I’m staring at a screen as I sit in the big brown chair in our living room. On my computer is the face of a dear friend and colleague, someone I’ve worked closely with for almost a decade. I also see faces of women I’ve not met before who are part of All The Things, a group she leads.
My dear friend is walking through a hard season, as are many of the women. She reads a question submitted before the call. The exact words escape me but the gist was, “How do you have hope when you’re in the messy middle, when nothing is resolved, when you don’t know the ending?”
Ah, hope — light like a balloon, strong like steel, life-giving at times, and heart-crushing at others.
I think back to when Mark and I went through almost a decade of infertility. Every month I hoped for a baby. When that didn’t happen, I became an expert at crying in bathrooms, using too-thin toilet paper for tissue. I once yelled at pregnant cows on the side of the highway while driving home from work. “It’s not fair!” I told them, “You don’t even appreciate how easy it is for you to get pregnant!” They looked up from eating grass and stared at me, wide-eyed and likely wondering why humans are so weird.
Then God took our story in a direction I never expected. We met a young woman, Lovelle, through a local organization called Saving Grace for girls who age out of the foster system or would otherwise be homeless. God made it clear that Lovelle was the daughter He planned for us all along. She was twenty when we met, twenty-one when she changed her last name to ours. We celebrate that day in our family each year like a holiday, calling it “Gerth Day.” Lovelle met a boy, got married, and a few years later had a girl of her own. Eula, our granddaughter, was born on Gerth Day.
For so many years, I thought God’s timing was off. But He’d had it down to the day all along. Now we also have a grandson, Clement.
Going through the heartache of infertility and eventually growing our family in a way only God could orchestrate taught me about a different kind of hope.
“I think there are two kinds of hope,” I tell the women on the video call, “We can hope for. Or we can hope in.”
Hoping for involves specifics. I hoped for a baby. Hoping for is about what we want, and it can be a beautiful, powerful thing. It can also be deeply disappointing. It is a healthy part of being human; it’s just not enough to sustain our souls when nothing is going as we planned. When the pregnancy test is negative again, the story feels less like Cinderella living happily ever after with the prince and more like the wicked stepsisters sold the glass slipper on eBay.
In those times, what can see us through is hoping in. I hope in a God whose character remains the same no matter what happens. I hope in the promise that I’m part of a purpose and plan bigger than I can see. Hoping in isn’t meant to be used as a spiritual cliché or holy Band-Aid. It’s not for the faint of heart. It’s an anchor, a foundation, a still place our souls can go while the hurricane of hurt swirls around us, when the wind gusts are a hundred miles an hour and the debris of our former lives is flying through the air.
“Hoping for” may have recently drained out of you like the last bit of honey from a jar. You have a memory of what that kind of hope felt like, when you close your eyes you can still taste it sometimes, but there’s none left just now — your toast is dry as a desert. Hoping for can be both delicious and unreliable.
Hoping in, on the other hand, can be the constant that gets us through as we heal. It is something solid, stable, unchanging. “Hoping in” is not an emotion or wish, a vision or vague desire — it is a near and present comfort. “Hoping for” is about the future. “Hoping in” is about Who is real in the here and now.
I’d like to tell you that what you’re hoping for is going to come true. At the same time, I’ve lived a story with our family where I’m now so grateful all my original hopes didn’t pan out. Sometimes what we think we want and what’s truly best for us are two different things. Only God knows the difference. We can trust God with our hopes, with our fragile hearts, with our deepest hurts.
After the video call with the women ends, I sit in my brown chair a little longer and stare out the window. I think of all I have, and I feel grateful. I think of all I still desire, and I feel a familiar ache. Don’t we all live suspended between gratitude and longing when we’re healing? We sway in the wind of our feelings, trying to find surer footing.
I am hoping for better.
I’m hoping in a God who knows what’s truly best.
That is enough for this moment, enough for me to take one more step.
Are you in a hard season too? Holley’s latest devo has more hope and help for you. Get a free excerpt here!
