Monday, August 27, 2007
On the Journey Towards Hope
written by ALBERT M. LEWIS
The journey towards hope is a deliberate and difficult decision, especially if hope is not a common part of our life and vision.
The extreme opposite of hope is despair, and the middle ground is indecision or ambivalence. Ambivalence prevents us from seeing the mystery and hearing the music of life; all is gray, and sameness surrounds us.
Despair causes us to see and feel everything in consistently blotted blocks of black.
Hope, the consciously conceived child of the desire for more, is parented by the will to dream ever so slightly about a tomorrow, and to let go of what must be cast off from today.
Moses, Jesus, and certain prophets wandered in the desert of doubt and despair for as long as forty days.
Yet each of them allowed himself to be open enough to be delivered, and ultimately to become the deliverer.
Hope whispers to us: "You are alive and loved, even if you cannot fully feel it."
The inhale and exhale of a breath, the blink of an eye, and the yawn of tiredness or boredom remind us that hope is part of the soul yearning to be fully acknowledged.
Hope rises from the soul first as a rivulet and then as a great stream.
It begins in the daring to sleep or nourish ourselves.
Hope is rooted in the soul, watered by tears shed and shared, and given life by us and God.
At any moment, therefore, you are at least halfway there.
- RABBI ALBERT M. LEWIS is the Director of the Emeritus College at Aquinas, in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and a weekly columnist for the Grand Rapids Press.
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