Hope That Does Not Disappoint
I often wonder what was going through the minds of the disciples as they waited in Jerusalem. Only weeks earlier their hopes had seemed utterly shattered on a Roman cross. The one they had trusted, followed, and built their future around had been taken from them. Even with resurrection appearances behind them, they were still waiting — waiting for understanding, waiting for direction, waiting for the promise Jesus had spoken of.
That waiting space mattered. It gave them time to revisit the words Jesus had taught them over three intense years. Slowly, painfully, hope was being reshaped — no longer a hope built on outcomes they could control, but on a promise they could trust.
Paul later gives language to that emerging hope in Romans 5:1–5. He writes that through faith in Jesus Christ we are justified and have peace with God. We stand in grace, and we rejoice in the hope of God’s glory. But Paul is honest: hope is not born in comfort alone. It is forged in struggle. Suffering produces perseverance; perseverance shapes character; and character gives birth to hope. And this hope, Paul insists, does not disappoint, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit.
It’s rather like a potter working clay. The pressure of the wheel and the steady hands of the potter are not there to damage the clay, but to shape it into something strong and purposeful. Without the pressure, the clay would remain shapeless. In the same way, God uses the waiting, the uncertainty, and even the pain to form a hope that is deeper and more resilient than we imagined.
The challenge for us is this: can we trust God in the waiting? Can we believe that even when hope feels thin, God is still at work, shaping perseverance, character, and a hope that will not let us down?
Prayer
Faithful God,
When our hopes feel fragile and our waiting feels long,
remind us that you are still at work.
Shape us through perseverance,
deepen our character,
and fill us afresh with your love through the Holy Spirit.
Help us to hold fast to the hope that does not disappoint,
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.






