Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life

Our Birth: Cosmic

37 min
Apr 8, 202621 days ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Tim Keller explores how the resurrection power of Christ forms the foundation for Christian faith and perseverance. He examines what happens when someone becomes a Christian—experiencing new birth into a living hope—and how this imperishable hope, grounded in Christ's sacrifice, fundamentally reshapes one's life priorities and resilience through suffering.

Insights
  • The new birth is not a type of Christianity but the essence of Christianity itself—a non-negotiable spiritual transformation that occurs in diverse ways across individuals
  • Hope is the primary driver of human experience and well-being; changing one's hope changes everything about how life circumstances are experienced and endured
  • Suffering becomes redemptive when one's hope is anchored in God rather than perishable worldly sources; it drives deeper faith rather than destroying it
  • The imperishability of Christian hope is guaranteed not by human performance but by Christ's substitutionary sacrifice, making it unconditional and secure
  • Spiritual growth happens through intentional practices like worship and communion that reinforce and deepen one's investment in eternal hope over temporal concerns
Trends
Religious teaching emphasizing psychological resilience through reframed hope and meaning-making in secular contextsShift in Christian messaging from dramatic conversion narratives to inclusive recognition of gradual, subtle spiritual transformationIntegration of personal counseling observations into theological teaching to address contemporary relationship and identity strugglesEmphasis on hope-based anthropology as foundational to understanding human motivation and well-being across life domainsTheological reframing of suffering as spiritually productive rather than merely redemptive, addressing existential despair in modern audiences
Topics
Christian spiritual rebirth and regeneration theologyHope as psychological and spiritual foundation for human well-beingSuffering and faith resilience in Christian practiceSubstitutionary atonement and Christ's sacrificeIdentity transformation through religious conversionComparative conversion experiences and spiritual journeysEschatology and future hope in Christian beliefPrayer and worship as spiritual practicesCounseling and pastoral care in faith communitiesMeaning-making and purpose in Christian worldviewPerishable versus imperishable hope frameworksAngels and celestial perspective on redemptionThe gospel as central theological narrativeSpiritual growth through adversityRedeemer Presbyterian Church community teaching
Companies
Redeemer Presbyterian Church
Tim Keller's church where this sermon was delivered in 2014; primary institutional context for the teaching
Gospel in Life
Podcast platform distributing Tim Keller's sermons and theological content to broader audiences
Children's Hospital Philadelphia
Institution where C. Everett Coop worked as a brilliant pediatric surgeon before his Christian conversion
10th Presbyterian Church
Philadelphia church where C. Everett Coop attended evening services with his wife under preacher Donald Gray Barnhouse
Westminster Chapel
London church where preacher David Martyn Lloyd-Jones served; referenced for conversion story illustration
People
Timothy Keller
Primary speaker delivering sermon on Christian rebirth, hope, and resurrection power; explores theological framework ...
C. Everett Coop
Referenced as example of gradual, subtle Christian conversion over 18 months through exposure to preaching
Ruth Graham
Cited as example of childhood spiritual formation where faith developed gradually without memorable conversion moment
Billy Graham
Referenced as master of dramatic born-again conversion experiences; contrasted with wife Ruth's gradual faith develop...
David Martyn Lloyd-Jones
Historical preacher whose sermon led suicidal man to conversion; illustrates dramatic spiritual transformation narrative
Donald Gray Barnhouse
Philadelphia preacher whose sermons gradually converted C. Everett Coop over extended period of attendance
Augustine
Historical figure cited for transformation narrative illustrating identity change through Christian conversion
Quotes
"The new birth is not a type of Christianity. It's Christianity. If you haven't experienced a new birth, you're not a Christian."
Timothy KellerEarly in sermon
"If you build your life on anything more than God, suffering can only destroy you. But if you build your life on God, suffering will drive you deeper into your real joy."
Timothy KellerMid-sermon
"Every tree in this world is coming down. God wants to get you to build your nest in the rock."
Timothy KellerLumberjack parable section
"Your hope is imperishable because Jesus Christ perished. Your glory in the future is assured because he emptied himself of his glory completely."
