HOPE: a gathering place (part 4)

A global candlelight vigil for hope.

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“The Lord has promised Good to me. His Word, my Hope secures.”

from “Amazing Grace” by John Newton, a hymn born of his conversion from a slave trader to an abolitionist/preacher, from blind to seeing, from hopeless to hopeful.

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Welcome back as we enter the final week of this series!

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Today’s contributors inspire us to reflect on the seeds of transformation God asks us each to plant–among the voices of “Why bother?” “Give up!” “That’s illogical,” “But that’s not the way it is,” “That’s strange,” “That’s impractical”– in our lives.

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May we remember today these seeds we planted in faith, and find the hope that resists digging them up when things don’t go as cleanly, as quickly, as planned. May we remember that breakthroughs are directly attached to our meantime, when we allow the seed to sprout and grow toward the surface, into some unexpected fruit, better than we imagined. Breakthroughs come when we realize we don’t need to know how to grow a plant… but just listen to the (wink) ludicrous loving whispers of the One who does. One now at a time.

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And what if hope, then, is the ever-increasing trust in that process? Won’t we all keep planting those seeds?

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“Where do you find hope?”

“For me, hope always seems to come from other people. In tough situations, I have seen so much resilience when people are faced with unbearable hardships and heartaches. Their determination to continue on, through those tough times gives me hope. 

If people are willing and able to push through this, then together, we can push through anything. 

On a more personal note, I think back to certain times in my life when I had been in situations where I had given up on myself- Where my weaknesses and failures that continuously swirled around my head tainted me- telling me that those failings were all I was made of. In those times, specific people in my life still saw me and loved me where I was at. Yes, they saw my failures and weaknesses, but they also saw all the good qualities about me as well- and that always provided hope to me through my own turmoil.”

Amanda Fahrendorf works at the Riverwest Food Pantry in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. She is passionate about meeting people right where they are, and fostering community in a world that so desperately needs it. She’s an artist, a hiker, a remarkable listener, a superb whistler, a very scary lava monster during Kindergarten recess, and a most genuine friend. In some of my most difficult hours as a teacher last year, God sent in Amanda with her encouragement, energy, and grace.

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“I first find Hope in my faith. My faith in Jesus is a major priority in my life and having a personal relationship with Jesus is especially important to me. I pray constantly, and when I pray, I must have faith in what I am praying for. By spending quality time with Jesus through prayer, I find hope in that Jesus hears my prayers, and that provides me comfort.

I also found hope from my mother. She provided a great example for me and gave me hope my whole life through her many sacrifices. Because of her vision for my life she helped prepared me for success, so I am hopeful that I can handle any situation that comes my way because of my mom’s prayers, love, and guidance. 

My daughter provides me hope as well. She is one of my biggest blessings in my life, and I thank God for her. I am passing on the same knowledge to my daughter that my mom passed on to me, so my daughter will be ready and prepared for the pressures of this world. She provides me extra motivation to succeed, because I want to be able to provide a great life for her. I am hopeful that I will provide a good example for her on what a good father is, on how a man should treat a woman/lady, on what a good work ethic is, among other valuable lessons–so that when she gets older and has to make decisions, she will have a good blueprint to look back on. If I do a good job as her dad, I am hopeful she will make the right decisions.

I also find hope from my own athletic and coaching experiences. I played sports my whole life, so I understand teamwork and working hard towards a common goal. Coaching is about building relationships and teaching life lessons through sports. Of course I taught basketball skills and concepts, and that is why our players and teams were successful over the years, but one of the main things I was trying to do was teach life lessons through basketball… and even if some of our players did not fully understand some of those lessons while in high school, maybe one day when they get older, they will look back and say, ‘That is what coach was trying to teach us,’ and maybe some of those lessons we were trying to teach will be able to help them the rest of their lives as adults, and that gives me hope. I know the importance of sports, coaching and leadership, and the responsibility of adding value into other people’s lives.”

(Coach) Ron Moncrief is the Athletic Director at Saint Joseph High School in Natrona Heights, Pennsylvania. He coached women’s basketball at Vincentian Academy from 2005 to 2020, where his teams won back-to-back state championships in 2014 and 2015. Ron was named 2013 and 2014 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette North Basketball Coach of the Year, and the 2014 Pennsylvania Sports Writers (A) Coach of the Year. He is the author of Coaching from the Heart: The Greatest Untold Stories. I can attest: his authentic faith and love for others inspires his players to rise to more than they would otherwise dare imagine.

