From the transcript...
I’m going to read this out of The Message. Romans 5—just before verses 8, 9, 10, because it sets the tone so beautifully:
“There’s more to come: We continue to shout our praise even when we’re hemmed in with troubles, because we know how troubles can develop passionate patience in us, and how that patience in turn forges the tempered steel of virtue, keeping us alert for whatever God will do next. In alert expectancy such as this, we’re never left feeling shortchanged—quite the contrary. We can’t round up enough containers to hold everything God generously pours into our lives through the Holy Spirit. Christ arrives right on time to make this happen. He didn’t and doesn’t wait for us to get ready. He presented himself for the sacrifice of death when we were far too weak and rebellious to do anything to get ourselves ready.”
That last line just lands, doesn’t it?
He didn’t wait.
Not for improvement. Not for readiness. Not for some turning point where we finally got our act together. He stepped in right at the point of our weakness—right in the middle of it, not on the other side of it.
And that reframes everything.
Because now even the “troubles” Paul talks about aren’t signs that something’s gone wrong—they become places where something is being formed. Not by pressure alone, but by the presence of God in the middle of it. That phrase—“alert expectancy”—it feels like a quiet invitation to live looking for Him, even here.
It reminds me of how James says to “count it all joy,” not because the situation itself is good, but because something deeper is happening in us. And Paul is saying the same thing, but with this added layer: you’re not empty in the process. You’re not barely getting by.
You “can’t round up enough containers” for what God is pouring in.
That’s abundance language. That’s not survival—that’s overflow.
And it all flows from this one truth: Christ acted first.
Before response, before awareness, before anything on our side—He moved toward us. Which means whatever we’re waking up to now isn’t something we’re trying to earn or unlock… it’s something we’re discovering has already been given.
That’s why hope here doesn’t disappoint.
Because it’s not built on our progress—it’s anchored in His initiative.