Robert & Kay Camenisch encouraging and equipping relationships

Hope for the New Year

Leaving one year and entering a new one is a time of transition, a chance to begin again, with hope for better. That sense of hope is strengthened by New Year’s wishes for happiness, blessings, and prosperity.

We celebrate as we embark on our new beginning, and even make resolutions in our hope for better, for improvement in life.

We have reason to hope for change in 2016. This year, several things have threatened our sense of security, such as court and political decisions that dictate unrighteousness and moral decline, an influx of illegal immigrants, random attacks by individuals and by terrorists groups, and talk of welcoming refugees.

As candidates compete for political support, the lack of clear answers to problems is evident. Lingering questions and doubts further threaten peace for tomorrow.

However, since we celebrate Christmas just a week before the New Year, we have a fresh reminder of the source of hope.

Emmanuel (God with us) is the maker of heaven and earth (Ps. 115:15). He is our hope. Jesus is not afraid of tomorrow because He is Sovereign over all (1 Tim. 6:13-16).

Furthermore, He is with us, so we have no need to fear (Matt. 1:23). Even in a seemingly out-of-control world, He cares for His own. He will see to our needs.

We know that, so why does our hope waver and grow dim?

Jesus said, “If your eye is clear, your whole body will be full of light. But if your eye is bad, your whole body will be full of darkness” (Matt. 6:22-23).  When our hope grows dim, we need to check our eyes.

When our eyes are turned toward Jesus, we are filled with light and hope. When we focus on the bad things in life (whether personally or culturally), we’re filled with fear, darkness, and hopelessness.

“For this reason I say to you, do not be anxious for your life” “Which of you by being anxious can add a single cubit to his life’s span?” (Matt. 6:25, 27).

Watching the news sometimes steals my joy. So does listening to murmuring and complaining—whether through my own thoughts or from others. When I focus on problems, hope evaporates because I feel helpless to make—or to influence—needed changes.

But it’s not about me or what I can do.

I have a friend Who is King of kings, sovereign over all. He is faithful. He works all things together for good in His time and way. Hope rises when I look to Him, remembering His love, compassion,mercy, power, and His covenant commitment and faithfulness to keep that covenant.

If my hope is slipping, all I need to do is turn my eyes to Jesus, Emmanuel. “I wait for the Lord, my soul does wait, and in His word do I hope” (Ps. 130:5). Wait means to look for expectantly, to wait with expectation, to hope.

When my focus is clearly on Him—rather than on the problem or what I want Him to do—light floods my soul and hope rises as I gaze into His eyes.

The world is a mess, and it seems we are going in the wrong direction. But the answer isn’t in fixing the problems. The answer is in Jesus. Our efforts will fall short without Him.

As long as we deny God, we will face trouble. However, “the eye of the Lord is on those who fear Him, on those who hope for His lovingkindness (covenant faithfulness)” (Ps. 33:17-18). The God Who is with us is not surprised by the state of the union, and He watches over His people.

Our challenge is to guard our eyes and keep our hope in Jesus, not on the politicians or anything or anybody else. We need to fear God and hope in Him more than we fear the things happening around us.

“Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for He who promised is faithful” (Heb. 10:23).

Help us, Lord to be faithful to look to You for our hope and salvation throughout the new year.

 

Declutter: Make a Fresh Start for the New Year

What is your New Year’s tradition?

We’ve been to a few parties and have participated in watch services of prayer and praise to bring in the New Year. I’ve also made resolutions, but haven’t done anything consistently enough to establish a tradition.

However, with the change of the calendar year, I do look back to see what God has done in previous months, and to review what I learned about life through things that happened in the past year.

I also look forward, asking, “Where am I going? What does the Lord want from me in the year ahead?” I have an inner since of making a new start and a question of, “Lord, what are you saying to me?”

His word to me this year is being reinforced by the deep cleaning we are doing as we transition an inherited house into our home. As I clean out “their” closets and drawers, I run into things that have not been used in years. As I take our boxes out of storage and go through them, I wonder, “Why did you keep this?”

I’m keenly aware that “stuff” is cluttering our house—and thus our lives.

I’m also increasingly aware that harmless—even good—“stuff” can quickly crowd out better things in life. I’m seeing that good can rob us of better. It can even cause harm–that we’re likely not aware of.

This is true in our spiritual lives too—probably more than in our physical lives.

In the last days it has also occurred to me that years ago, nearly every prayer included the clause, “and forgive us our sins.” The phrase was used so much that I heard a sermon from the ’80s about how that petition could become a meaningless ritual and that we needed to be specific in confessing our sins.

Today, I rarely hear anybody ask forgiveness for “our sins” unless they are repeating the Lord’s prayer. It seems that we’ve swung so far in focusing on God’s love that we forget that our sin separates us from the source of that love.

As I find forgotten things in closets and drawers, I wonder how much “stuff” I have hidden in the closets and drawers of my heart in the past year—or years. How many sins have I let pass without seeking forgiveness, i.e. without clearing out the dregs?

How many times have I grumbled, complained, or coveted rather than being grateful in all things? How often have I said hurtful or empty words, rather than being an encouragement? How often have I sought my own pleasure rather than seeking the Lord? How many times have I kept quiet when given the opportunity to give credit to God for His goodness and faithfulness? And so forth.

How much clutter have I deposited this past year?

“If we confess our sins, [the Lord] is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (1John 1:9).

When we don’t confess our sins, do we bury them in forgotten places of our hearts, like the forgotten stuff I’m finding and throwing out?

In Psalm 19, David prayed, “Who can discern his errors? Acquit me of hidden faults. Also keep back Thy servant from presumptuous sins; Let them not rule over me; then I shall be blameless, and I shall be acquitted of great transgression” (12-13).

In David’s words, it seems our “stuff” may not be harmless at all. It could rule over us. Some of it could be “great transgression.”  The New Year is a good time to do spiritual house cleaning to get rid of the stuff that clutters our soul, an opportunity to unburden our souls of unneeded stuff.

We can then begin the New Year with a clean heart and a fresh start.

David offered prayers that are appropriate for the New Year, “Search me, O God, and know my heart; Try me and know my anxious thoughts; and see if there be any hurtful way in me, and lead me in the everlasting way” (Ps. 139:23-24).

“Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in Thy sight, O Lord, my rock and my Redeemer” (Ps. 19:14).

Do you seek a fresh start in the New Year? What do you do?