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“Every year, after our final shows, I ask the cast to choose quotes from the show which reflect a life philosophy or lesson. One by one, 2nd or 3rd or 5th graders stand up and reveal deep insights into human behavior, positive philosophies, and messages of love and hope they have gleaned from the show. Their choices and explanations reveal depth, insight, love and positivity far beyond their years. The hearts of our children give me hope.”

Karen Cordaro (aka “Mrs. C”) is an educator and the founder of ACT ONE Theatre School, which offers musical theatre programs for youth from Kindergarten through high school. She also wrote the script and co-wrote the lyrics for Sesjun (an internationally broadcast jazz program with Holland’s Metropolitan Orchestra), directed the Route 66 performance with the cast of The Bold and the Beautiful in Rotterdam, and has written for Paramount, among many other accomplishments in the field. I experienced firsthand how Mrs. C encourages her young students to take creative risks, celebrates their differences, empowers growth, nurtures an empathetic imagination, and lives out her motto “There are many ways to teach love.”

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“Hope springs forth from many sources for me. In the past, it was working with alumni and their families in doing service work around the community. Being able to lead such a genuine and kind group of people meant a lot and really shaped my college experience. Now, with the hustle and bustle of my 9-5, hope comes in different ways: texts and messages from old friends that feel like no time has passed at all, music that energizes me or helps me reflect, and spreading joy in the form of cheesy jokes every week. But most of all, hope comes from continuing to grow personally and seeing not only how my life is changing for the better, but how I am able to be a light for others.”

Justin Knobloch is an analyst at Digitas in Chicago, with side hustles including but not limited to: near-professional Latin dancing, curating dozens of playlists to suit your every mood and season under the pseudonym “Headphone Guy,” playing the guitar, drinking too much milk in Italian restaurants, and folding shapeshifting origami roses. Two times a year, he can be found fully costumed as Buddy the Elf. Once weekly, he can be found emailing his coworkers and friends a new collection of original puns. Daily, he can be found bopping to a good beat, confidently strolling along, and alchemizing authentic joy in all he encounters.

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“I find so much hope in children and teenagers (yes, teenagers). Kids and teens are seriously the best. My nieces, nephews, students, and little brothers and sisters at the Finca being me hope and call me to the work of giving all I’ve got to building up my little corner of God’s kingdom. Here are some favorite memories over the past few months: getting a FaceTime call from a student so that I could be a part of her grandmas 60th birthday party, seeing a very fantastic kiddo laughing hysterically over Bob books as she learned to read virtually, riding the waves on a ridiculous pineapple inflatable with my nieces and nephews, and knowing that my first class of students have beat numerous odds and graduated high school. I’m really wildly blessed to know children and teens who have shown me the heart of God- a heart that loves lavishly, unconditionally , and fills the world with laughter! If you need hope, be there for a kid in your life. Works every time.”

Anna Smith is a 3-5th grade Montessori teacher at Durant Tuuri Mott Elementary–a public school in Flint, Michigan that offers multiple specialized programs to suit its students’ unique needs. Upon graduating from Franciscan University, she taught middle school English and Religion De La Salle Elementary School, a Catholic school in Memphis (now Compass Binghampton Charter School) that serves primarily immigrant and refugee students. “Over 13 languages spoken in a student body of under 200!” she told me. From 2018 to 2019, she served as the Sub-Director and Special Education Director of Centro de Educación Básica Católico San Pedro at the Finca del Niño in Trujillo, Honduras. Anna is the loving and beloved “cool aunt” to her nieces and nephews, a strong woman of faith who lets God make a way in places others might write off, an angelic vocalist who can harmonize anything, and a top meatball chef.

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“I take hope to the ability to imagine a better world – more loving, more just – than the one we currently reside in.  

Hope is necessary in my work as an addiction recovery coach.  It is necessary for the recoverees because recovery is impossible without the ability to imagine, even if fleetingly and incompletely, a life of sobriety.  One of the things strong drugs do when taken frequently is rewire the neurons in the brain into a closed circuit of drug-seeking thought. Not much else gets in.  So when someone in active addiction simply imagines sobriety, that alone is a victory.  

