H. Richard Niebuhr - "The Hope of Glory" (February 3, 1957)
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Transcript
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| (upbeat organ music) | 0:03 | |
| - | Sunday morning, February 3, 1957. | 0:06 |
| Preacher, Dr. H. Richard Niebuhr | 0:12 | |
| from Yale University. | 0:15 | |
| (record scratching) | 0:17 | |
| (choir singing) | 0:19 | |
| (worship organ music) | 0:35 | |
| (choir singing) | 1:19 | |
| - | Let us offer onto God | 3:40 |
| our unison prayer of confession. | 3:42 | |
| Let us pray. | 3:47 | |
| Have mercy upon us, O God, | 3:50 | |
| according to thy loving kindness. | 3:53 | |
| According to the multitude of thy tender mercies, | 3:56 | |
| blot out our transgressions. | 4:00 | |
| Wash us thoroughly from our iniquities | 4:03 | |
| and cleanse us from our sins, | 4:07 | |
| for we acknowledge our transgressions, | 4:10 | |
| and our sin is ever before us. | 4:13 | |
| Create in us clean hearts, O God, | 4:17 | |
| and renew a right spirit within us, | 4:21 | |
| through Jesus Christ, our Lord. | 4:24 | |
| Amen. | 4:28 | |
| And now as our savior, Christ, hath taught us, | 4:29 | |
| we humbly pray together saying: | 4:33 | |
| Our Father, who art in heaven, | 4:37 | |
| hallowed by thy name, | 4:40 | |
| thy kingdom come, | 4:43 | |
| thy will be done | 4:45 | |
| on Earth as it is in Heaven. | 4:47 | |
| Give us this day our daily bread, | 4:50 | |
| and forgive us our trespasses | 4:53 | |
| as we forgive those who trespass against us. | 4:55 | |
| And lead us not into temptation, | 4:59 | |
| but deliver us from evil. | 5:02 | |
| For thine is the kingdom, | 5:05 | |
| and the power, and the glory forever. | 5:07 | |
| Amen. | 5:11 | |
| (worship organ music) | 5:16 | |
| (choir singing peacefully) | 5:48 | |
| (singing becomes powerful) | 7:08 | |
| (worship organ music) | 8:32 | |
| - | I reckon that the sufferings of this present time | 8:52 |
| are not worthy to be compared with the glory | 8:57 | |
| which shall be revealed in us. | 9:00 | |
| For the earnest expectation of the creature waiteth | 9:04 | |
| for the manifestation of the sons of God. | 9:08 | |
| For the creature was made subject to vanity. | 9:12 | |
| Not willingly, but by reason of him who subjected | 9:16 | |
| the same in hope, | 9:19 | |
| because the creature itself also shall be delivered | 9:22 | |
| from the bondage of corruption | 9:25 | |
| into the glorious liberty of the children of God. | 9:27 | |
| While we know that the whole creation groaneth | 9:32 | |
| and travaileth in pain together until now, | 9:34 | |
| and not only they, but ourselves also, | 9:37 | |
| which have the first fruits of the Spirit. | 9:41 | |
| Even we ourselves roam within ourselves | 9:43 | |
| waiting for the adoption to (mumbles), | 9:46 | |
| for the redemption of our body. | 9:49 | |
| For we are saved by hope. | 9:54 | |
| But hope that is seen is not hope, | 9:57 | |
| for what a man seeeth why doth he have hope for? | 10:00 | |
| But if we hope for that we see not, | 10:04 | |
| then do we with patience wait for it. | 10:07 | |
| Likewise, the Spirit also help with our infirmities, | 10:12 | |
| for we know not what we should pray for as we ought, | 10:15 | |
| but the Spirit itself maketh intercession for us | 10:19 | |
| with groanings which cannot be uttered. | 10:22 | |
| And he that searcheth the hearts knoweth | 10:25 | |
| what is the mind of the Spirit, | 10:29 | |
| because he maketh intercession for the saints | 10:30 | |
| according to the will of God. | 10:33 | |
| And we know that all things work together | 10:35 | |
| for good to them but love God to them | 10:38 | |
| who are the call according to His purpose, | 10:40 | |
| for whom He did furlough He also did predestinate | 10:43 | |
| to be conformed to the image of His son. | 10:46 | |
| That he might be the first born among many brethren. | 10:50 | |
| Moreover, whom He did predestinate, them He also called; | 10:54 | |
| and whom He called them He also justified; | 10:57 | |
| and whom He justified, | 11:00 | |
| them He also glorified. | 11:02 | |
| What shall we then say to these things? | 11:06 | |
| If God before us, who can be against us? | 11:10 | |
| He that spared not His son but delivered him | 11:14 | |
| up for us all, how shall He not with him also | 11:17 | |
| freely give us all things? | 11:20 | |
| Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect? | 11:24 | |
| It is God that justify. | 11:27 | |
| Who is he that condemneth? | 11:30 | |
| It is Christ that died, ye rather that he'd risen again | 11:32 | |
| who is even at the right hand of God | 11:35 | |
| who also maketh intercession for us. | 11:38 | |
| Who shall separate us from the love of Christ | 11:42 | |
