Posted on 01/12/2017 8:51:46 AM PST by Salvation
Hope (like love) is a word that needs to be rescued from a world that has overused and misused it for so long that its original meaning has been nearly lost. Hope has come to imply more of a vague wish for something. Sometimes its used as a substitute for the word maybe. For example, if a person says, I hope it doesnt rain tomorrow, he likely means I wish it wouldnt rain or Itll probably rain but it sure would be nice if it didnt. Here is another example: If a person is asked, Will you be at the meeting tomorrow? and responds, I hope so, he probably means Maybe Ill be there.
In both examples, doubt surrounds the situation and the desired result seems improbable. While the word hope is not used only in situations like this, too often it merely represents wishing for an unlikely outcome.
I cannot set forth an entire treatise on hope here, but I would like to try to rescue it from its secular meaning, or at least to distinguish the theological virtue of hope from secular hope.
The theological virtue of hope is confident expectation. The theological meaning of the word hope has a much more vigorous quality. The definition of theological hope that I memorized back in Seminary is the older one, which was in use prior to the current Catechism.
Hope is the Theological Virtue wherein one confidently expects Gods help in attaining eternal salvation.
The current Catechism of the Catholic Church defines hope in this way:
The theological virtue by which we desire and expect from God both eternal life and the grace we need to attain it (Glossary, cf # 1817).
Notice how much more vigorous hope is in these definitions. Hope is a confident expectation. The Catechism (# 1817) quotes from the letter to the Hebrews, which says, Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for He who promised is faithful (Heb 10:23).
This is more than a vague wish for something that is unlikely. This is more than saying maybe God will save us. It is vigorous because He who has promised is trustworthy, true, and able. It is also vigorous because true hope is a theological virtue. That is to say, it is infused into the soul of the believer by God Himself. Hence, although it interacts with our human nature and builds upon it, it does not wholly depend on our mood or temperament.
The theological virtue of hope has God for its proper object. St. Thomas Aquinas made it very clear that eternal happiness with God is the true and proper purpose of hope:
The hope of which we now speak attains God by leaning on his help [and] the good which we ought to hope for from God properly and chiefly is the infinite good For we should hope from Him nothing less than Himself Therefore the proper and principle object of hope is eternal happiness (Summa Theologica II, IIae, 17.2).
St. Thomas also taught that hope concerns things that, though difficult, are possible with Gods help. This is why we need hope. Life has its challenges and there will be obstacles and discouragements. But hope summons us to persevere, not losing sight of our goal.
Therefore, hope is a vigorous and necessary theological virtue. It bestows a kind a confidence and ability to persevere.
The theological virtue of hope pertains to what we do not yet fully see or possess. Although hope is confident expectation, it is not absolute fact or current possession that some of our Protestant brethren assert when they claim Once saved, always saved. St. Paul wrote of hope in this way: For in this hope we were saved. But hope that is seen is no hope at all. Who hopes for what he already has? But if we hope for what we do not yet have, we wait for it patiently (Rom 8:24-25).
In other words, if I were to say, I hope I find my Bible and then proceed to find it, hope vanishes. One doesnt hope for what one already has. Hope pertains only to what one does not currently have or fully possess. When I hope for something, I confidently expect that I will one day possess it because God has promised it. I am not already saved (as some Protestants assert) but am justified through the Blood of Christ and am being saved as long as I hold on to Gods unchanging hand by His Grace. Hence, hope is confident expectation, but not possession.
We can thus see that the word hope has suffered the same fate as the word love. Too often people say, I Love God, or I love my wife, or I love my new car. Love has lost its meaning through overuse and misuse. So it is also with hope. We say, I hope in God and to be with him eternally, and then follow right up with, I hope it doesnt rain. Theologically hope does not pertain to things like rain, the outcome of football games, getting a raise.
In theology, hope always has God and the things of God as its object. I have no delusions that we will ever get the words love and hope back to their proper objects and context, but I wanted to present their origin so that we can all understand that when the Church and Scripture use these words, they do not mean them in the flat and often vacuous way that the world does.
Tomorrow we will look at some sins against hope. Or at least I hope so.
Monsignor Pope Ping!
Thank you for pointing this out.
I’m very sure this will go a long way toward settling the matter with a lot of people.
Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life. John 5:24. NASB
I believe you will enjoy this:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B_ZTAxevT9-OaTVRQ0JmQVZFOHA4ZW9TX1JOZW1WSWdGelJB/view
Before I click on the link....what is it?
Loretto Chapel’s miracle staircase - Santa Fe. About the carpentry and mystery surrounding it. Beautiful.
“Hope” is a terrible concept.
The ancient Greeks considered hope to have the same qualities as pestilence, famine, war and evil.
Life was hard and people had to be pragmatic and live in the real world. Hope was just a way of fooling yourself.
When Pandora opened the box, the evils escaped into the world and when she quickly closed it, only hope had not escaped from the box.
Paul sure seems to think he's saved given the grammar involved.
And from the first reading from today's Mass:
Hebrews3:10-14
"Take care, brothers and sisters,
that none of you may have an evil and unfaithful heart,
so as to forsake the living God.
Encourage yourselves daily while it is still "today,"
so that none of you may grow hardened by the deceit of sin.
We have become partners of Christ
if only we hold the beginning of the reality firm until the end."
Can I have an Amen to that?
Further reading of Paul also indicates it is God Who saves us. We can only believe/have faith.
That’s because Pagans did not have a faith in the God who has proven how far he was willing to go to bring salvation to mankind by revealing to us his Son Jesus.
The difference is that God gives an authentic grace for hope while pagans believed in fickle beings.
Amen!
I hope this thread doesn’t devolve into a OSAS vs conditional salvation argument!
But I'm not sure I got an "Amen" from you about, as the author of Hebrews says, "Holding on firmly until the end."
::::::Sigh::::::
I'm going out for a walk.
How do you know Paul wrote the book of Hebrews?
:)
Sorry, couldn’t resist.
How do you know he didn’t? :)
Well sure. If we put our faith in anything or anyone other than Christ there is no hope. He and He alone is our salvation.
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