Hope – as distinct from optimism – is also necessary for the recovery coach.  Optimism expects things to turn out well; hope is just thankful when they do.  

So what gives me hope?  The small victories of my recoverees.  One got high, spent all the money he was saving to move out his parents’ house, wrecked his car, and lost his job.  A day or two later, he called to meet with me.  The fact of this call meant that he had not given up on himself.  That gave me hope.  For six months, I have been trying to convince another recoveree to go to inpatient rehab because outpatient has not worked (he keeps getting high when he has too much free time on his hands).  Today he is taking a Greyhound bus to a six-month treatment center. Even though he bailed after one day because he was anxious the last time he tried inpatient treatment, his taking the bus today gives me hope.  

In addictions work, there is no victory too small to celebrate, and when we celebrate it is for a hope fulfilled, even a hope seemingly as insignificant as a person getting on a bus.”

Todd Whitmore is an Associate Professor of Theology and Anthropology at the University of Notre Dame. He is the author of Imitating Christ in Magwi: An Anthropological Theology, which he wrote upon traveling to northern Uganda and South Sudan from 2005-2013. In 2018, he wrote a successful grant to train addiction recovery coaches to work in the local hospital emergency room, to support those recovering from overdoses to maintain ongoing sobriety. He is currently a Certified Addiction Peer Recovery Coach for persons with methamphetamine and opioid addictions in northern Indiana. His work–and his ability to articulate its inspiration in lectures and writings–is a vivid example of the modern-day, living hope of Christ in our world.

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Thank you so much to everyone who has contributed–in writing, reading, talking, sharing, living, or all of the above–to this HOPE: a gathering place series. You have inspired me and an exponential amount of others more than you will ever know. Your seeds are producing fruit in ways you could never imagine.

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The image at the top of this post is the one I want to leave you with after these four weeks. The vision I had from the beginning: flickering candles coming together from all over, a brief moment in time, creating a bonfire, and then going forth each more blazing than before… to pass it on.

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Look around, look within: don’t you see them burning?

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I declare it: God is working in your life, in my life, in our world. We have glimpsed His promises. We will know the next good step in our participation, we will plant the seeds and trust there’s a reason. We will be renewed.

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And we will discover HOPE, again and again, against all odds.

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Go forth, brave friends. ♡

HOPE: a gathering place (part 3)

“When historians pick up their pens to write the story of the 21st century, let them say that it was your generation who laid down the heavy burdens of hate at last and that peace finally triumphed over violence, aggression, and war. So I say to you, walk with the wind, brothers and sisters, and let the spirit of peace and the power of everlasting love be your guide.”

John Lewis, civil rights leader and congressman, in his final essay “Together, You Can Redeem the Soul of Our Nation.”
Photo taken at the 2015 UNOSDP International Sport and Social Impact Summit, where youth leaders from 30+ countries united in a singular, hopeful cause. (Read on for Johana’s story!)

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Welcome back, friends!

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Things look different today. This morning, as I was sipping coffee, looking out into this sleepy Pittsburgh alley, and reading Discerning the Voice of God by Priscilla Shirer (shout-out to Kaliyah for the recommendation!) I was reminded of one of the most powerful prayers in the game:

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“Lord, open my eyes to see where you are working.”

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That’s the incredible gift of this project: this very opening of the eyes, this ongoing discovery of where God has worked, is working, and will work in the lives of us all, nationwide, worldwide. It is seeing, one step at a time, how we are each called to participate in that work in our own way. I know I’m not the only one continually baffled by this!

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So, as we enter week three of this exploration in HOPE, I pray we all keep our eyes WIDE open. ♡

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“Where do you find hope?”

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“I find hope in remembering.

Remembering how God has provided for me in the past. In places where I don’t feel hopeful, I look back and remember the times that He has provided people to give me that hope, who showed me in difficult situations that I can find my hope in the Lord. 

I find hope in looking back and seeing the growth from before to now, and seeing that there’s hope for change. That there will be joy and goodness amidst the struggle, or the being stuck, or whatever it might be.

I find hope in remembering my own life, in looking at the Bible, and at the stories of the saints and all who have gone before us. I find hope particularly in building relationship with young people and young leaders.” 

