Thursday, December 1, 2016


Post 89
GIVING HOPE
The title caught my eye: How to Do Giving Tuesday for Free; and the email continued,  “instead of giving money, consider giving reviews.”  (info@sojourrngrace.com ) What a great idea: positive reviews draw interest - and curiosity may bring folks to attend the reviewed place of worship.  The reviewer didn’t spend a penny … BUT an encouraging word can be worth its weight in gold!
For this issue of December’s GRM Blog, I want to follow along this theme of giving – GIVING HOPEIn the clergy trainings I teach (for the International Gambling Counselor Certification Board’s Clergy/Lay Minister Certification), I caution the class members to be mindful about using the word  hope  too quickly or easily with individuals whose lives are severely impacted by gambling addiction  -  including the family members -  who, likewise, suffer from this devastating illness.
During the work I do as Director of Gambling Recovery Ministries, I speak with folks whose lives reflect just that: to them, all hope is gone. Their lives are ruled by an addiction that attacks the person’s mind, body, and spirit:  obsessive thinking, compulsive urges to gamble regardless of the circumstances, the breakdown of the family and other personal relationships … then too, the person’s faith can collapse.
It is quite common for those in the “Hopeless Phase” to believe that God has already abandoned them … that the Divine Healer has given up and moved on. Therefore, they think, I’m in this alone … “Why pray?  There won’t be any healing for me.”  … “I’m not worthy of being prayed for OR of even being the one who prays.”
AND SO, I challenge the clergy to be “GUIDES-TO-HOPE” … even before the person is able to perceive a glimmer of hope for recovery.  One of the first exercises we do in class is to read together what is called The 13 Affirmations of Women for Sobriety (WFS) recovery program.  The purpose of this is to demonstrate how we will picture the person who comes to us for help  -  that we, ourselves, will see them – successful in recovery – as individuals filled with hope and promise.
For us, then, as guides-to-hope, we need to first center within our own minds what hope will actually mean to the one who is suffering and not experiencing any hope for his/her present or future.  From a number of definitions of the word hope come these components:  anticipation with confidence, trust, some sense of potential (positive) certainty, a foretaste of do-able optimism, and capacity for being workable … moreover, as opposed to mere wishful thinking, there is encouragement and  truth to back up hope. 
Additionally – and significantly – I want to include further definition to the concept of hope.
The following is a slice from the sermon I preached this past Sunday, kicking off a Sermon Series on HOPE leading up to Christmas Sunday.  
How would it be if we start off defining HOPE as an expectation which is God-derived ...
that the foundation of HOPE comes from a desire/ an anticipation instilled within each of our hearts by God.  In other words, let us see HOPE, as God’s gift – given to us, in response to our prayers for HOPE  -  specific to our own circumstances … and that in doing so, desires for what I’ll call  God-outcomes swell within our hearts and minds  …   that we may become filled with hope in ways that we would never expect – which then brings us to what I’ll term as holy trust and peace
Here-in, is the message for each of us.
WHAT DO WE HOPE FOR?  DO WE EVEN PRAY FOR HOPE?
·         How teach-able are we?
·         Have we decided the limits of God’s divine ministry, directed to us?
·         Have we limited the number of miracles – or blessings – that the Creator of the Universe will bestow upon us?
·         Do we discount or minimize what God has personally shown us already ?
THREE CLOSING QUESTIONS FOR OUR REFLECTING ON HOPE:
·         Are we open and ready for unexpected miracles to happen in our personal circumstances?
·         How, indeed, does trust interact with hope ?
·       Do our own lives reflect hope to the realistic extent that we can serve as Guides-to-Hope for others?
Once more, what do you hope for …now and in the coming year(s)?
Blessings,
Rev. Janet Jacobs, CCGSO
Founding Director
Gambling Recovery Ministries
 For more information on recovery from problem gambling and other addictions, go to:

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