Last Sunday at church, we were asked in groups to give three
to five words on what gave us hope for Australia . I didn't really get a
chance to speak during that time - partly because of the dynamics of the group,
but also because, at first, I struggled to find anything in Australia that
gave me hope.
But I've been thinking about it all week and I've finally
come up with my three to five words. They're a bit different to the words that
other people were providing. They gave words for three to five different
things. Well I'm giving three to five words that make up a phase. And it's a
phrase is borrowed from Martin Luther King Jr.
What gives me hope for Australia ? I have a dream. Or to
change it to three words and make it more specific to Australia :
Australians have dreams.
A dream is the ability to imagine a different world. It
doesn't just say 'Well this is the way the world is', it asks 'How might the
world be changed?' It doesn't just accept injustice and suffering. It envisions
a world without them. It doesn't look at the problems in the world and despair.
It sees its potential to become something new and something better.
Dreams can become just wishful thinking. But when Martin
Luther King Jr said he had a dream, he wasn't just talking about something to
fantasise about. Nobody expected that Martin Luther King Jr would be happy just
to close his eyes and imagine that different world. He was going to do
everything he could to see that world happen.
Dream can also appear to be unrealistic. The bigger the
dream, the more idealistic people are, the more likely people are to scoff at
them and say 'that will never happen'. People with dreams can often seem like
they're too focused on the way the world might be that they've lost touch with
the way the world actually is.
But it is an understanding of what actually is wrong with
this world that encourages us to dream. We don't dream because we think the
world is perfect and rosy. We dream because we know it is not.
And to dream doesn't mean we expect that dream to happen exactly
as we want it to. To dream is not to say 'This is the way the world will be one
day'. But it is to say 'This is the way I want the world to be, so let's do
everything we can to get as close to that as possible.'
And dreams take a long time to come to fruition. Martin
Luther King Jr's dream has come a long way. But has his dream been realised in
every aspect? I would say no. It still has some way to go.
I would say that dreams have to be unrealistic. If we're
dreaming of a world that seems possible, then we're not dreaming big enough.
And yes, if our dreams are too big and too unrealistic, then we may have to
wait a long time to see them come true (and they probably won't come true in
our lifetime). But if we make our dreams too little, then we're limiting the
potential of what this world might become.
When Jesus spoke of the Kingdom of God ,
it sounded like the kind of big, unrealistic dream that will never happen. Two
thousand years later and it still hasn't happened. But that doesn't mean we
stop dreaming (and hoping) for that Kingdom
of God . It's a dream
worth pursuing. And dreams worth pursuing need to remain dreams for however
long it takes.
Furthermore, while the Kingdom of God
may not be here, we know it is coming and we know it is already happening. The
Spirit of God is at work bringing us to that future and bringing that future to
the present. It may sound like just a dream. But as Christians, we have the
awesome privilege of being part of that dream and helping see that dream
happen.
When we believe in a God who is at work in the world,
bringing everything to its final consummation, then we realise that dreams
really will come true. And we know they are already coming true - right here
and right now.
So what gives me hope for Australia ? The fact that there are
Australians who are dreaming. There are Australians who are imagining a better
world. And there are Australians who aren't prepared to just close their eyes
and fantasise about this better world, but are actively working to make that
world a reality.