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Signs of Hope

Categories: BLOG | Author: Frances | Posted: 11/01/2018 | Views: 910

Sr Isabel Smyth writes our latest blog and reflects on the signs of hope that are all around should we choose to see them. 

As we start the New Year it’s good to consider beginnings, to take stock of our lives and look back with gratitude and maybe even regret while facing the future with hope and perhaps even courage.


It’s good to look back and give thanks for the good things that have happened to us and please God there have been good things. In spite of much of the negativity that we hear in the news there’s much to be grateful for in our world today.


Iain Macwhirter, the political editor of the Scottish newspaper, The Herald, recently acknowledged that many good news stories never get attention in the press. He set out some of the good things that have happened and perhaps been missed:

extreme poverty has fallen by 70% and the UN has announced that extreme poverty should be eradicated within the next decade; the number of terrorist atrocities has fallen massively in the past forty years and is in decline across the world; the UN has adopted the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, a great result for the Nobel Prize Winning International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, ICAN; the move to renewable energy rather than fossil fuels. Last year 54% of Scotland’s gross electricity consumption was produced by renewable energy. All this is good news and a sign of hope that things can and do change.


In our own small worlds there are also signs of hope. I’ve always been taken by the idea of kingdom spotting – that is looking for signs of the Kingdom of God around us – courage, determination in the face of difficulties, justice, compassion, service, love, struggle to be the best we can be. There are lots of examples of people recycling, caring for sick and aged relatives, caring for children and those with disabilities of all sorts, campaigning for justice and simply living a good, wholesome life in their families and among their friends and neighbours.  There’s a lot of good out there if we have eyes to see it.


But it’s not perfect by any manner of means. There’s much still to be done on an international scale as well as a local and personal one. This, I suppose, is where New Year’s resolutions come in. I’m not too keen on them as they’re usually difficult to keep and can become a burden. What I am keen on is looking to the future and realising that we can play our part in the future of our world and our planet – not so much by setting ourselves specific goals but by changing our mind set and way of looking at life. I would want myself and all of us to realise that this world will unfold as a result of our choices and actions, that we hold in our hands the future of our race and our planet, that we can offer one another and creation the gift of loving kindness which recognises that we are all brothers and sisters and that the well-being of one affects the well-being of all.  The choice is ours.  Will we, as Rabbi Rami Shapiro asks in his book, The Sacred Art of Lovingkindness, “engage this moment with kindness or with cruelty, with love or with fear, with generosity or scarcity, with a joyous heart or an embittered one?”


The Rabbi tells us that this is our choice and that no one can make it for us. If we choose kindness, love, generosity, and joy, he says, then we will discover in that choice the Kingdom of God, heaven, nirvana, this-worldly salvation. If we choose cruelty, fear, scarcity, and bitterness, then we will discover in that choice the hellish states of which so many religions speak …...Heaven and hell are both inside of us.


 It is our choice that determines just where we and our world will reside.

 

 

originally published in interfaith journeys http://www.interfaithjourneys.net/

 

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