"Hoping against hope, he believed..." (Romans 4:18)
Paul's description of Abraham is one of the most astonishing statements in Scripture. Abraham did not believe because the evidence was favorable. He did not trust because the future looked secure. Quite the opposite. He looked at his own aging body, Sarah's barrenness, and every reason to doubt and still trusted that God could bring life where no life seemed possible.
Abraham's faith was not optimism. It was not a refusal to see reality. It was the conviction that God's promises are larger than human calculations.
That truth speaks powerfully into our own moment.
The relationship between the United States and Iran remains marked by deep mistrust. Despite ongoing negotiations, major questions surrounding nuclear development, sanctions, regional security, and military actions remain unresolved. Recent reports indicate that talks continue, but both sides remain divided on fundamental issues, even as efforts toward a broader peace framework proceed amid renewed tensions and military exchanges.
It is tempting in moments like these to assume that conflict is inevitable. History teaches us caution. Political leaders make promises and break them. Agreements are signed and abandoned. Violence often seems easier than reconciliation.
Yet Romans 4 reminds us that faith begins precisely where certainty ends.
The God Abraham trusted is described as the One "who gives life to the dead and calls into existence the things that do not exist." Paul is speaking about God's promise to Abraham, but the principle extends far beyond one family. Throughout Scripture, God repeatedly creates futures that no one else can imagine. God brings liberation out of slavery, return out of exile, resurrection out of death.
Peace often seems impossible until it suddenly exists.
The Berlin Wall stood until it didn't. Centuries of conflict in Northern Ireland gave way to agreement. Bitter enemies have become trading partners, allies, and neighbors. Human history contains countless reminders that what appears impossible today may become reality tomorrow.
Christians should therefore resist two temptations. The first is naïveté and the assumption that peace requires no hard work or sacrifice. The second is cynicism and the belief that peace is impossible because human beings never change.
We are called to a different path. To look honestly at reality and acknowledge danger. To recognize the depth of divisions, but refusing to surrender hope to fear. We trust that God continues to work in places where human wisdom sees only dead ends.
As people of faith, we continue to pray for leaders who must make difficult decisions. We pray for diplomats who continue conversations when others demand abandonment. We pray for civilians who bear the greatest cost of conflict and pray that God would open paths toward justice and peace presently hidden from view.
Abraham's story teaches us that faith is not confidence that everything will turn out as we wish. Faith is confidence that God remains faithful even when the future is unclear.
In every generation, there are moments when the world seems trapped between promise and impossibility. Abraham stood in such a moment. So do we.
And still the gospel invites us to hope against hope.
For the God who raised Jesus from the dead has not exhausted the possibilities of peace.