Alissa Coburn says
Thank you, Holley. I needed this today.
Holley Gerth says
I’m glad it was helpful, Alissa!
Maggie R says
Wow, Holley!
Thank you and thank you dear Jesus who always knows what we need.
I carry a deep pain regarding my oldest son. Always hoping for instead of hoping in.
May God continue to bless you as you bless others.
Maggie R.
Holley Gerth says
Saying a prayer for you and your son now, Maggie.
Ruth Mills says
Such excellent words! Blessings (((0)))
Amada (pronounced: a.m.a.TH.a) says
Holley your words speak to my heart so clearly! I’m SO grateful God led me to you, a kindred Spirit! <3 I don't think I've ever told you the story. I was a Christian Fiction book reviewer for many years and I stuck mainly to just fiction, but one day by "accident" one of your devotionals arrived in the mail. I immediately hopped on to the publishers email since I knew I didn't put in for the book and they said there was a glitch in the system and some got sent the book by accident. Just keep it, give it away, or if we felt inclined read and review it. I know there are no coincidences with a God so Great He can use ANYTHING, so after saying a quick prayer and feeling in my soul it was right, I started to read. I must tell you the Season couldn't have been more perfect for that devotional. It was like a special gift from God saying "I see you. I'm here with you. You matter to Me." It was such a difficult time full of hurt and His love through your words was the balm my heart needed. I could say the same for this post today!
May- "The Lord bless thee, and keep thee: The Lord make his face shine upon thee, and be gracious unto thee: The Lord lift up his countenance upon thee, and give thee peace." Numbers 6:24-26 KJV
Holley Gerth says
I love this story, Amada! I’m so glad God made our paths cross through my book. Thank you for telling me!
d from Canada says
How beautifully put & how accurately clarified Holley! You have described it as perfectly as I’ve experienced.
Thank You Holley.
Thank You for sharing of your story & including the beautiful evidence of your God-given family.
Bless You Holley❣️
Irene says
Thanks, Holley. Your words are a balm for the “in between” times.
Julie says
More beautiful evidence of how we don’t know what God’s plans are for us and yet He has it all arranged to bless us in His spectacular ways.
Brenda M. Russell says
Amen. Thank the Lord for on time articles like this one. I just learned so much about placing my hope in God. Yes, I will still hope for things to come to fruition but while I wait, I pray that I keep my constant and consistent Hope in God.
Enjoy your day.
Brenda
Holley Gerth says
So glad this was timely for you, Brenda!
Janet W says
Thank you Holley. Beautiful reminder. Thank you. I’m passing it on…. \0/
Holley Gerth says
Thank you for reading and passing it on!
Beth Williams says
Holley,
I just love hearing the story of how your lovely family came to be. There is a saying “God works in mysterious ways His wonders to perform. ” We never know how God will answer our prayers. His ways are higher than ours. He knew Lavelle would need parents to be there & shower her with love. You have a very lovely family.
I have a God story. I was simply hoping & praying for a full-time job. January 2019 I was let go from a part-time job. Over time I had seen God work in my life so I knew He would provide a good job. It wasn’t long & the local hospital hired me as a part-time clerical for an ICU Step down unit. Fast Forward two years & my unit gets shut down for a second time. I began praying for a full-time job. They put me in an ICU Covid unit. After a while they saw my work ethic & wrote a position just.for.me. Leaving work that day I was in tears. I knew God was at work. Last fall a ton of changes came about & my job duties changed drastically. While I don’t like the job I realize the benefits God has blessed me with including a 3-day weekend every week.
Loved this: “Hoping in” is not an emotion or wish, a vision or vague desire — it is a near and present comfort. “Hoping for” is about the future. “Hoping in” is about Who is real in the here and now. Today & always I hope in Jesus Christ my Savior & Lord of my life.
Blessings 🙂
We can trust God with our hopes, with our fragile hearts, with our deepest hurts.
VB says
What beautiful and timely words to hear today! Thank you for sharing your story as it will benefit so many others.