Olivia Frahm has worked in Catholic youth ministry for the past five years. Currently, she works at the Catholic Youth team in Christchurch, New Zealand as the mission team supervisor, leading a team of four young women as they go into colleges and run retreats, camps, and youth groups. From 2018 to 2019, Liv was a librarian, English teacher, and after-school program coordinator at the Finca del Niño in Trujillo, Honduras. Her hidden talents are soulful belting of “I Won’t Give Up,” making soup that burns your mouth but is so good you aren’t mad about it, animating a Kiwi bird puppet to appear “de verdad,” and inspiring anyone close to her to live a more deeply rooted, and authentic life. 

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“If HOPE is a belief that ‘something wanted or desired will happen,’ how does that feeling visit different communities and the individuals within? Hence it is at least a conundrum if not a complex irony to consider the question, ‘where do I find hope?’

Some find hope everywhere they look, though primarily because their ability to HOPE is an inherited ideal, one of their many unearned privileges.

Hope being something we desire happening isn’t necessarily a universal desire. I’m hoping for rain on the day you hope for sun. Perhaps if more people unpacked HOPE as an acronym, “Help Others, Provide Energy” I would feel less guilty hoping. Conversely, I unpack hope actively instead of passively. My identity as an able-bodied, cis-gendered, socio-politically situated man born without any ailments, physical and/or mental constraints in most of the pertinent categories of my identity allows me this advantage. Hence, my ability to hope and have my hopes achieve an unfettered fruition is an easy thing to miss if I’m not mindful of it. 

I don’t have to hope to one day be able to demonstrate my love publicly as opposed to having my love closeted, regimenting me to a lifetime of loving privately, clothed in shame. 

I’m able to walk unimpaired towards the possibility of hope, talk intelligently about my expectations of having hope. Seldom has anyone balked at my ability to hopefully walk and talk, though my race/my Blackness makes it more probable that I could end my life outlined in chalk. 

Someone can hope for their paychecks fatter while others must hope that eventually their lives, though they are Black, may nonetheless matter. 

Though I was fortunate enough that my family transcended poverty while I was in my childhood, serving me invaluable lessons about appreciating what was on my plate not having been an option for others, or the ‘Other,’ it is a fleeting thought that requires mindful vigilance for me to not lose it. 

Many people’s hopes are inseparable from whatever luck they have experienced, oblivious of the fact that luck is nothing if not the residue of preparation. All that said, where I find hope is in the eyes, conversation, or actions of someone who struggles with hoping only for themselves and instead invests their hope in the wellbeing of others and then works towards actualizing it.

Dr. J.W. Wiley is currently a full-time writer, with a novel published in 2019 titled, An Academic Lynching: Myth, Misandry, and Me, Too,” and an academic book published in 2013 titled, “The NIGGER in You: Challenging Dysfunctional Language, Engaging Leadership Moments,” and a consultant with his company Xamining Diversity. From 2000-2018 Dr. Wiley served as a professor of Philosophy and Interdisciplinary studies at State University of New York Plattsburgh, where he also was the Chief Diversity Officer, and the Director for the Center for Diversity, Pluralism, and Inclusion (CDPI). Dr. Wiley was co-writer/co-director of the documentary “Dissed-Respect: The Impact of Bullying,” He is also a traveling lecturer, and his talk on “Examining the Dimensions of Cool” at Notre Dame in 2016 was extremely formative in my earliest days of questioning how the notions of “haves” and “have-nots” play out in our culture—and how we can unpack these forces and work to change them. Dr. Wiley is, above all, an agent of hope, a beacon of wisdom shining away shadows of ignorance and apathy in the minds of all whom his messages reach.

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“My hope is found in God through Jesus Christ! It is through Jesus’ death on the cross for my sins and His resurrection that I no longer wander aimlessly, unsure of where my hope lies. I have assurance that whatever happens in this life, my eternity rests with God our Creator who loves and cares for us. It is the only hope that never fails and never changes. This Truth brings peace to my heart and soul through the trials and uncertainties of this life! 

‘…and hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out within our hearts through the Holy Spirit who was given to us.’ -Romans 5:5″

Dayelle Metras of Kansas City is one of the most empathetic people I have ever met, as she will meet someone exactly where they are in one moment—cry with them, pray with them, make them feel wholly heard and loved—and then will go on to make them laugh so hard they cry even harder. This makes her an incredible friend and an incredible nurse. Her dancing skills—salsa, punta, toe-tapping, she does it all!—will leave you awestruck, and her love for Jesus will leave you better than she found you. 