Timothy KellerConclusion section
"Even the foretaste of our imperishable hope is more exciting, it's more fulfilling than the aftertaste of having built your life on all these other things."
Timothy KellerHope discussion
Full Transcript
Welcome to the Gospel and Life podcast. What sustains our faith when life feels overwhelming? The Bible tells us that when we become Christians, the power of Christ's resurrection is already at work in our lives. Today Tim Keller explores how this resurrection power forms a framework for perseverance and hope amid the pressures of everyday life. Tonight's scripture reading comes from 1 Peter chapter 1 verse 3 through 12. Praise be to God and the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. In His great mercy He has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead and into an inheritance that can never perish, spoil, or fade. This inheritance is kept in heaven for you who through faith are shielded by God's power until the coming of the salvation that is ready to be revealed in the last time. In all this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. These have come so that the proven genuineness of your faith of greater worth than gold, which perishes even through refined by fire, may result in praise, glory, and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed. Though you have not seen Him, you love Him. And even though you do not see Him now, you believe in Him and are filled with an inexpressible and glorious joy, for you are receiving the end result of your faith, the salvation of your souls. Receiving the salvation, the prophets who spoke of the grace that was to come to you, searched intently and with great care, trying to find out the time and circumstances to which the Spirit of Christ in them was pointing when He predicted the suffering of the Messiah and the glories that would follow. It was revealed to them that they were not serving themselves but you when they spoke of the things that have now been told to you by those who have preached the gospel to you by the Holy Spirit sent from heaven. Even angels long to look into these things. The word of the Lord, thanks be to God. Now the Bible says that when we unite with Jesus Christ, His resurrection power comes into our lives. It says in Ephesians 2, it says we've been raised with Christ already, the spiritual resurrection. Philippians 3, Paul says, I want to know Him and the power of His resurrection. Even though we are Christians believe that we'll be resurrected in our bodies at the end of time, there's already a spiritual resurrection that happens to us now. What does that look like? What kind of life is that? That's what we're going to actually explore for a number of weeks at Redeemer in the next few weeks by looking at these early chapters of 1 Peter, 1 Peter 1 and 2 and actually some of 2 Peter as well. I realized that so I was getting ready to do this with you. Some of the most important verses and passages in my life are here in 1 Peter. So look at this first chapter. We're going to go through and we're going to notice that 1 Peter says something happens to you when you become a Christian. And by marching through the text we're going to see what happened, where it happens, how it keeps happening and why it happens. What happens, where it happens to you, how it keeps happening and why. So first, and we're just going to really march right through. Let's go. Here's what happens to you when you become a Christian. Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. In His great mercy He has given us new birth. The first thing it tells us and it's very significant is that we experience the new birth. That's what happens to us. And it's to us. See, Peter doesn't say, he's writing to a church, right? He doesn't say, praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. In His great mercy He has given some of us new birth. He doesn't, see people today, especially in New York, I've talked to people who say, oh yes, I understand, born again Christianity. It's a type of Christianity for people who need a kind of cathartic experience. If you've had troubles in your life, I can understand why you want to have some kind of deep emotional experience. So born again Christianity is for kind of person. It's a type of Christianity. I get that. But Peter's saying, no, it's not a type of Christianity. The new birth is Christianity. He's saying us, who's us? Christians. He has given us. He can talk to a whole group of, an entire church and say, every one of us has received a new birth. Why? Because if you haven't received a new birth, you're not a Christian. It's not a type of Christianity. It's Christianity. If you haven't experienced a new birth, you're not a Christian. Now, what is the new birth? Now, this is the good and bad part about these epistles. Peter's bringing up a subject which he doesn't give us a lot of answers. You have to go to John James, a lot of other places. But in a nutshell, let me tell you what the Bible says about what the new birth is. It's a new vitality and it's a new identity. The reason why the metaphor is used, see being born physically is one thing. Being born spiritually is a way of talking about what happens to us spiritually. It's like being born, being born again. How? Now, so, it's like being