| shall tribulation of the stress, | 11:45 | |
| or persecution or famine or nakedness | 11:48 | |
| or peril or sword. | 11:51 | |
| As it is written for thy sake, | 11:53 | |
| we are killed all the day long, | 11:55 | |
| we are (mumbles) of the sheep for the slaughter. | 11:57 | |
| Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors | 12:01 | |
| through him that loved us, | 12:05 | |
| (mumbles) and persuaded that neither death nor life | 12:07 | |
| nor angels nor principalities nor powers | 12:11 | |
| nor things present nor things to come | 12:14 | |
| nor height nor depth | 12:17 | |
| nor any other creature shall be able to separate us | 12:19 | |
| from the love of God which is in Christ, | 12:24 | |
| Jesus our Lord. | 12:27 | |
| The Scripture lesson is from Paul's letter to the Romans, | 12:30 | |
| the eighth chapter. | 12:34 | |
| (worship organ music) | 12:38 | |
| (choir singing) | 13:02 | |
| - | The Lord be with you. | 14:50 |
| (audience mumbles) | 14:53 | |
| Let us pray. | 14:54 | |
| Lord, God of our fathers, | 15:04 | |
| and our God, | 15:07 | |
| who art alpha and omega, | 15:10 | |
| we adore and worship thee | 15:15 | |
| at the beginning of this new semester. | 15:20 | |
| We pray that we may be mindful of every | 15:24 | |
| opportunity to serve thee. | 15:27 | |
| Eager to learn, | 15:31 | |
| ready to be trained for thy service. | 15:34 | |
| Implant in our hearts that fear of thee, | 15:39 | |
| which is the beginning of wisdom, | 15:44 | |
| and fill them with thy love | 15:48 | |
| apart from which all knowledge is vain. | 15:51 | |
| Help us to pure thoughts and unselfish conduct. | 15:57 | |
| And grant us the grace of perseverance to the end | 16:02 | |
| through Jesus Christ, our Lord. | 16:08 | |
| Let us offer unto God our prayer of thanksgiving. | 16:13 | |
| O God, our Father, | 16:18 | |
| merciful and gracious, | 16:20 | |
| hear the thanksgivings with which we come | 16:24 | |
| before thy throne in the name of Jesus Christ, thy son. | 16:26 | |
| For the wonder of thy beauty manifest in the world, | 16:33 | |
| for thy wisdom inspiring the works of men, | 16:38 | |
| and for thy fatherly love shone forth to us | 16:43 | |
| in Christ, Jesus, | 16:47 | |
| praise be to thee, O God. | 16:49 | |
| For the happiness of our earthly life, | 16:54 | |
| for home and school and friends, | 16:59 | |
| for the joy of loving and being loved, | 17:03 | |
| praise be to thee, O God. | 17:08 | |
| For the power to worship thee, | 17:13 | |
| for the right to pray to thee, | 17:18 | |
| and for thine answers to our prayers, | 17:23 | |
| praise be to thee, O God. | 17:27 | |
| But above all, for Jesus Christ, thy son, | 17:32 | |
| the word incarnate, | 17:37 | |
| who came to end the reign of sin and death, | 17:40 | |
| and to bring in the reign of righteousness and life, | 17:45 | |
| praise be to thee, O God. | 17:50 | |
| Let us offer unto God our prayer of intercession | 17:56 | |
| for the hospital. | 18:00 | |
| We commend unto thee, O Father, | 18:04 | |
| all who hallow suffering. | 18:08 | |
| Those who, in their thoughts for others, | 18:13 | |
| leave no room for pity of themselves, | 18:16 | |
| those whose patience inspires others to hold on; | 18:21 | |
| we commend unto thee all who endure suffering. | 18:29 | |
| Those whose bodies or minds are distressed, | 18:34 | |
| those who cannot be themselves | 18:40 | |
| because of pain, | 18:44 | |
| grant to all who are bound to one another | 18:48 | |
| in the fellowship of suffering | 18:51 | |
| the sense of comradeship, | 18:55 | |
| the knowledge of thy presence, | 18:58 | |
| and give them thy peace | 19:02 | |
| which passeth man's understanding. | 19:06 | |
| And let us offer unto God our prayer of supplication | 19:13 | |
| for the spirit of Jesus in our own lives. | 19:17 | |
| O Lord, God, | 19:23 | |
| father of Jesus Christ, | 19:25 | |
| give us a measure of his spirit | 19:29 | |
| that we may be enabled to obey his teaching, | 19:32 | |
| to pacify anger, | 19:37 | |
| to take part in pity, | 19:41 | |
| to moderate desire, | 19:46 | |
| to increase love, | 19:49 | |
| to put away sorrow, | 19:53 | |
| to cast away vain glory; | 19:57 | |
| not to be vindictive, | 20:02 | |
| not to fear death. | 20:05 | |
| Ever entrusting our spirit to thee, | 20:09 | |
| the immortal God, | 20:13 | |
| through Jesus Christ, our Lord. | 20:15 | |
| And the grace of our Lord, Jesus Christ, | 20:20 | |
| be with us all evermore. | 20:24 | |
| Amen. | 20:31 | |
| (worship organ music) | 20:36 | |
| (choir singing powerfully) | 23:33 | |
| (worship organ music) | 25:16 | |
| (music becomes powerful) | 25:32 | |
| (choir singing) | 25:57 | |
| Accept, O Lord, these the gifts | 26:33 | |
