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Sunday Sermon

Some thoughts on Hope


Chapter 13 of 1 Corinthians closes with these words..” and now these remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.” We hear much abut faith and much about love but hope seems to be the neglected triplet.

Dr. Armand Mayo Nicoli of Harvard Medical School writes: “The word hope is used and heard little in our culture. Perhaps hope conflicts with our concept of a scientific world.” Many books exist about faith and love but very few on hope. Hope is essential to sanity and a balanced outlook on life. We all need to hope, as hope will sustain us in perilous times.

Hope looks forward to something good. Faith looks to the person who has promised and hope to the thing promised. Faith is the root, hope is the fruit. Faith looks to who and hope to what. Real hope for the future is grounded in the promise of God and guaranteed in the resurrection of Christ Jesus. Hope needs to be based on reality. It is not a mere wish or strong desire.

In a world filled with fear for the future, do you have a hope? Where is your hope and on what is it based? It seems we need to examine to see if our hope is real hope or a mere dream. The hymn writer wrote these words in his song, “The Solid Rock” :

“My hope is built on nothing less,
than Jesus blood and righteousness.
I dare not trust the sweetest frame,
but wholly lean on Jesus name.”

Put your trust in God. His promise never fails.

May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace
as you trust in him,
so that you may overflow with hope
by the power of the Holy Spirit.
~Romans 15:13


Thank you very, very much.
Bill Gibson
Texas, October 1990

Some Thoughts On Haste

I would like to share with you some thoughts on haste.

“He that believeth shall not make haste.”
Isaiah 28:16


Hurry, hurry is the cry of the moment. Time is money; let’s get it done as fast as we can. We seem to rush from one thing to another so that we have very little time free from the hurry of the hour. There seems to be a real lack of restfulness in our lives. The stress and push take their toll in lives every day. This is also true in churches as numbers of people and meetings fill our week nights. George Morrison used this text years ago in a sermon on “The Leisure of Faith” and he points out that where there is greater haste there is also found lesser faith.

We do not become strong mature Christians overnight. God moves slowly but surely in our lives to accomplish His will in us. It took years for Israel to learn the lessons from God. It takes us a long time to learn from God that which He wants us to learn. God is not hasty in His judgments and in his dealings with us.

The haste of which our text speaks is not the urgency and the push that is laid upon the serious Christian to get the work done. The harvest is ready and the workers are few. Every Christian should sense the urgency and the “now-ness” of the hour in which we live. Yet he will “run with patience the race that is set before him”. UN-hasting, not UN-resting should be our motto.

Our text speaks of the haste that makes waste. Haste without faith produces work without fruit. We Christians find ourselves caught up in the rush and hurry of the day. We find we are more interested in producing results in less time than we are in waiting on God with patience and with faith. This haste is the cause for many of our problems.

Hasty judgments are so easy to make and yet cause much hurt. Why is it so hard to hold back from making a hasty judgment? There seems to be nothing harder than to suspend judgment of another in our daily contact with people.

We live in haste to get enough money saved so we can retire. Many a couple have saved and worked hard for enough for the later years, only to find out at retirement that they have no more strength left. Why not a four day week if we can get the work of five days done in four? Result is poor quality and wasted time.

Hasty decisions have been the cause of failure in many instances. We need always to guard ourselves as Christians in this matter of decision. It’s the little decisions that make the difference, it takes time to know God’s will in making those decisions. God’s promise to us is:

“But they that wait upon the Lord
shall renew their strength;
they shall mount up with wings as eagles;
they shall run, and not be weary;
and they shall walk, and not faint.”


It is our desire that this little message be a blessing to each of you.

Thank you very, very much..
Bill Gibson
Craig Alaska, Fall 1985

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About Bill and Gladis

In 1949, Bill and Gladis Gibson left family and friends behind and began their lives together as missionaries to the Jivaro (Shuar) Indians in Ecuador South America.
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This took an incredible amount of courage and faith because at that time, the Shuar were fierce indigenous people living in the Amazon rainforest, actively engaging in feuds, vendettas, witchcraft, and violence.

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