born spiritually because it's a new vitality, new identity. First of all, new vitality. By that I mean that when you become a Christian, there is an implantation of a new kind of life. Spiritual life comes into you. It's 2 Peter 2, 2 Peter 1 verse 3 says, we are partakers of the divine nature. It means God puts His spirit in us. God puts His life blood in us, His very nature in us. Now, the two things I want to tell you about that are on the one hand, sometimes that can be subtle. It doesn't always have to be dramatic, but on the other hand, what comes into you is stupendous. Now, first of all, I think it's very important. If the Bible says that every person who's a Christian has to experience the new birth, we need to immediately say there are an enormous number of varieties of how that can happen. We must not decide that there's one kind of conversion experience, experience that everybody has got to somehow to align with. So, let me give you three very famous examples to show you how different these things can be. David Martin Lee Jones was a pastor, was a preacher in the center of London for many years in the 20th century. He preached at Westminster Chapel. Westminster Chapel was this big church at Buckingham Gate. It was right outside of Buckingham Palace, not far, right in the middle of London. He tells this story in his preaching lectures. And the story is this, there was a man one Sunday night, there was a man so despondent he was suicidal. And he was walking through the streets of London on his way to the River Thames to throw himself in. He was going to find a bridge and walk across the bridge and throw himself in. He was that suicidal. And as he was going, it's a true story, by the way, as he was coming along, it was a Sunday night and Westminster Chapel had Sunday night services and the windows were open and he heard the music and it gave him some kind of hope. He said, you know, I think I'll go in. And so he went in, sat down, heard the word of God preached, and eventually he became a Christian. That's pretty dramatic, right? I was on the way to kill myself and then I heard, you know, I went by a church and I went in and I heard the word of God and I was converted. That's dramatic, okay? Very dramatic. However, another story, C. Everett Coop, who just died recently in his, he was in his 90s, he was the Surgeon General of the United States in the 1980s. And he was also a brilliant doctor at Children's Hospital in Philadelphia. If I remember correctly, he was the first person to successfully separate slimy's twins, I think. But he was just a brilliant doctor. And he was not a Christian believer, but his wife dragged him to the evening services at 10th Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia where Donald Gray Barnhouse was the preacher. Many years ago, it must have been in the, what, 50s or something like that, 40s or 50s. And this is what he tells to happen to him. He said he remembers that when he began going to hear the preacher in the evening services, his wife dragged him. When he listened to the sermons, it was like almost nothing that he heard that he liked. Virtually everything he thought was stupid. He said he just, he just, he didn't believe hardly anything the guy said. And he realized that about a year and a half later, after continually being dragged by his wife, a year and a half later, he realized he believed pretty much everything the guy was saying. And he looked back and he said, what happened? And he realized that very slowly, very slowly, bit by bit by bit, he had, you know, one thing, one argument made sense. Okay, I guess I believe that. And another argument made sense. Well, I guess I believe. And bit by bit, he came to believe more and more the Christian faith until he realized about a year and a half later that actually he believed, that he really believed he was praying he had given himself to Christ. But if you'd asked him what day or what month or week or even what month, what month he couldn't tell you. It was just sort of, you know, somewhere the new life came in, but he couldn't even tell you when. And one more example, it's a pretty famous example and interesting, is Billy Graham's wife, Ruth. Billy Graham, of course, was the master of the dramatic come to Jesus born again experience. Okay, buses will wait for you. And, but Ruth, the story is that Ruth experienced almost what Seavart Coop experienced only as a little child. She found that as she grew up, she heard the stories about Jesus. And, you know, at the age of three, at the age of five, at the age of eight, every time she could understand a little bit more because she'd gotten older, what she understood, she embraced bit by bit by bit. So somewhere, I don't know, you know, 12, 14 year old or something like that, she realized I profess faith. She believed it. She could never under, she could never remember when she didn't believe it. On the other hand, she could remember when she didn't get it. And at some point, bit by bit by bit, it grew together and therefore she never really could remember a time in which she didn't believe and she experienced a new birth. When? What year did it happen? Age five, age eight, when did it happen? She didn't know, but she experienced a new life. Now, you see, I'm telling you that because it is