023
Dr. Charles F. Stanley was the senior pastor of First Baptist Church Atlanta for more than fifty years. He was also the founder of In Touch Ministries and a New York Times best-selling author, who wrote more than seventy books encouraging people to seek Jesus as their Savior and know Him as their wise and loving Lord.
Known to audiences around the world through his wide-reaching TV and radio broadcasts, Stanley modeled his 65 years of ministry after the apostle Paul’s message in Acts 20:24: “Life is worth nothing unless I use it for doing the work assigned me by the Lord Jesus—the work of telling others the Good News about God’s mighty kindness and love.”
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