“For
surely I know the plans I have for you,” says the Lord, “plans for welfare and
not for harm, to give you a future with hope.” (Jeremiah 29:11 NRSV)
Peter
Steinke’s book A Door Set Open: Grounding Change in Mission and Hope
contrasts hopefulness and hopelessness. Hopefulness,
according to Steinke, stirs imagination, expands horizons, influences events,
energizes, and creates a sense of buoyancy. Hopelessness
shrinks the radius of possibility, becomes apathetic, entraps, minimizes
options, resigns to existing conditions, and loses heart. Steinke also writes
that hopefulness remembers the future so that we will not remain trapped in the
present arrangement of things (p. 41).
Since reading Steinke’s book, the phrase Remember the
Future has lingered in my mind. At first, the words are disorienting. Remember
points backward, future looks forward. Yet in every discussion, deliberation,
discernment, and decision, a leader must give deep and conscientious
consideration to the future -- to the future of the mission, to future
contexts, to future generations, to a future with hope. Hope carries us across
the threshold of “can’t.” We must always remember the future.
-- U.M. Bishop
Robert Schnase
#3683
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for sharing your comments about a quote or about this ministry. Please include your name and what state or country you live in. If you do not have a registered profile, you can login using the "Anonymous" tag in the "Comment as:" box below.
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.