crucial to realize, because of what I'm about to tell you, that in spite of what I'm about to tell you, the new birth can be dramatic or it can be incredibly subtle. And you must not insist that it always happens in a certain way. But let me tell you what's coming into you. I'm going to do a little Greek on you. There's a word in the Bible, palogenesia. It's a word that means regeneration. You can even see the word genus, genesia. You can see the Greek word generate in there. Palogenesia means the ancient regeneration. Paul says in the book of Titus that when we're born again, we experience regeneration, which is another way of saying rebirth, regeneration. And he uses the word, this is in Titus, the book of Titus, palogenesia. Now, if you go to Matthew 19, 28, Jesus says this, when the Son of man comes to sit on his glorious throne at the renewal of all things, everyone who left houses or fathers or mothers or children or fields for my sake will receive 100 times as much and inherit eternal life. Now, Jesus is saying someday he will come back and he will sit in his throne and everything will be put right. He calls it the renewal of all things, of all things. God's power at the end of time, when Jesus Christ comes back, will come down and everything stained and deformed about this world will be wiped clean. All suffering will be gone, all death will be gone, all deformity will be gone. Everything sad will become untrue. All tears will be wiped away. Think of the power it's going to be, the power that's going to be exercised at that minute to make everything in the world perfect. The renewal of all things, well guess what word Jesus uses there? He says when the Son of man sits on his glorious throne at the renewal of all things, at the palogenesia, what he says, the palogenesia, which means at the great regeneration of all things, Paul has the audacity to use the same word. And this is what most commentators and theologians understand Paul to be saying. The tremendous power at the end of time that's going to make everything new actually comes into your life now. First installment, down payment, foretaste, but it's that, that's the same power that's going to renew the world at the end of time. Comes into your life now through faith in Jesus Christ. Do you know the power to change you've got? I want you to know that everybody in this room who has experienced a new birth, you're putting up with stuff you shouldn't put up with, including me too. Give up your small ambitions. The potential for change. The potential to change things that in your life that are hard to change. You've got it. The palogenesia is in you. And that's the reason why this metaphor is used, the new birth. It's a metaphor not only that when you become a Christian you get new vitality, but you get a new identity. How so the new identity? Well, it's a little bit like when a person is born you've got a new person, right? And in many ways when you become a Christian it's you, but it's not really, I mean it's, you're almost like a new person because the changes eventually can be enormous. Very often it starts small, just like babies start small. Babies start just a couple pounds in some cases. And so the new life starts small, but the possibilities for change are enormous. It's almost like becoming a new person. The story is told supposedly. In St. Augustine, you know the great theologian, St. Augustine, had been a very licentious guy. You know, kind of a wild and crazy guy before he became a Christian. And then he became a Christian and one day he was walking along the street and one of his old mistresses came up and threw herself at him. And he was polite, evidently, and he was, you know, courteous to her, but he wasn't doing that. He wasn't going there. And she was stunned by his change and she looks at him and then suddenly occurred to me, maybe, oh, maybe he didn't really recognize me. So then he says, but Augustine, she says, excuse me, she says, Augustine, it's me. And Augustine says, oh yeah, yeah, I see, but it's not me. Those things don't define me anymore, he was saying. Those things don't drive me anymore. I'm really kind of, I'm really somebody else. I'm not somebody else, but I am. He has given us a new birth. That's what happens to us. But secondly, where does this happen? Now what I mean by that is what makes this change so great that Augustine could even say, well, but it's not really me anymore. And the second thing we learn is the new birth operates in your hopes. The reason new birth changes you so much is it changes your hopes. And if you change your hopes, you change everything. Look here. It says praise be to God and Father who's given us new birth into a living hope. Isn't that interesting? What does that mean? That's what we're going to look at. We're born again, which is like a huge change. Why? Because we now have a living hope. We're born again into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ and into an inheritance that can never perish or fade or spoil. Captain heaven, imperishable, living hope. Now what does that mean? It means a lot. If you can change a person's hope, you change everything in their lives because whether you know it or not, your life is essentially the course of your life is being set by what you hope in the most. That's why