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New Year’s Theology: The Forgotten Kind Of Hope That Built The Church… And Will Continue To Change The World
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The Lie We’ve Been Told About the Future
The early church didn’t grow because it expected to lose. Yet today, a lot of believers wear defeat like humility and call it wisdom. That shift didn’t come from Scripture… it came from forgetting the kind of hope that actually built the church in the first place.
It is true that every January feels like a bit of a threshold.
It’s that strange, quiet space where one foot is still planted in the old year and the other hovers over what hasn’t happened yet. Behind us… twelve months of headlines, heartaches, small wins, half-finished plans, and prayers that didn’t turn out the way we expected. Ahead of us stretches a fresh calendar… blank, silent, and full of possibility.
Looking Back to See Ahead
Two faces, one truth—learn from the past, but set your eyes on the dawn God is already writing ahead.
Even the name January hints at this tension. It comes from Janus, the Roman god with two faces… one looking backward, one looking forward. It’s a pagan image, sure, but the instinct behind it rings true. The turn of the year naturally pulls our eyes in both directions at once.
And for Christians, that posture… looking back and ahead… isn’t just seasonal. It’s how faith itself works.
But here’s the difference: while the world looks back at markets, elections, scandals, and cultural trends, believers look deeper. We look further. We reach back past last year and last century, past empires and revolutions, all the way to the opening words of Scripture. And then we look forward… not just to the next twelve months, but to the long, unfolding story God is writing in history.
The new year doesn’t belong to blind optimism. It doesn’t belong to fear, either. It belongs to redemptive optimism… a hope anchored in what God has already done and confident in what He has promised to finish.
History Is Not a Dead Weight—It’s Fuel
When Christians look backward, we aren’t reminiscing. We’re remembering.
Our faith doesn’t float in abstractions or spiritual slogans. It is rooted in real places, real people, real moments when God stepped into time and acted. Creation wasn’t a metaphor. The flood wasn’t folklore. The Exodus wasn’t a campfire tale. David wasn’t a legend. And the resurrection wasn’t symbolic.
Again and again, God intervened in human history… sometimes loudly, sometimes quietly, but always decisively. He spoke worlds into existence. He judged wickedness. He rescued slaves. He raised shepherds to kingship. And in the fullness of time, He entered His own creation, wrapped in flesh, laid in a feeding trough, and nailed to a Roman cross.
That matters.
Because history, for the Christian, isn’t just a list of dates and dead folks. It’s evidence. It’s testimony. It’s proof that God keeps His word even when circumstances scream otherwise.
The same hand that split the Red Sea still directs the tides of nations. The same voice that called Lazarus out of the grave still speaks life into dead hearts. The past isn’t a museum… it’s a record of victories that should fuel courage for the future.
The Seduction of False Optimism
The truth is that every age has its preferred way of thinking about the future.
Some people choose optimism… but the wrong kind. You see it everywhere: the idea that progress is automatic, that humanity is naturally getting better, smarter, kinder, more enlightened. It’s the belief that if we just give things enough time, enough education, enough AI, enough technology, the world will eventually sort itself out. I think Elon believes that.
This is humanistic optimism… the faith that man can and will save himself.
It’s a comforting story. It flatters our egos and soothes our consciences. It allows people to believe in “hope” without repentance and “progress” without redemption.
But history has been brutal to that idea.
The twentieth century alone should have buried it for good. Two world wars. Genocides. Totalitarian regimes. Technological advances paired with moral collapse. The bloodiest century in human history came wrapped in the language of progress.
And Scripture explained why long before it happened.
The problem is this: Without redemption, the human heart doesn’t improve… it decays. Left to itself, mankind doesn’t climb upward… it curves inward. The problem isn’t that humanity needs a boost. It’s that humanity needs to be made new.
That’s why Jesus didn’t come as a life coach, consultant, or moral example. He came as a Savior. He didn’t tweak behavior; He resurrected hearts. Humanistic optimism fails because it refuses to reckon honestly with the past… with the fall, with sin, with rebellion.
The Quiet Poison of Pessimism
But optimism isn’t the only danger.
On the other side of the ditch is pessimism… and many believers have quietly settled there. You hear it in the tone of certain books, sermons, and conversations. The world is beyond saving. Culture is collapsing. Evil is winning. The best we can do is hang on until the end.
