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Read for This Week’s Study: Hab. 1:1–4, Job 38–41, Isa.

41:8–14, Jer. 29:1–10, Heb. 12:1–13.

Memory Text: “Now hope does not disappoint, because the love of

God has been poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit who was

given to us” (Romans 5:5, NKJV).

When in church surrounded by smiling people, how easy it

is to talk and sing about hope. But when we find ourselves

within the crucible, hope does not always seem so easy. As

circumstances press in around us, we begin to question everything,

particularly the wisdom of God.

In one of his books, C. S. Lewis writes about a make-believe lion.

Wanting to meet this lion, someone asks if the lion is safe. The person

is told that he’s not safe, “but he’s good.”

Even though we don’t always understand God and He seems to do

unpredictable things, that doesn’t mean that God is against us. It sim-

ply means that we don’t have the full picture yet. But we struggle with

the idea that for us to have peace, confidence, and hope, God must be

understandable and predictable. He needs to be, in our thinking, “safe.”

As such, we set ourselves up for disappointment.

The Week at a Glance: How does our understanding of the

character of God help us maintain hope in the crucible?