the new birth is so radical because it gives you an imperishable hope and takes you off the perishable hopes that you've got. So let's talk a little bit about this. What do I mean by hope? Well, what I mean by hope is hope is actually a desire and an expectation. See, everybody's got certain desires. We want meaning. We want significance. We want security. We want purpose. We want to feel like we're important. We want to feel like we're secure. We have those desires. Then you have to decide what will fulfill those desires. What will fulfill your desires? You need to look up there and figure out what that is. And whatever it is that you believe in that will fulfill those desires, whatever it is that you believe in, that will fulfill it. You're building your life on that. You're setting your heart on that. You're setting your hopes on that. What is my purpose in life? What is a good life? And why does the world feel so broken? In the Gospels, Jesus meets people who are asking these very questions. And when Jesus responds, their lives are changed in unexpected ways. In his book, Encounters with Jesus, Tim Keller explores several of these conversations. Looking at Jesus' interactions with everyone from a skeptical student to a religious insider to a social outcast, Dr. Keller shows how these encounters with Jesus can uniquely address the big questions and doubts we still face today. Encounters with Jesus is our thank you for your gift this month to help Gospel and Life share the hope of the Gospel with more people. Request your copy today when you make a gift at gospelandlife.com slash give. That's gospelandlife.com slash give. Now here's Tim Keller with the remainder of today's teaching. Now there's a whole lot of things you can do. There's a whole lot of things that you could invest in and say, this will fulfill my deep desires. There's clusters of them. There's a career and money and accomplishment and status. That's one cluster. Another cluster is love, romance, finding that right person, building a family, you know, beauty, maybe sex. These are things that, that's another whole set of things that you can say, that will fulfill my hopes. That will fulfill my desires for significance and security. I'll set my hope on that. Another thing is being a good, is political causes or social causes or trying to make the world a better place or that sort of thing. And then there's smart people who diversify their portfolio. Honestly, very often people who are, if you build your whole life on your career and you have a career reversal, you build your whole life on your family and somebody in your family is not doing well, you build your whole life on this or that. And you know, some people say, well, I'm kind of, you know, I'm going to diversify the portfolio. I'm going to invest in a lot of these things. Nevertheless, all of us, all of everybody's heart chooses something to believe in that will fulfill those desires. You might believe in God, but you're building your life on some of these things. These are your hopes. Now secondly, I want you to see, that's what hope is, that we are unavoidably hope-based creatures. The Bible says in the book of Proverbs, hope disappointed makes the whole heart sick. Your entire well-being is all based on your hopes. Let me give you an example. This has been proven, by the way, empirically. If you have two people in a room, let's just say you put a person A here and a person B here, they're in the same room. The room is the same, two rooms, but they're identical conditions, identical situations, and you give them a task. Put this in this or do this. They have the same job. And then you tell them, when you're finished with this, I'm going to pay you $100. And then you tell the other person who's got the same job, same conditions, when you're done with this, I'm going to give you $10,000. So they're working, it's kind of tedious work, and they take a break, and they go out, and one person says to the other, isn't this tedious? This is awful. I'm ready to quit. And the other person says, oh, not tedious? No, it's fine. It's all right. I have no problem with it. Because one person thinks at the end of the day, I'll get $100. Other person thinks at the end of the day, I'll get $10,000. And studies have shown that you experience your present in completely radically different ways depending on your hope. They're having the very same experience, but because their hopes are different, one of them can hardly bear it, and the other one is whistling why he works. Why? Hope. You see how radically it affects you? Here you have very often, frankly, over the years when I've counseled couples, and Christian couples, very often if the career isn't going well, the money's not doing well, very often the husband says, I'm just falling apart, and the wife says, they're there, honey, we need to trust the Lord. But there's something wrong with one of the children. The wife saying it's the end of the world, and very often the husband saying, there, there, honey, we need to trust the Lord. And the reason was because very often, though they both cared about money and they both loved their children, very often the wife had built her hopes for her significance, her security, her meaning in life was basic, and will my children be okay? And though