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“‘Where do you find hope?’

For a Christian, this response can be easier to give—as hope makes our faith make sense.

In my life I have had highs and lows, but never have I been without hope for a better tomorrow. 

I’ve known hope since I was small. I was very insecure as a child. I had speech problems. But I always sought help to work through this, and I always believed in myself. I always knew hope, that the sunshine will come out after a gray day.

When I was around 17 I began to see more attentively the problems of my country (Honduras), how many young people were breaking the law or in gangs all around me, and how this number was increasing. I knew how to help, but I knew it would be difficult work. 

Yet, I have always liked to do things that challenge me as a person. I’ve always had hope, and the confidence that I am able to give more than I am.

When I was 18, I began volunteering in a prevention center that helped these vulnerable young people in my area. I began giving classes in Basic English, computation, and crafts. For four or five years, more or less, my daily routine was to go to my own school in the morning, and teach these classes in the afternoon.

Was I tired? Yes. But truly I felt that I was doing something positive for my country, and this was gratifying. 

I was 21 when, due to my work at the center, I was selected to travel to the United States for a United Nations summit for young leaders. I never lost the faith as I was applying for this trip (As I said, I like a challenge!), and I had people surrounding me with so much support.

And there, in that place, my perspective of service work changed. I understood that God gives us a small piece of the world in which we live, and that the world is huge—and we can each do something wherever we are to make a better world. There were so many young people united there for this very cause. The love for a better world was there, concentrated in that place.

I returned to my country with a bigger heart for serving, wanting to help all those in need. I had discovered that the choice to serve, to be a volunteer, is a decision I can practice every day of my life—such as helping someone cross a street or assisting my neighbor when they need something. This type of work is a lifestyle, the hope of helping create a better world.

When I was 22 years old I decided to study law—in a country where it almost seemed like laws didn’t exist. That’s the irony of life! But hope lives on. People will say that being in a lawyer in my country will be the death of me (or crueler things than that!), but no one knows the amount of hope I find in this career. It is a noble job, as good lawyers are guardians of the earth!

I currently have a job with the government, so life is still ironic, because honestly I never thought I’d be where I am. But I like what I do, I try to go the extra mile, and hope that I can leave a positive footprint in my workplace. Doing this work  is something I am proud of. I work for my country, with the faith and the hope of giving my tiny grain of sand so that this country has a better future. 

And now, a cherry on top. In 2016, I was in a season of heartbreak and said, “One day I will know love…the love Mom and Dad have taught me for more than twenty years.” And today at age 25, more secure and authentic than I was before, I am sure that I have found the love of my life. 

So, hope has been in every stage of my life. I am a very happy young woman because I understand that everything God does is good, and everything that God allows is necessary. God gives us hope, in sickness and tribulations. He promised the rainbow after the rain. He promised us hope. 

Hope lives in every step we take. Despite the situation, hope always must be our best ally.

Hope is a reason to keep going forward.

Hope is for the living.

Hope is you.”

(translated)

Johana Cortes is currently studying Law in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, alongside her fiancé Gabriel. I had the honor of befriending her in 2015 for the UN camp in Florida (when my Spanish/Honduras knowledge was very minimal!) and reconnecting with her four years later in her hometown in Honduras, when I could thankfully talk about more than her favorite animal and the weather, and thus hear more of her story. Love for God and for others emanates from Johana, and her testimony of hope can remind us all of our little missions to tend to our small plot of the world. 

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Going forward, may our eyes stay open to the work of God, may we walk with the wind toward building a better world in our pedacito of the world, and may “the spirit of peace and the power of everlasting love be your guide.” Have a hope-fueled week, everyone.

HOPE: a gathering place (part 2)

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“See, I am doing a new thing!

Now it springs up; do you not perceive it?

I am making a way in the wilderness

and streams in the wasteland.”

Isaiah 43:18-19

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Hey friends! Thank you for returning to, or joining, this conversation.

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This week, I pose the question: What do hope and listening to new perspectives have in common?

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I propose this answer: They both expand our imaginations.

