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The Case for Hope in a Year of Despair

The Case for Hope in a Year of Despair

FromQuick to Listen


The Case for Hope in a Year of Despair

FromQuick to Listen

ratings:
Length:
68 minutes
Released:
Dec 1, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

There’s not a lot making Americans hopeful these days. More than half of the country told pollsters last year that they were “extremely worried” about the direction of the country. One in 4 said that “nothing made them hopeful.” Their anxieties: politics, the pandemic, and inflation.This year, existing worries have likely been compounded by fears and anger over mass shootings, the war in Ukraine, more fallen Christian leaders, and sex abuse scandal cover-ups by church leaders, a massive drought on the Southwest side of the country, climate change inaction, spiking fentanyl deaths, a surge in crime, an explosion in homelessness.In the midst of this, why should Christians hope?
Carmen Joy Imes is Associate Professor of Old Testament at Biola University. She has previously joined the show to nerd out about the Bible in light of Trump getting COVID and controversy over the San Francisco school board seeking to drop the names of a lot of well-known Americans from their schools.Imes joined global media manager Morgan Lee to discuss what it looks like to practice hope in the mist of despair and how we move past Christian platitudes and flimsy one-liners to a robust faith that there is more to our present circumstances.
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Quick to Listen is produced Morgan Lee and Matt Linder
The transcript is edited by Faith Ndlovu
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Released:
Dec 1, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Each week the editors of Christianity Today go beyond hashtags and hot-takes and set aside time to explore the reality behind a major cultural event.