
Just wanted to share another new favorite picture, one I ran across today during my many searches for clip art for my website. We often tell people to "cross their fingers" when we're hoping for the best in a situation. I've never been able to understand what crossing the fingers does for luck or fortune. We also cross our fingers if we don't mean what we promise. I'm not sure what that means, either.
I guess this picture reminds me of the difference between the hope of the world and the hope of the believer. The world's hope is a hope that something may come true even if there is no assurance of a result. It is a crossing of the fingers. A blind optimism. But the hope of the believer is not blind optimism. It has nothing to do with crossed fingers or well wishes. It has to do with certainties -- particularly the certainty that God keeps His promises. We hope in what God has promised, not because there is some doubt that God will fail but because we know that God will succeed. He always keeps His promises. And when He says that He will love us, that He will save us, or that He will comfort us, we can count it as truth. Hope does not disappoint, Paul wrote in Romans 5. My computer dictionary says that hope is an expectation, something looking forward. God has told us what He will do for us in certain circumstances of our lives, such as times of trial. We hope in His promises. And we watch them come true time and time again.
And that makes crossed fingers rather silly, don't you think?


