Does Hope Matter?
In a world marked by uncertainty, suffering, and disappointment, the question is worth asking: does hope really matter?
The story of Katherine Wolf offers a powerful answer. In 2008, at just 26 years old and the mother of a six-month-old son, Katherine suffered a catastrophic brain stem stroke. Against all expectations, she survived, enduring months in the hospital and numerous surgeries. Though she continues to live with disability, chronic pain, and significant challenges, her life has become a testimony to hope through the ministry Hope Heals. How can someone facing such ongoing struggles speak so confidently about hope?
The answer lies in understanding the difference between the hope we commonly talk about and the hope the Bible describes.
In everyday language, hope is often little more than a wish. We hope for good weather, hope our team wins, or hope circumstances improve. Such hope is rooted in uncertainty. Even in the Gospels, before the resurrection, Jesus’ followers often spoke of hope in this way: “We had hoped…” they said on the road to Emmaus after His crucifixion.
Yet after the resurrection, something changed dramatically. The New Testament writers speak of hope not as wishful thinking but as confident certainty. The writer of Hebrews describes hope as an anchor for the soul, while Paul speaks of a hope that does not disappoint. Why the difference? Because of the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
The resurrection changed everything. Humanity has lived under the shadow of death since the fall in Genesis 3. Death remains the great destroyer of hope, the reality we spend our lives trying to delay or avoid. But through His resurrection, Jesus conquered death itself. For those who trust in Him, death is no longer the end but a doorway into His presence and ultimately into God’s eternal Kingdom.
This is the hope that sustained Katherine Wolf. It is also the hope that sustained my late wife Sarah and me during her illness. As doctors offered treatments and possibilities, we naturally hoped for healing. Yet over time we learned to live in a deeper hope—not based on desired outcomes, but on the certainty that Jesus had overcome death. Whatever happened, our future was secure in Him.
That same hope is available today. It does not remove pain, erase grief, solve financial pressures, or instantly fix broken relationships. Instead, it gives us a foundation that cannot be shaken by present circumstances. It allows us to face uncertainty with confidence because our future is held securely in Christ.
As we look around at a world filled with conflict, loneliness, anxiety, and fear, perhaps the most important question is: where is our hope rooted? Is it resting on circumstances that may change tomorrow, or on the unchanging reality of Christ’s resurrection?
The Church is called to be a community of hope—not offering simplistic answers or quick fixes, but walking together through life’s challenges with confidence in God’s promises. In a world desperately searching for stability and meaning, followers of Jesus have the privilege of sharing a hope that is not based on wishful thinking, but on the certainty that Christ is risen and that His Kingdom is coming.
Hope matters because it changes how we live today. It enables us to face tomorrow with courage, whatever tomorrow may bring.

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