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Health & Fitness

New Year Offers Hope

Examples of hope, faith, and love abound in the lives of ordinary people every day.

“Nothing that is worth doing can be achieved in our lifetime; therefore, we must be saved by Hope; nothing which is true or beautiful or good makes complete sense in any immediate context of history; therefore, we must be saved by Faith; nothing we do, however virtuous, can be accomplished alone; therefore, we must be saved by Love.”

Reinhold Niebuhr, American theologian


I doubt that many people include January 1 in their list of favorite holidays, but I do. I have always liked beginnings because they are another chance to start anew and thus a source of hope. No matter what has happened during the previous year, January 1 gives us pause to hope that the coming year will be better. The biggest hope for many Americans in 2012, as it was a year ago, is that the economy, especially their own financial situation, will get better. Despite signs of economic recovery, 15 million Americans of working age are still without a job. Many people around the world hope to be able to obtain the necessities of life in 2012: food, clothing and shelter. If world peace is an unrealistic hope, we can at least hope for a reduction in the violence and number of deaths caused by wars. The end of combat operations in Iraq is a source of such hope.

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The second part of the Niebuhr quotation is inextricably linked to the first, because without belief in the possibility of a better life, or a better world, or just a better year, there would be no hope. We need faith not only in God but in our leaders, in our neighbors and in ourselves. One of the causes of the overthrow of dictators in
Egypt and Libya in 2011 was the faith of the people in those countries that
freedom and other basic human rights were attainable.

Ellen Goodman, longtime nationally syndicated columnist, expressed the type of faith needed in our country in a recent column. Her point was that the worst economic situation in America since the Great Depression will perhaps make more people realize what truly matters in life – and it’s not material possessions. Goodman frames the economic crisis as an opportunity for significant, long-term change in American values, and she expresses faith that it is possible.

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In their new book One Can Make a Difference, Ingrid Newkirk and Jane
Ratcliffe offer the essays of 54 people, some famous, most unknown, who did
something significant at some point in their lives. Both the authors and the
people in their essays illustrate faith in human nature that we can always do
better.

To illustrate the third part of the Niebuhr quotation, I would offer a few examples from my own experience writing for The Toano-Norge Times. Over the course of three years, I have met, interviewed and written about hundreds of people -including a grief counselor for young adults who have lost a relative or close friend, a man who began an organization to help kids with special needs, a nurse who opened a clinic to provide medical care for the uninsured, a caregiver for older adults, a man who collects and distributes food each week to honor his young son who died, lay missionaries, church groups, ministers and many others - who, with
the help of a spouse, friend, relative or co-worker, or on their own, demonstrate
love for others through their vocation or their avocation.

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