| of thy worshiping people, | 26:37 | |
| and grant that our love for thee | 26:41 | |
| may be as great as our need of thy mercy, | 26:44 | |
| in Jesus Christ, our Lord. | 26:49 | |
| Amen. | 26:53 | |
| (worship organ music) | 26:57 | |
| - | My text this morning is a double one. | 27:27 |
| First of all, it is the statement of St. Paul | 27:31 | |
| read to you from the eighth chapter of Romans. | 27:35 | |
| Particularly I reckon that the sufferings | 27:40 | |
| of this present time are not worthy to be compared | 27:43 | |
| with the glory that shall be revealed | 27:45 | |
| in us or toward us. | 27:49 | |
| And the second place, it is that | 27:53 | |
| opening part of the general prayer of thanksgiving | 27:57 | |
| which is so frequently used in the churches of Christendom. | 27:59 | |
| There we say we thank thee for our creation, | 28:05 | |
| preservation and all the blessings of this life. | 28:08 | |
| But above all, for thine inestimable love | 28:12 | |
| in the redemption of the world by our Lord, Jesus Christ, | 28:15 | |
| for the means of grace and for the hope of glory. | 28:20 | |
| I do not know how it is with you. | 28:26 | |
| But with me, it often seems that I can be | 28:30 | |
| reasonably thankful, | 28:34 | |
| reasonably polite to the Almighty in the first | 28:36 | |
| part of that prayer. | 28:40 | |
| I know what creation, preservation and all | 28:42 | |
| the blessings of this life are, | 28:45 | |
| and that is thankfulness. | 28:48 | |
| Sometimes one begins to stumble a little | 28:51 | |
| over the phrase, "above all for thine | 28:54 | |
| "inestimable love in the redemption of the world | 28:58 | |
| "by our Lord, Jesus Christ." | 29:01 | |
| For the greatness of that event and its significance | 29:05 | |
| for us and what it means in our existence | 29:09 | |
| often seems to be covered over. | 29:13 | |
| But when it comes to the phrase, and for the means of grace, | 29:16 | |
| and for the hope of glory, | 29:20 | |
| one sometimes wonders whether this isn't simply | 29:22 | |
| a polite statement. | 29:26 | |
| It is as though we have received presents, | 29:27 | |
| and we're writing our thank you letters. | 29:30 | |
| And someone tells us don't forget | 29:33 | |
| the hope of glory; and we say, what was that? | 29:36 | |
| Something we received (mumbles), yes, | 29:40 | |
| we did receive it but in what package it came | 29:42 | |
| and what it looked like, we simply have forgotten. | 29:46 | |
| We put it away somewhere in the attic. | 29:50 | |
| It wasn't like that for Paul. | 29:57 | |
| For Paul, the hope of glory was | 30:01 | |
| one of the magnificent gifts that had been given. | 30:04 | |
| It was one of the three great things: | 30:09 | |
| faithfulness, or loyalty, | 30:12 | |
| love and compassion, and then hope. | 30:16 | |
| These were the marvelous gifts that had been | 30:20 | |
| bestowed on men out of the treasuries | 30:24 | |
| of the unsearchable riches of Christ. | 30:27 | |
| These were better than gifts of | 30:30 | |
| prophecy, wisdom, | 30:34 | |
| gifts of healing, of interpretation, | 30:38 | |
| speaking with tongues, of all the many | 30:41 | |
| wonderful things that Christians thought | 30:45 | |
| they had received, but they had indeed received. | 30:48 | |
| Now abides faith, hope, love, these three. | 30:50 | |
| And the greatest of these is love, | 30:54 | |
| and the first of these is faith, | 30:56 | |
| and the central thing is hope. | 30:58 | |
| Hope was that gift which enabled you to say | 31:04 | |
| despite all the sufferings, | 31:10 | |
| all the disappointments in all these things, | 31:14 | |
| we are more than conquerors through Him that loved us. | 31:18 | |
| For in Jesus Christ, | 31:26 | |
| the love of God was bestowed upon us, | 31:30 | |
| and that love gave us the hope of glory, | 31:32 | |
| and by hope we are saved. | 31:36 | |
| Well we say yes, it was like that. | 31:40 | |
| For Paul, it was like that. | 31:44 | |
| And for the early Christians, it was like that. | 31:47 | |
| We remember now what the gift was. | 31:50 | |
| It was the gift that was celebrated in | 31:53 | |
| the poetry of the Book of Revelations. | 31:57 | |
| It was the idea that a glory was coming, | 32:02 | |
| a heavenly city was to come to men. | 32:05 | |
| A city which could be described partly in physical terms | 32:10 | |
| as a city of gold | 32:13 | |
| and glass and of all things beautiful. | 32:17 | |
| It was a city in which all | 32:21 | |
| the marvelous achievements of men would be saved. | 32:24 | |
| All those things of which we thrill when we | 32:29 | |
| remember the history of mankind: | 32:32 | |
| courage, nobility, everything that was good | 32:36 | |
| was to be in that city. And what was to be burned up, | 32:39 | |
