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I hope… (Philippians 2:19)
In the summer of 1994, I arrived at the University of Kentucky from my hometown of Atlanta, GA, driving my dad’s hand-me-down company car. It was a 1990 Dodge Dynasty that had well over 100,000 miles and wasn’t exactly the epitome of cool. I give that car all the credit for my inability to acquire any romantic dates my entire freshman year in college. As a result, I watched a lot of movies with my buddies that summer.
One of the most impactful VHS tapes we brought back from Blockbuster Video that summer was a film titled “The Shawshank Redemption.” The film caught me (and most of America) off guard with its gripping drama that cut to the heart of the human condition. The basic plot follows an innocent man who is wrongfully locked up in Shawshank Prison and subjected to the worst expressions of human depravity. The central question of the film (a question we must all answer at some point) is revealed through a heated debate between the two main characters. Here is the question:
Is there any place for hope in the prison?
Not all prisons have four walls and iron bars. Some prisons are fashioned from a bad season in our marriage. Some prisons are formed from a terrifying medical diagnosis. Some prisons look like a middle school cafeteria with a bully we can’t shake, the grief from losing a loved one, or credit card debt that has become debilitating. Prisons are any unwanted, unpleasant circumstance in life that leaves us feeling stuck with no foreseeable opportunity to escape. This is precisely where we find the Apostle Paul in Philippians 2:19. He is in a prison in Rome, battling anxiety, with no idea how things will turn out. And yet, he begins verse 19 with this life altering phrase:
I hope...
As we begin this new week of devotions, I want you to ask yourself two questions:
Wrestle with those questions today as we prepare to look at Paul and discover where he found hope in his prison.
By Jimmy Carter
Jimmy serves as the Ministries Pastor at Immanuel Baptist Church. He is married to Carrie, his treasured wife of 24 years, and they have one beloved daughter named Christy Ann “C.A.” who is a Senior at LCA and will attend UK and play golf for the Wildcats next Fall.
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