Faith is not certainty so much as it is acting-as-if, in great hope.What chutzpah to quote my own words right under the title of my blog. Well, why not? It IS my blog. And the words describe my faith quite well.
Perhaps due to old age and a greater conviction that there really is nothing new under the sun, I seem to be repeating myself more and more. Nevertheless, I'm convinced that if Christianity is about anything at all, it is about hope, and I often speak those words - to myself and to others - my Good News, so to speak.
The prophets in the Hebrew Testament and the writers of the Christian Testament show us the path of hope. Above all, the Gospels, the books that tell the story of Jesus, our Lord and Savior, the Word made flesh, the One whom we are called to follow - the Gospels, above all - point the way to hope. The Incarnation, the teachings, the healings, the embrace of the outcasts, the death on the cross, and the Resurrection, the whole of the human life of Jesus Christ shows us the way to hope.
In the face of our own sinfulness, struggles, sicknesses, losses, deprivations, and all manner of adversity, we are called to be a people of hope.
From Isaiah in the Lectionary on the feast day of St. Mark, a bearer of the Good News:
How beautiful upon the mountains
are the feet of the messenger who announces peace,
who brings good news,
who announces salvation,
who says to Zion, ‘Your God reigns.’
Listen! Your sentinels lift up their voices,
together they sing for joy;
for in plain sight they see
the return of the Lord to Zion.
Break forth together into singing,
you ruins of Jerusalem;
for the Lord has comforted his people,
he has redeemed Jerusalem.
The Lord has bared his holy arm
before the eyes of all the nations;
and all the ends of the earth shall see
the salvation of our God.Isaiah 52:7-10