This outlook often dresses itself up as realism or humility, but at its core it’s a failure of faith. It treats history like a sinking ship and the church like a lifeboat… small, battered, and barely staying afloat until evacuation.
And yes, times can be dark. Scripture never denies that. But it also never portrays darkness as the final word.
Think about it. Think about the problem of ascribing to all redemptive history what’s happening to you, a culture, or a people… in the moment. Not the best lens for examining the big picture, as we see through a glass darkly.
Israel, trapped at the Red Sea, didn’t look victorious. David facing Goliath didn’t look promising. A crucified Messiah didn’t look like triumph. Yet those moments became turning points precisely because God delights in overturning human expectations.
Pessimism forgets that the resurrection didn’t just change eternity… it changed history. Christ didn’t rise from the dead to preside over a slow-motion defeat. He rose to reign.
When Christians lose that confidence, they don’t just lose hope… they lose their purpose and mission.
The Drift Toward Comfortable Indifference
There’s a third danger, subtler than the other two.
Some believers avoid optimism and pessimism altogether by retreating into uncertainty. They shrug and say, “Who knows what will happen? Maybe things will improve. Maybe they won’t.” It sounds cautious. It sounds humble.
But it isn’t biblical. It treats Gods commands as well as His promises with a kind of “agnostic” Christianity.
God never called His people to drift. He never told them to suspend expectation or avoid confidence. From the garden to the Great Commission, He speaks in promises, commands, and assurances… not guesses.
A faith that expects nothing eventually attempts nothing.
Indifference may feel safe, but it quietly denies the power of God to act in history. It treats the future as unknowable when Scripture insists it’s promised.
What “Redemptive Optimism” Really Means
So what does faithful hope look like?
It’s not walking by sight.
It’s not confidence in man.
It’s not a denial of suffering.
It’s not ignoring evil or pretending hardship doesn’t exist.
Redemptive optimism is confidence rooted in Christ’s reign.
It says the past matters because God has already proven Himself faithful in history. And it says the future is hopeful because the same God is still ruling, still redeeming, still advancing His kingdom.
This isn’t wishful thinking. It’s covenantal thinking.
Five Reasons the Future Belongs to Christ
First, we are equipped to overcome.
Scripture tells us plainly that the weapons of our warfare are not physical. They are spiritual, and they are powerful. Lies can be dismantled. Strongholds can fall. Hearts can change.
Second, the church cannot be defeated.
Jesus didn’t say He might build His church. He said He will. And He didn’t say the gates of hell would harass it… He said they wouldn’t withstand it. Gates don’t attack. They resist. And resistance implies advance.
Third, the kingdom will keep growing.
The mustard seed starts small, but it doesn’t stay that way. The stone cut without hands grows until it fills the whole earth. The increase of His government has no end… not because of human strategy, but because of divine zeal.
Fourth, the nations will be discipled.
The Great Commission isn’t a suggestion or a gamble. It’s a command backed by Christ’s authority and presence. The knowledge of the Lord will cover the earth… not might, not maybe, but will.
Fifth, every enemy will fall.
Christ reigns until all enemies are placed under His feet. Death is last… not first… which means injustice, tyranny, and corruption are already on borrowed time.
Justice Is Not Disappearing—It’s Rising
When internet headlines and social media scream chaos, it’s tempting to believe justice is fading.
But Scripture says otherwise.
The prophets envisioned a world where righteousness rolls like water, where peace spreads like morning light, where even ordinary tools and everyday work are marked “Holy to the Lord.” Redemption doesn’t erase creation… it restores it. (Zechariah 14: 16-21)
God’s goal is not escape from the world, but renewal of it.
Walking Into the Year With Open Eyes
So here we are again… standing in the doorway of time.
Behind us lies a full record of God’s faithfulness. Ahead of us lies a future shaped by His promises. That means we don’t enter the new year with fear or cynicism.
We enter it with expectation.
Not because man is improving. Not because circumstances are easy. But because Christ reigns.
Look back… and remember every victory. Look ahead… and anticipate what God will do next.
The story isn’t over. No theological fat lady has sung. No permanent funeral dirge for eyes gone blind. Nope. The King is still on the throne. And because of that, the future doesn’t belong to despair.
By God’s grace… It belongs to redemptive optimists.