My favorite Easter verse has always been 1 Peter 1:3-5. It begins, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! According to his great mercy, he has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead…” Having the “living” hope of the resurrection changes our lives. Some people spend the days of their lives moping around. Things haven’t turned out how they had “hoped,” so they throw in the towel and give in to despair. Paul looked at the funerals of unbelievers and noticed that they were “lost and without hope in the world.” Even the rich and the famous in our world can’t find meaning and purpose in temporal things and often commit suicide. When the pills, the bottles, the money, and the power don’t bring what they had expected, they have nothing left to live for. Paul told the believers in Thessalonica that he did not want them to grieve like those around them who had no hope. Even though, like all mankind, they faced death, Paul wanted them to understand that it was not the end. Those who have died are simply sleeping for a time, and there will be a glorious reunion. That truth keeps the hopeful from the depths of despair. Without that hope, despair reigns supreme.
But the world is full of iron-willed individuals who find various ways to cope with life’s pains, heartbreaks, and setbacks on their own. They trade what is eternal for what is temporal and fill their moments with pleasure, possessions, or positions of power or prestige. They live for the moment. They go for the gusto. “You only go around once in life,” the saying goes; you have to get it while you can. There are those who mope. There are those who cope, and then there are those who grope! They go through life seeking answers to life’s most profound questions: where did I come from? Where am I going? What am I here for? They experiment with every new fad that invades the culture: Transcendental meditation, Eastern Mysticism, Hinduism, Zen Buddhism, various forms of the occult, and some even grope through the horoscope section of the papers in search of purpose and meaning in life.
During one difficult period when things appeared incredibly bleak, the reformer Martin Luther was seen tracing two words on the table with his fingertip: “Vivit, vivit!” This is Latin for “He lives, He lives!” This truth brought Luther up from the dumps into a world filled with hope. Because Christ lives, we can live abundantly today. Jesus promised that he’d come to bring to us abundant life. But even more, we will live eternally. It will be a life in which our past sins have been forgiven, and in the glory of God’s Mercy and Grace, we will bask forever! So lift up your eyes, lift up your hearts, lift up your spirits, and focus your thoughts and hopes on the Lord of Life. Put a smile on your face and say, “Blessed be the God and Father of my Lord Jesus Christ, who, according to His abundant mercy, has caused me to be born again into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead!”