Words of Encouragement










             


    Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.
     Hope in Hardship

    Imagine: you are ten years past customary
    retirement age.  It's time finally to kick back and
    relax.  You live in a great city where everything is at
    your fingertips — shopping opportunities, cultural
    events, all your relatives and lifelong friends.  
    Suddenly God appears and tells you to pack up,
    uproot your life, and march into an uncivilized
    wilderness.

    This is what happens to Abram in Genesis 12.  He
    lives in Mesopotamia, the cradle of civilization.  He's
    75 and he and the wife are not getting any younger.  
    He does not even know the name of the God who
    calls him.

    Wouldn't you "discuss" this one a bit?  Not Abram.  
    Genesis reports no backtalk, no "yeah-buts."  In a fit
    of understatement, Genesis simply says "Abram
    went as the Lord directed him."

    That's faith.  Abram hears a command from a God he
    can't see, believes that this God must know what He
    is talking about, and begins a journey to he knows
    not where.  Keep in mind that Paul says "we walk by
    faith, not by sight." (2 Cor 5:7).  That's why Abraham
    is the great model of faith in the Old Testament.  For
    faith is not just about believing.  It's about walking.

    Obviously Abraham's choice to walk entailed great
    hardship.  What was the motivation that drove him
    to do it?  Simple.  There was something that God
    promised him that he desperately wanted.  He had a
    lot of things — wife, property, servants, and all the
    creature comforts afforded by his civilization.  Yet
    he lacked a son.  And for a Semite like Abram who
    had no belief in any sort of afterlife, a son was the
    only ticket to immortality.  A son would,
    presumably, go out and beget sons, thus keeping
    his father's name and memory alive.  God promised
    not only descendants, but a progeny so numerous
    and great that all the communities of the earth
    would find blessing in Abram's name.

    So it was desire for future glory that enabled Abram
    to put up with the hardships entailed in answering
    the call.  This desire is called hope.

    About 1900 years later, St. Paul writes these words
    to Timothy: "bear your share of the hardship which
    the Gospel entails" (2 Tim 1:8).  To be a Christian
    during the first 300 years meant risking everything.  
    If the Romans caught you, it could mean torture or
    death or, if you got off easy, the confiscation of all of
    your possessions.  Why would people take this
    chance?  For the same reason Abram embraced
    hardship-hope.  They had been giving a vision and a
    promise of eternal glory.  They understood that no
    earthly good could compare with this everlasting
    joy and so were willing to suffer whatever loss
    necessary in order to secure it.  In this, they
    followed their master who "for the joy that was set
    before him endured the cross, despising the
    shame" (Heb 12:2).

    Aware of the trauma the apostles would shortly
    suffer through the horror of His crucifixion, the Lord
    Jesus gave their leaders a vision of hope to sustain
    them.  He went up on Mount Tabor and at last
    appeared as He really was.  In anticipation of His
    risen glory, the Light of the World allowed the
    dazzling white of His divinity to be revealed.  The
    Law and the Prophets bore witness to Him through
    Moses and Elijah.  The Father's voice boomed the
    affirmation that this was His beloved son.  The Holy
    Spirit was manifested as the shekinah cloud of glory
    which had led the Israelites on their desert journey.  
    This transfiguration is a scene that proclaims the
    whole gospel, the Good News of a glorious life, won
    by the Savior, that lasts forever.

    But the experience itself did not last forever.  It was
    not given to them so they could erect tents and stay
    there.  There was still walking to do.  The path called
    the via dolorosa lay before Him and before them as
    well.  The experience called the Transfiguration was
    to show them that this way of the cross was not a
    road to death but through death to a life that makes
    even death seem but a trifle.


    Dr. D'Ambrosio studied under Avery Cardinal Dulles for his Ph.D. in
    historical theology and taught for many years at the University of
    Dallas. He now directs www.crossroadsinitiative.com, which offers
    Catholic resources for RCIA and adult and teen faith formation, with
    a special emphasis on the Year of the Eucharist, the Theology of the
    Body, the early Church Fathers, and the Sacrament of Confirmation.

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