| all the trash heap of the world, | 32:44 | |
| was everything that was shameful, | 32:47 | |
| everything that was degrading. | 32:50 | |
| All this would pass away. | 32:53 | |
| The glory of Egypt and the | 32:57 | |
| glory of Assyria, and of Athens and of Rome, | 33:01 | |
| this would be there. | 33:06 | |
| But the cruelties of men, | 33:08 | |
| these would be gone. | 33:12 | |
| These would not so much be the subject | 33:16 | |
| of punishment as of utter destruction. | 33:19 | |
| And overall, this city, the Prince of Peace, | 33:25 | |
| the merciful Christ, | 33:30 | |
| in power and great glory would preside; | 33:32 | |
| and there would be no night there, | 33:36 | |
| and every tear would be wiped away from | 33:38 | |
| every eye, and death would be no more. | 33:41 | |
| And of this reign, there would be no end. | 33:45 | |
| This civilization would never pass away. | 33:48 | |
| That was the hope they had. | 33:52 | |
| No wonder then that they could stand great persecutions. | 33:55 | |
| They were about to become the heirs of this last wealth, | 34:00 | |
| sons of God, and joint heirs with Christ. | 34:05 | |
| They were also to see the triumph | 34:10 | |
| of nature's spring. | 34:14 | |
| The unfolding of the meaning of nature, | 34:17 | |
| the salvation of nature from corruption, | 34:19 | |
| this was to be a part of that glory. | 34:22 | |
| The whole creation groans and travails together until now. | 34:29 | |
| The long story of natural life | 34:34 | |
| is without meaning, it is subject of vanity. | 34:40 | |
| But it will reveal its meaning, its meaning will be revealed | 34:44 | |
| and all the glory of the natural world | 34:48 | |
| as well as all the glory of the world of culture, | 34:51 | |
| civilization; all this would be united | 34:54 | |
| in the presence | 34:58 | |
| of the radiant light of God. | 35:00 | |
| It will be glory. | 35:05 | |
| And so these men | 35:09 | |
| could say... | 35:13 | |
| who shall separate us from this love | 35:16 | |
| and Christ from this glory? | 35:19 | |
| Persecution, nakedness, poverty, anguish; | 35:22 | |
| all the difficulties of existence in all these things. | 35:27 | |
| We are more than conquerors, we are saved by hope. | 35:31 | |
| That was the hope of glory we say our | 35:37 | |
| Christian forefathers had. | 35:39 | |
| They were very naive, weren't they, | 35:42 | |
| in their acceptance of it? | 35:45 | |
| Life must have been wonderful for them. | 35:47 | |
| No wonder they could say rejoice in your tribulations; | 35:54 | |
| rejoice for the Lord is at hand. | 36:00 | |
| But now for us, this hope of glory seems to be | 36:02 | |
| something quaint that we have put into | 36:06 | |
| the attic of history. | 36:08 | |
| And we remember too that this gift of hope was | 36:14 | |
| given to us personally, individually. | 36:18 | |
| Perhaps a connection with the gift that was given to us | 36:24 | |
| as a group in the Christian church, | 36:27 | |
| as Christendom, as mankind; | 36:29 | |
| perhaps given to us with our creation the promises of God. | 36:34 | |
| These were made known to us in moments of | 36:39 | |
| childhood or of youth when all the world | 36:43 | |
| seemed to be transformed. | 36:47 | |
| When behind the veil of ordinary things we saw, | 36:49 | |
| or thought we saw a radiance and a light | 36:53 | |
| of a reality that was glorious, | 36:57 | |
| in which we were to participate, | 37:00 | |
| in which we were participating. | 37:03 | |
| It is because so many of us have had experiences | 37:06 | |
| of that sort that we can read Wordsworth | 37:09 | |
| and feel a responsive vibration | 37:15 | |
| in us when he speaks of our birth | 37:20 | |
| being a sleep and a forgetting, | 37:23 | |
| of the fact that we trail clouds | 37:27 | |
| of glory as we come from God, who is our home. | 37:30 | |
| Albany celebrates that sense sublime | 37:35 | |
| of something far more deeply interfused, whose | 37:39 | |
| dwelling is the light of setting suns and around ocean, | 37:43 | |
| and the living air and the blue sky, and in the mind of man. | 37:47 | |
| Or... | 37:54 | |
| When he reminds us of that blessed mood | 37:58 | |
| in which the burden of the mystery in which | 38:02 | |
| the heavy and the weary weight of all this | 38:05 | |
| unintelligible world is lightened. | 38:08 | |
| C. S. Lewis, in his biography, | 38:14 | |
| the biography of his youth entitled Surprised by Joy | 38:18 | |
| speaks of some of these moments in his childhood | 38:24 | |
| and in his youth before he was converted to Christianity | 38:27 | |
| and before he brought these | 38:31 | |
| experiences into connection with the Christian faith. | 38:34 | |
| One of these experiences is related in this wise. | 38:41 | |