the husband loved the children, his hopes were a little bit more, were actually more invested in his career. And even though everybody believes in Jesus, you know, we all believe, and yet our hopes are different, and it really sets the course of our life. When you're born again, however, everything changes. What changes? The things that you used to look at as your hopes, you begin to pull your heart off of, and now you have an imperishable hope. See your career is perishable, your children are perishable, everything else is perishable, but not this hope. And this hope is so powerful that when you actually begin, the more you really set your heart on it. And by the way, this takes time, as we're going to see. The Lord's Supper tonight is a way of actually investing more in your hope. It's a way of just saying, okay, I'm going to pull my heart off these other things, I love these other things, but this is my hope. This is really what I'm building my life on. The text tells us, many places in the New Testament, that if you build your life on this future hope, even the foretaste of that, at the end of time, the love you've always been looking for from your parents, you're going to get in the arms of your father. The love you've been looking for from your spouse, you're going to get in the arms of your ultimate spouse, Jesus Christ. The significance you've been trying to get from your job or your achievements or your art or your political causes or whatever, you're going to get, when the Triune God says to you, well done, good and faithful servant. Even the foretaste, we don't have that yet, but even the foretaste of it, even the foretaste of it is stronger than the aftertaste of any other worldly hope. Can I say that again? Even the foretaste of it, even the anticipation of it that you get in prayer, you get in the foretaste of it in worship, even the anticipation of it, knowing what it's going to be, even the foretaste of our imperishable hope is more exciting, it's more fulfilling than the aftertaste of having built your life on all these other things. And that's where the new birth happens. It changes your hopes. It changes your hopes. Thirdly, here's how the new life grows. When I said, we're going to look at what has happened to you, where it happens to you in your hopes, how it keeps happening to you. Now I don't mean the new birth actually keeps happening to you. You're either born again or you're not. I don't mean that, but I mean the life that comes with the new birth grows. How? Now there's a lot of ways to do it. I don't want you to think this is the only way. But 1 Peter is particularly good at talking about something, that one of the best ways, in fact one of the main ways that all people grow into their hope and become more Christlike, become more buoyant, live more loved, become more joyful is through suffering. Look at the next verses. Verse 6, in all this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. These come so that the proven genuineness of your faith of greater worth and gold, which perishes even though refined by fire, may result in praise, glory, and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed. What is that saying? Here's what it's saying. First, look at the first sentence. In these things you rejoice. In other words, you're rejoicing in your hope. A Christian is somebody who through the power of the Holy Spirit realizes the stuff I've been looking for here, here, and here, here is in there. It's in Jesus. It's in the Lord. I'm not going to rest my heart's deepest hopes and faith in anything but that. Now to rejoice in what you've got, to rejoice in that, he says, you're doing that now. You're greatly rejoicing. Present tense. And then it says, now for a little while, however, you've had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. Now I think actually the English translation mutes this a little bit, but look carefully. The word suffer grief means you are in agony. It's a strong word that means you're in pain. But notice what he says. You are rejoicing. Isn't that present tense? In all this, you greatly rejoice. Present tense, even though right now you are in pain. It doesn't say you used to rejoice, but now you're in pain. It doesn't say because you're rejoicing, you're not really in pain. It says you're crying out in pain, you're in agony, you're feeling you're hurt, and yet you're still rejoicing. They're both present tense. And if that's true, he says, if you instead of when you crying out in pain, you still go look at your hope, you still go look at it. You still do everything you can to remind yourself of what you've got coming in spite of the pain now. That's like putting gold into a fire and you become a person of greater poise, of greater joy, of greater faith. You become like gold. You say, how is that the case? I can tell you. Think about what we just said about the hopes. If you build your life on anything more than God, suffering can only destroy you. If you build your life on your career and you lose your career, you are destroyed because your life's based on that. If you build your life on your children and something happens to your children, you are destroyed because you have no other life but your children. If you build your life on anything but God, suffering will just destroy