“You’re an alcoholic. You always will be.” Doctors and therapists said she had fallen too far. The best Sarah could do now was manage just one more day.
Yet when she found herself in a Christian rehabilitation centre, Sarah encountered a starkly different message. Over the entrance, Jeremiah 29:11 proclaimed, “ ‘I know the plans I have for you,’ declares the Lord, ‘plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.’ ”
Sarah’s anger boiled. What right did these people have to offer hope to those now beyond it?
The first months in rehab were hard. But then Sarah came across the full story: God had given this “hope” to people who also seemed beyond it. The Israelites were exiled by God because of their sin (v. 4) and had lost homeland, identity and security. Hope would take time, yet it did indeed come.
“You will call on me and come and pray to me, and I will listen to you,” God promised His people. “You will seek me and find me” (vv. 12-13). Their future was hopeful because God was in it.
Sarah realised her situation was similar: God, not her failure, would determine her future. We might not know how things will turn out, but, like Sarah, we can understand that our role is to “seek” the Lord earnestly each day. The rest we can entrust to the God of hope.