| The first itself is the memory of a memory. | 38:45 | |
| "As I stood beside a flowering currant bush on a summer day, | 38:49 | |
| "there suddenly arose in me without warning, | 38:52 | |
| "and as if from a depth not of years but of centuries, | 38:55 | |
| "the memory of an earlier morning. | 39:00 | |
| "I remembered my brother had brought a toy guard | 39:03 | |
| "he had fashioned out of moss and twigs and flowers | 39:06 | |
| "on the top of a biscuit tin into the nursery. | 39:09 | |
| "It is difficult to find words strong enough | 39:13 | |
| "for the sensation which came over me. | 39:15 | |
| "Milton's enormous bliss of Eden, | 39:18 | |
| "giving the full ancient meaning to enormous | 39:21 | |
| "comes somewhat near it. | 39:24 | |
| "It was a sensation, of course, of desire, | 39:26 | |
| "but desire for what not certainly for a biscuit tin | 39:28 | |
| "filled with moss, not even though that came into it | 39:32 | |
| "for my own past. | 39:35 | |
| "Before I knew what I desired, the desire itself was gone, | 39:37 | |
| "the whole glimpse withdrawn, the world turned | 39:41 | |
| "commonplace again, only stirred | 39:44 | |
| "by a longing for a longing | 39:48 | |
| "that had just ceased." | 39:51 | |
| It is because, perhaps because | 39:54 | |
| these moments of understanding are | 39:59 | |
| of revelation, | 40:03 | |
| of a glory behind the veil things | 40:06 | |
| that philosophies such as Platonism, | 40:12 | |
| all the natural Platonisms of men | 40:16 | |
| flourish among us. | 40:20 | |
| It is perhaps for this reason that | 40:23 | |
| in Eastern thinking, the world seems to be | 40:26 | |
| so much of an illusion. | 40:29 | |
| World behind this world of masks. | 40:32 | |
| There lies the nirvana of pure joy. | 40:38 | |
| (mumbles) this is how different, this hope of glory... | 40:44 | |
| This anticipation of the transformation of all things, | 40:53 | |
| how different it is from optimism. | 40:58 | |
| One reads the story of the 1920s, | 41:05 | |
| Galbraith's Great Crash, for instance. | 41:10 | |
| And it is evident that | 41:15 | |
| what the 1920s were | 41:18 | |
| so happily anticipating was not glory. | 41:20 | |
| It was prosperity, it was security. | 41:26 | |
| One reads the financial and the pages | 41:32 | |
| of the papers, | 41:35 | |
| the reports of the economic advisors of the nation, | 41:38 | |
| and one notices optimism. | 41:41 | |
| Optimism about the next nine months, perhaps, | 41:45 | |
| or about the next five years. | 41:47 | |
| But it is not the hope of glory, | 41:50 | |
| it is the hope of survival, | 41:54 | |
| it is the hope of continuing a little longer. | 41:56 | |
| Sometimes it is the hope of glamor, | 41:59 | |
| but not the hope of glory. | 42:03 | |
| We hear the predictions about our own existence | 42:06 | |
| that we may be enabled to live | 42:09 | |
| longer than our predecessors. | 42:13 | |
| That the lifespan increases, and who knows, | 42:15 | |
| in another hundred years, it may be | 42:19 | |
| that men will live to be 120 years old. | 42:22 | |
| But that is not the hope of glory! | 42:26 | |
| (mumbles) contrast this hope of glory | 42:34 | |
| in the Book of Revelations, in the eighth chapter of Romans, | 42:36 | |
| in the poetry of Wordsworth, in the thinking of a Plato, | 42:40 | |
| one contrast this hope of glory | 42:44 | |
| with the religious hopes of glory for me. | 42:48 | |
| An egotism and a utilitarianism | 42:57 | |
| which translates this whole idea, | 43:02 | |
| or depraves this idea | 43:06 | |
| of the transformation of all things, | 43:08 | |
| of the liberation of nature, | 43:12 | |
| of the realization of splendor and of radiance | 43:14 | |
| into the idea I'm going to be saved out of all of this. | 43:18 | |
| I will be better off than those who are punished. | 43:24 | |
| (mumbles) contrast the hope of glory with | 43:30 | |
| the hope of immortality, of going on and on and on. | 43:32 | |
| This was not the hope of glory that Paul was speaking of. | 43:37 | |
| It is connected with the hope of immortality; | 43:43 | |
| it is connected with the idea of eternity, | 43:47 | |
| but it is the hope of God, | 43:52 | |
| and of participation in God, in ultimate goodness, | 43:55 | |
| in ultimate unity. | 43:58 | |
| We ask ourselves what was the use of this gift | 44:04 | |
| which we have put away into the attic of our | 44:06 | |
| social history which we have put into the attic of our mind. | 44:09 | |
| We know that one use of it was | 44:13 | |
| the increase of our sensitivity, | 44:18 | |
| increase of man's sensitivity to evil, | 44:21 | |
| to the inglorious, to the shameful, | 44:25 | |
| to the irrational, to the humiliating, | 44:29 | |