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While there is certainly a time to go inward and wholly accept a current reality (a hope that bypasses this is counterfeit), there comes a time to go outside of ourselves and imagine that there’s a better way–or maybe simply imagine the possibility that we don’t know everything–which is a relief, isn’t it? Especially when our thoughts stray toward something like, “This is just the way it is,” “This is a dead end,” “They are hopeless,” “I’m hopeless,” “This is hopeless,” etc.?

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An expanded imagination gives space for productive accountability, surrender, learning, community, and compassionate transformation to occur. So, we hope in some greater Good. We listen. And we act (or, in select cases, don’t act) from there, even when it feels like the biggest mess in the world.

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“See, I am doing a new thing!” God said through Isaiah, to both the exiles in Babylon and to us today. I’ve always read this in the tone of a very wholesome Picasso-type figure giddy to reveal the masterpiece he’s working on, one we never could’ve predicted. That seems fitting. God, the ultimate Creator, the genius Artist behind it all, is of course always creating things, transforming things, expanding things, progressing things for Good in new ways–and wanting us to share in that. We each were a new thing too, after all, and continue to be if we dare let Him work in and through us. (Say it louder for the stubbornness-prone *me* in the back!)

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“Now it springs up; do you not perceive it?”

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So, this week, in this place and beyond, I invite us to:

  • dare to listen to new perspectives (starting with the powerful ones below)
  • dare to imagine new possibilities
  • dare to hope… and watch God work.

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“Where do you find hope?”

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“’Hope’ is the thing with feathers-/ that perches in the soul-/ and sings the tune without the words-/ and never stops- at all-”

So begins Emily Dickinson’s famous poem on Hope, beloved (or perhaps begrudged) by many students as an example of extended metaphor. It’s a poem I taught to my students, a poem that I myself was taught when I was in their shoes. It’s a poem that, all those years ago in the dusty basement English classroom, seized my heart and mind with its beauty and vividness. Hope is a bird, hope sings: hope is my soul, my soul is a bird, my soul sings, even in the midst of a gale. It is one of the first poems I volitionally memorized, not because a teacher told me to but because I recognized in it words better than my own, words that I wanted to save so that they could spring forth unbidden when my own failed me.

Poetry—and really literature and art, as well—is a source of hope for me. It is a reminder of the constancy of human experience, of human suffering, and the ability of humans to triumph. It is the great border-flattener, removing not only barriers across time and space but also across mind and heart to let me glimpse the experiences of others and lead lives other than my own. And, it reminds me that despite all the pain and difficulties of the world, there is beauty and goodness and truth out there waiting to be encountered.” 

Tracey Schirra is a current education policy research assistant in Washington, DC, former high school English teacher, and perpetual lover of learning. She dabbles in creative writing, various artistic mediums, and political theory. She is sunshine personified. 
The core members of Skupnost Barka (Slavko, Marinka, Stane, Ado, and Marianca) and I painted this mural in the community’s new shed to inspire each workday. The scene depicts the gorgeous Slovenian landscape, and the verse, Psalm 33:5: “The earth is full of God’s unfailing love.”

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“I find Hope in every smile and lovely face of all our core members, as this means that they feel okay. Also in every vegetable in our garden, as this means we have food, we are not hungry, and we respect nature. I find Hope in every kind word. I know more and more we are people who dream and work for better relations – in our small community and wider. I hope and believe in a world of respect and love.”

Brigita Perdih is the volunteer coordinator and an assistant in the Skupnost Barka (L’Arche) Community in Medvode, Slovenia. This is a community of people with developmental disabilities (core members) and people without disabilities who live together, work together, sing together, cook together, garden together, dance together, and take care of one another. Brigita is an incredibly kind, fiery, adventurous (she once did rescue work in the Alps!), open-hearted woman who mentored me and many others during my summer with the community in 2017.

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“When I look at the world today I see despair. When I watch the news or walk down the streets of social media, hopelessness is looming in our posts and souls. However, when I look at Jesus Christ and his love for you and me fully demonstrated at His cross, I become optimistic, even in the face of death or poverty. If God has done so much for me already, what won’t he do to bring me through this too? I find hope in the person of Christ and what he’s offering to all humanity.” 

