“SOMETHING
will turn up.” That was the catchphrase of Charles Dickens’s comic master-piece
Mr Micawber, famously portrayed by W C Fields in 1935, and subsequently played
by the likes of Ralph Richardson, Arthur Lowe, Bob Hoskins and David Jason to
name only a few.
To
give the full quotation from Chapter One of David Copperfield: “I have no doubt
I shall, please Heaven, begin to be more beforehand with the world, and to live
in a perfectly new manner, if – if, in short, anything turns up.”
Come
what may, Mr Micawber is relentlessly optimistic. Whatever happens, he remains
convinced against all the evidence that in the end “something will turn up”. And
in one sense it does of course, but it is never the unbridled fortune that he
dreams of – only ever more of the same, or worse.
This
is what we call optimism – hoping for the best, based on no rational foundation
and nothing more than a gut feeling that the next ticket you buy will bring the
lottery jackpot and change your life. “Something will turn up.”
Many
people think that is what the Christian faith is about as well. They see it as
based on pure optimism – pie in the sky with no foundation in reality and no
visible means of support. Christianity is based on the God Delusion. It is
whistling in the dark to keep our spirits up – and we would be better off
without it.
Needless
to say, I would beg to differ. The Christian faith is based on some very well
documented historical evidence for the person of Jesus of Nazareth and what he
taught about God and God’s purpose for our lives. There is probably no better
attested figure in ancient history in terms of the huge quantity of manuscripts
that tell us about Jesus, what he did and what he taught. There are thousands of
documents from a very early date, from Christian and other sources, compared
with a handful of copies of texts telling us about other figures in the ancient
world.
The
story of Jesus that we read in the pages of the gospels is no fairy story, no
cleverly devised myth, it is rooted in history and tells us of a real person who
had a huge impact on those around him – an impact he has continued to have for
the last two thousand years.
And
it is this Jesus who is the source of my hope both for my life in 2017 and for
the life of our world. Following Jesus is what gives my life purpose and meaning
– and my confidence in his reality and faithfulness is what keeps me going when
awful things happen, whether to people close to me or on the other side of the
world.
I
don’t know what the New Year will bring.
The
last year certainly brought some tragic and unexpected events, including the
murder of Batley & Spen MP Jo Cox right here in West Yorkshire. In the wider
world, we saw terrorist atrocities in Belgium and France, the largely unexpected
vote for Brexit, the dreadful violence in Syria and the Middle East, and the
(again largely unexpected) election of Donald Trump. I certainly do not have any
confidence that “something will turn up” in the sense of believing that the
world economy will recover dramatically and that Britain’s public finances will
be restored overnight. (Remoaner!)
But
I do have hope. Hope in the faithfulness of God, hope in the power of Jesus
Christ to give purpose and direction to the lives of those who follow him, and
hope that by following him we can also make a difference to the lives of those
around us in our local communities and in the wider world. My conviction, born
out of faith in Jesus Christ, is that I am not here on this earth just to look
after myself and those close to me. I am here because I am loved by God and I am
here to express and pass on that love to others.
My
hope for 2017 is that more and more people will begin to discover the reality of
Jesus for themselves and that as a result they will start to find a new purpose
and meaning for their lives. Not based on blind optimism or on Mr Micawber’s
empty belief that something will turn up, but based on seeing something of who
Jesus is and also something of the difference he can make in the lives of those
who follow him.
And
followers of Jesus have a responsibility to live lives based on the hope we have
found through him and not to let fear dominate the way we relate to those around
us. Over the last few years, fear has become a significant factor in political
life. It played a huge part on both sides of the EU referendum campaign and it
has had a corrosive influence in the life of our nation. My hope for 2017 is
that we will begin to see that changing – but if that is to happen, then it will
have to start with you and me. The Right Reverend Jonathan
Gibbs is Bishop of Huddersfield. Yorks Post.