| to the meaningless, to the cruel, | 44:32 | |
| to the meretricious, to the superficial. | 44:35 | |
| One who had the hope of glory, | 44:39 | |
| the men who had the hope of glory | 44:42 | |
| experienced pain in the presence of all that was | 44:45 | |
| inglorious. It gave them a new sensitivity. | 44:50 | |
| Sometimes we think there must be a hope of glory | 44:57 | |
| in those men who are so sensitive to the sordid. | 45:01 | |
| The castle, when he can paint a thing like Guernica, | 45:07 | |
| indicate that he has the hope of glory | 45:13 | |
| because he is so sensitive to what is cruel and shameful. | 45:17 | |
| Does Faulkner have the hope of glory | 45:22 | |
| somewhere hidden in his life? | 45:24 | |
| The writers and the painters, and who, in our time, | 45:30 | |
| show what is sordid and mean and do not revel | 45:36 | |
| in the animality of man | 45:40 | |
| may be indicating what they know, | 45:45 | |
| what the contrast is against | 45:49 | |
| what the shamefulness in life | 45:52 | |
| is to be presented. | 45:56 | |
| I suppose one of the uses of the hope of glory, | 46:00 | |
| of that gift was also | 46:04 | |
| the ability it gave to men to fight and to endure | 46:08 | |
| and to continue in their | 46:12 | |
| effort to overcome evil in themselves | 46:16 | |
| and in others without compromise, | 46:19 | |
| without ever letting down; | 46:23 | |
| with the ability to rise after every defeat | 46:25 | |
| because they had the hope of glory | 46:29 | |
| and would not accept defeat. | 46:31 | |
| It enabled them to endure suffering, | 46:36 | |
| to wait with patience with the immense fortitude | 46:39 | |
| of those who had to endure, | 46:44 | |
| not only through months and years, | 46:46 | |
| but sometimes through decades without | 46:48 | |
| the hope of finding in this life | 46:52 | |
| or in this time | 46:55 | |
| an answer to their prayers. | 46:59 | |
| There was an admirable endurance. | 47:01 | |
| We find the hope of glory perhaps today | 47:06 | |
| in the work of those men who labor | 47:12 | |
| apparently in vain, in hospitals and elsewhere; | 47:15 | |
| labor in vain in politics and in statesmanship. | 47:21 | |
| There's the possibility of an endurance. | 47:26 | |
| Perhaps one of its uses was | 47:32 | |
| that it made men good workmen. | 47:34 | |
| One marvels at some of the craftsmanship of men | 47:39 | |
| who lived in a time when it was expected | 47:43 | |
| that the world would come to an end very quickly. | 47:46 | |
| In some of the medieval centuries when the end | 47:51 | |
| was near at hand, and yet men wrought so skillfully; | 47:54 | |
| did work that was not signed and which could not | 48:00 | |
| glorify them in any way; | 48:03 | |
| did work which endured and which was | 48:07 | |
| good not only in its visible parts | 48:11 | |
| but also in its invisible parts. | 48:13 | |
| Why did they do it that way? | 48:16 | |
| Perhaps because they had the hope of glory. | 48:19 | |
| Now we may say of this gift, | 48:27 | |
| which was given to us with life, | 48:29 | |
| which was renewed, | 48:34 | |
| reconstructed, raised in its | 48:37 | |
| dynamic power by Jesus Christ. | 48:42 | |
| We may say, well, it's been taken away from us; | 48:45 | |
| the experiences of life have taken it away from us. | 48:50 | |
| How can the 20th century have a hope of glory, | 48:55 | |
| the 20th century which has experienced | 49:01 | |
| concentration camps, | 49:05 | |
| wars, depressions, | 49:08 | |
| a totalitarian attempts to | 49:13 | |
| fasten on men reins of mortal power; | 49:17 | |
| how can the 20th have the hope of glory? | 49:21 | |
| How could we, who need to be mature | 49:28 | |
| and to accept life as it is, | 49:32 | |
| how can we have the hope of glory? | 49:34 | |
| It's been taken away from us | 49:37 | |
| by life, personally, | 49:40 | |
| by social history. | 49:45 | |
| But then we begin to wonder. | 49:49 | |
| Men had this hope of glory who lived in | 49:53 | |
| more desperate times than ours; | 49:56 | |
| who were more mature perhaps than we are | 50:02 | |
| who have suffered personally more than | 50:07 | |
| most of us. | 50:11 | |
| Has it been taken away from us or have we put it away? | 50:13 | |
| Is it one of those things in life which we suppress, | 50:18 | |
| for in our unconscious are not only | 50:23 | |
| the traumatic experiences which we do not want to remember, | 50:28 | |
| but perhaps also the great beneficent experiences | 50:32 | |
| which we do not want to remember. | 50:36 | |
| Perhaps we have put it away so that we might have | 50:41 | |
| freer scope to admire and to set our heart | 50:44 | |
| upon all that Paul calls the flesh. | 50:48 | |
| An American humorist, | 50:54 | |
| as described now by his son, | 50:59 | |