Sive “Sylvester” Nogada is a follower of Jesus Christ, loving husband to Linku, and the executive Pastor of New Creation church. He was born and raised in Cape Town, South Africa, where his career thrived in church leadership, sports ministry, and sport for development and peace. His vibrant passion for community transformation, and success in carrying it out, led to him becoming a global trainer to church and parachurch leaders across Africa, London, and in the U.S. His ambition for sustainability in African missions has led him to pursue a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration at William Jessup University, CA. He hopes to use his education for holistic-socioeconomic transformation when he returns to South Africa–to set the captives free, give sight to the blind, and declare freedom. His joy will inspire yours. 

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Artist: Adelina, age 6

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“I find hope reading the Bible…. also, I usually find hope when I’m snuggling with you, Mama.”

Adelina Wooldridge, age 6, in response to her mom, Nicole Wooldridge, posing the hope question.  Adelina is an artist in every sense of the word (her striking sailboat painting is featured above!) a generous free spirit, and an effortless master of the one-liner. 

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“I find hope in the mountains, with my calves achy, my breath heavy, and my soul singing the glory of God’s creation.”

Nicole Wooldridge led an initiative to install an entire new water filtration system for the Finca del Niño, and is currently pursuing a degree in Nursing near Seattle, Washington. She’s the mother of Kiara and Adelina, wife of Eric, a former “professional welcomer” to international university students, a lover of learning, a transformative communicator of peace and grace. Nicole lives out the deep authentic love of the Lord through all that life presents her.

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Photographer: Nicole Wooldridge, July 2020

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“I think hope is really when we experience [how God is working in all times of our lives]. Sometimes it is easy to be positive and have optimistic thoughts, no? But when we enter difficult situations—such as the sickness of a relative, financial difficulties, distance, circumstances like this—our faith gets tested and we must take a big step of faith to have hope in these times. Our priest Father Gregorio said once, ‘My hope begins where my optimism ends.” I agree with this. I have had months where it is difficult to be positive, but this is when God allows me to really experience hope. It allows me time to say okay, how am I living? How is my relationship with Jesus, really? And I realize I can continue with my life because I am truly entrusting everything to Him.” (translated)

Nely Herrera is a remarkably warm-hearted missionary with Missioners of Christ in Comayagua, Honduras, where she leads retreats for young adults through the organization Corazon Puro. Born in Nicaragua, Nely is dedicated to using her own experiences of hardship and faith to help young people establish healthy, loving relationships in their lives. She is a former missionary at the Finca del Niño and visits regularly to support the teenage residents. 

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“When first asked “Where do you find hope?”, I thought to myself…well, that seems easy enough. But the more I thought about it, the harder it was for me to convey. I realized this difficulty was because, for me, hope rose out of some of the darkest times in my life. In past years, I battled with my mental health so much so that hope was truly all I was holding on to get through the day. Thinking back on these darker times in my life, I realized the true beauty of the word “hope”. It is something that I have held onto as a means to climb out of dark times and lean into God and my own light.

I believe that hope is found deep within our souls. I have found hope within myself many times before. It is wanting to give up but waking up every morning because the possibility of tomorrow is too good to miss. And honestly, I would not be answering this question if I did not choose hope on every single dark day. Back then, I could not see the light, but I found hope in myself and other people who have battled with their mental health and triumphed over their struggle. 

More and more, I am learning that hope is in the little things. It is hearing someone say you did a good job. It is a teenager helping the elderly. It is allyship during times of civil unrest. It is simply waking up each morning ready to tackle a new day. For me, hope stems from these small, seemingly insignificant actions. It is seeing people work together, be kind, and be loved. Hope also comes from within, as mentioned before. It is the whisper on your bad days, telling you to stay. It is the last line of defense. Hope is the feeling, the aching desire that this life is still worth living, that the world is still beautiful, and that you can still find your light. Seek hope, feel hope…

…it will carry you.”    

Taylor McCorkle is a Neuroscience PhD candidate at Drexel University College of Medicine, a former track athlete at the University of Pennsylvania, a champion of love, an inspiring mental health advocate, and just a really genuine friend. She co-founded the Neuroscience Graduate Students for Diversity Group (NGSD), an organization fostering a safe and inclusive environment in the Drexel College of Medicine community. She leads with love in way that makes all around her eager to join in (present company very much included).

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Thank you once again for being here. Now let us go forth, daring to listen to new perspectives, daring to imagine new possibilities, and daring to hope

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…and watch God work.

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See you next week! 🙂