| appeared to all of his contemporaries | 51:03 | |
| to be a very happy and a gay man. | 51:05 | |
| But he was | 51:11 | |
| obsessed with the deep sense of the tragic | 51:14 | |
| failure of his life. | 51:18 | |
| And particularly when he met an old friend | 51:22 | |
| who had become one of our leading poets and biographers, | 51:25 | |
| he felt in the eyes of that man an accusation. | 51:30 | |
| Or he remembered that he, the humorist, | 51:35 | |
| had had gifts as great as those of the poet. | 51:40 | |
| But that he had found that | 51:45 | |
| he couldn't get the $500 a week, | 51:50 | |
| which his certain brand of humor | 51:54 | |
| allowed him to earn | 51:58 | |
| if he were to devote himself to, | 52:01 | |
| to a kind of work that the poet | 52:05 | |
| gave his attention to. | 52:09 | |
| He had put away the hope of glory, | 52:14 | |
| not of his own glory, but the hope of | 52:18 | |
| a life in which good work, in which integrity | 52:21 | |
| was recognized and vindicated and became | 52:26 | |
| a part of the structure of things. He had put it away. | 52:29 | |
| He hadn't had it taken away from him. | 52:34 | |
| What about our American Dream? | 52:37 | |
| We've had the dream in this country that | 52:43 | |
| earth shall be fair and all men glad and wise. | 52:46 | |
| But this was to be the new world | 52:52 | |
| in which a new life could be lived. | 52:55 | |
| Has the American Dream been taken away from us | 52:59 | |
| by the experiences of American life, | 53:03 | |
| or have we put it away because | 53:08 | |
| it doesn't quite comport with | 53:11 | |
| those things which we love a little more, perhaps, | 53:16 | |
| than the hope of glory? | 53:20 | |
| Can we indulge in the hope of glory | 53:23 | |
| and also have all the immediate | 53:26 | |
| joys of our prosperity? | 53:31 | |
| Can we entertain the hope of glory | 53:33 | |
| and also expect glamor? | 53:37 | |
| We have perhaps put it away far more than | 53:43 | |
| we have lost it. What, have we put it in the church? | 53:48 | |
| Have we put it away because, | 53:53 | |
| if we have the hope of glory, | 53:55 | |
| we could not glorify ourselves | 53:57 | |
| in our past quite so much? | 54:00 | |
| We could not use the hope | 54:04 | |
| of glory quite so much as an | 54:07 | |
| instrument for saving ourselves | 54:10 | |
| and for condemning others. | 54:15 | |
| Perhaps we have not lost it, | 54:18 | |
| perhaps it has not been taken away. | 54:21 | |
| Perhaps we have suppressed it, | 54:24 | |
| and perhaps, having suppressed it, | 54:28 | |
| it is there in the beneficent | 54:32 | |
| spiritual world of our root, | 54:35 | |
| social mind, of our personal mind. | 54:39 | |
| We have tried to repress the hope of glory, | 54:45 | |
| but there are times when we become aware that | 54:48 | |
| it is a part of our being still, | 54:51 | |
| in our history and in our personal life. | 54:57 | |
| We become aware that it is there sometimes. | 55:02 | |
| When we are forced to take into account | 55:07 | |
| the desolateness of our existence | 55:12 | |
| without the hope of glory, | 55:16 | |
| there come moments in life just the opposite | 55:20 | |
| of those moments described by Wordsworth; | 55:23 | |
| when the desolateness of existence, | 55:27 | |
| the brassy skies and the earth of mud, | 55:32 | |
| and the meaninglessness of being | 55:36 | |
| seems somehow to strike us, | 55:40 | |
| then we say thank God for the hope of glory. | 55:45 | |
| For if it were not for the hope of glory, | 55:50 | |
| this would be our humorless state. | 55:53 | |
| And when we read some of the interpreters of men | 55:57 | |
| on this existence, | 56:01 | |
| for whom all life is wasteland; | 56:05 | |
| or for whom it is all animality. | 56:11 | |
| And then think of our ordinary existence, | 56:16 | |
| we say, thank God for the hope of glory | 56:20 | |
| which is still present in us and modifies all our thinking. | 56:23 | |
| There is a glory behind the shame. | 56:30 | |
| There is a glory behind the vanity. | 56:36 | |
| That it is repressed and not absent | 56:40 | |
| may become apparent to us | 56:43 | |
| in the patient labors of good workman | 56:46 | |
| in every calling and profession, | 56:48 | |
| who will not yield to the easy temptations | 56:51 | |
| for our personal glory, for advancement in time, | 56:54 | |
| for quick rewards; | 56:58 | |
| but to work as though they worked for eternity | 57:01 | |
| and for the construction of glory. | 57:05 | |
| They may understand and phrase their ideas very differently | 57:09 | |
| from the way we do in the church. | 57:13 | |
| They may speak of truth for the sake of truth, | 57:17 | |
| or art for the sake of art, | 57:20 | |
| or justice for the sake of justice. | 57:23 | |
| But in any case, they seem to be working | 57:27 | |
| for the hope of glory as we understand it. | 57:30 | |
| When amidst all the time serving and all the temptations | 57:34 | |
| to seek quick rewards, all the efforts at | 57:39 | |
| a specious success, we see the work of such craftsman; | 57:42 | |
| we say thank God for the hope of glory. | 57:50 | |
| That it is only repressed but not lost to us is | 57:55 | |
| revealed too in the power over suffering, | 57:59 | |
| so often exercised in life. | 58:03 | |
| Sometimes coming to us as a surprise in ourselves, | 58:06 | |
| more often apparent in others. | 58:11 | |
| When in the midst of this (mumbles) men are enabled | 58:14 | |
| to endure without compromise | 58:17 | |
| and without disloyalty to their fellow men, | 58:20 | |
| we know that love is at work but it is | 58:22 | |
| love combined with the hope of glory, | 58:26 | |
| to celebrate the moment of defeat | 58:30 | |
| as a nation's finest hour, | 58:33 | |
| that is to confess to the hope of glory. | 58:35 | |
| The hope of a vindication and a conservation | 58:38 | |
| of man's best virtues in a time | 58:41 | |
| and place beyond all times and places. | 58:45 | |
| That is to make an appeal to the eternal | 58:49 | |
| rather than to time. | 58:53 | |
| When we see steadfast loyal men in the midst of suffering, | 58:56 | |
| remaining steadfast and we can say, | 59:01 | |
| thank God for the hope of glory. | 59:05 | |
| Our period in history is not a very hopeful one. | 59:10 | |
| Our national life is no longer greatly inspired | 59:16 | |
| by the idea | 59:21 | |
| of America, the Beautiful whose alabaster cities | 59:25 | |
| will gleam undimmed by human tears. | 59:29 | |
| Our church is a church which | 59:34 | |
| celebrates the fact that Christ came, | 59:37 | |
| but does not celebrate the fact that he will come again | 59:40 | |
| in power and great glory. | 59:44 | |
| The hope of glory seems faint in us. | 59:49 | |
| We live towards the past so much more frequently | 59:53 | |
| than towards the future. | 59:56 | |
| We live towards the apparent so much more | 59:58 | |
| than towards that which is hidden behind the veil of things. | 1:00:02 | |
| And yet... | 1:00:07 | |
| the hope of glory is not gone. | 1:00:10 | |
| There is in us a longing for a longing. | 1:00:12 | |
| The time will come again when we shall move forward | 1:00:18 | |
| toward this newness of life. | 1:00:21 | |
| And the proper response to that... | 1:00:25 | |
| is gratitude. | 1:00:29 | |
| We do not ask each other what can we do | 1:00:33 | |
| to increase the hope of glory, | 1:00:36 | |
| and to make use of the hope of glory. | 1:00:39 | |
| We say it has been given to us | 1:00:42 | |
| like the small mustard seed of faith, | 1:00:45 | |
| and the first thing we can do is to thank God | 1:00:50 | |
| it's still there, operating by that | 1:00:54 | |
| spiritual power which is beyond | 1:00:58 | |
| the reach of our explicit will. | 1:01:03 | |
| We can live by the expectation that we have. | 1:01:10 | |
| And through our gratitude perhaps, | 1:01:15 | |
| evoke in one another the slumbering hope of glory. | 1:01:19 | |
| Let us unite in prayer. | 1:01:25 | |
| All Mighty God, Father of all mercies, | 1:01:35 | |
| we (mumbles) unworthy servants to give the most humble | 1:01:38 | |
| and hearty thanks for all thy goodness | 1:01:40 | |
| and loving kindness to us and to all men. | 1:01:43 | |
| We bless thee for our creation, preservation | 1:01:47 | |
| and all the blessings of this life, | 1:01:49 | |
| but above all for thine inestimable love | 1:01:52 | |
| in the redemption of the world by our Lord Jesus Christ; | 1:01:54 | |
| for the means of grace and for the hope of glory. | 1:01:59 | |
| And we beseech thee, give us that few sense | 1:02:04 | |
| of all thy mercies that our hearts may be | 1:02:06 | |
| unfaintedly thankful; and that we show forth | 1:02:09 | |
| thy praise not only with our lips but in our lives, | 1:02:12 | |
| by giving up ourselves to thy service, | 1:02:16 | |
| and by walking before thee in holiness | 1:02:19 | |
| and righteousness all our days. | 1:02:22 | |
| Through Jesus Christ, our Lord, | 1:02:25 | |
| to whom with thee in The Holy Spirit; | 1:02:26 | |
| be all honor and glory were without end. | 1:02:29 | |
| And now may the God of hope fill you with all joy | 1:02:33 | |
| and peace and believing so that by the power | 1:02:37 | |
| of The Holy Spirit you may abound in hope | 1:02:40 | |
| and the blessing of God, Almighty Father, | 1:02:44 | |
| Son and Holy Spirit be with us all. | 1:02:46 | |
| Amen. | 1:02:51 | |
| (choir singing) | 1:02:58 |
Item Info
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