your life. But if you build your life on God, then suffering will just drive you deeper into your real joy. It'll just drive you deeper into your real hope. It'll show you what your real hope is through prayer, through fellowship with other Christians, through wrestling and struggling. You'll find that as time goes on, the suffering as bad as it is is driving you into your real joy and when you come out the other side, you're going to be more stable, you're going to be more strong, you're going to be more poised, you're going to be more buoyant than you ever were before. That's how, not the only way, but one of the main ways that this new life that comes to you in your new birth continues to grow. Build your life on something more than God, suffering will destroy you. Build your life on God, suffering will just drive you more into your joy. Now here's the last thing, why is this all possible? Why? Or put it like this, you say, put it like this. How can God, how can Peter say that if you're a Christian, your hope is imperishable, kept for you. See what all the stuff he says? It's a living hope and it can never perish, it's imperishable, never spoil, never fade, kept in heaven for you. How can he say that to us? We fail each other, we fail God and we will fail each other and we will fail God. Jesus says, love your neighbor as yourself, love God with all your hearts, soul, strength in mind, that's what God wants from you. You and I have never done that and we will not do it. How in the world then? And Peter promised us a hope that doesn't perish. See this is the essence of it all. The problem with every other kind of hope is it perishes. Every tree here is coming down. You know that story, I've told this story, haven't I told you? About the, no, maybe I haven't, it's been a while. The lumberjack went into the forest and he saw a mother bird making a nest for her eggs and chicks up in one of the trees and he knew that he was taking that tree down. So what he actually did was he took the side of the act and he started pounding on the tree so the poor mother bird was, you know, getting, you know, all shaken up until finally she fled over to another tree. And so she started making her nest there. But he was going to be taking that tree down too. So he went over there and he started banging on the tree, you know, trying to shake her up and of course until finally she said, all right, all right. And then she went to another tree and then he started banging on that tree. You know, certainly this bird felt like, what is this man doing persecuting me? What is wrong with this man? You know, finally she flew to a high rock and started making her nest there and then the lumberjack led her alone. And see the moral of the story is every tree in this world is coming down. And sometimes God shakes you and you say, why is this God persecuting me? But he wants to get you to build your nest in the rock. Because every tree in this world is coming down. Now how is it possible for us to believe that we actually then have this imperishable hope? Every other hope is perishable. That's our problem. We keep losing things. The older you get, the more you'll see that. When you're younger, very often you just really don't believe it. You believe, well, if I get in this school I won and if I get the job I want, then I'll be happy. You do not understand how deep your desires are. Your heart has desires for something that nothing in this life will ever satisfy. You don't understand the greatness of your own soul. You don't realize just how deep those desires are. And the best thing God can possibly do for us is shake it up because he says, I really want you to have an imperishable hope. Every other hope is perishable. But how can it be imperishable? How can God guarantee when we don't live like we should live? We don't deserve that. You know, why aren't you worried that we're going to lose that just like every other hope? And here's the reason. At the very end, it says, considering the salvation, the prophets who spoke of the grace that was to come, searched intently and with the greatest care, trying to find out the time and circumstances to which the spirit of Christ in them was pointing when he predicted the sufferings of the Messiah and the glories that would follow. And those who preached the gospel to you spoke of those things into which even angels long to look. What is the gospel that the prophets revealed? That the apostles preached? What is the gospel that Jesus Christ suffered? He came as a Messiah, not in triumph, but in weakness to suffer. That's the reason why your hope is imperishable because Jesus Christ perished in your place. Your hope, my hope is imperishable because Jesus Christ perished. He came and he took the punishment we deserve so that God could forgive us. And so that now that's not based on our performance anymore, it's based on his performance. Your hope is imperishable. That's why we can know it's there. Your hope is imperishable because Jesus Christ perished. Your glory in the future is assured because he emptied himself of his glory completely. Isn't it amazing it says angels long to look into these things? Do you realize what would it... Angels have been around for thousands of years, millions of years, maybe billions of years, we don't know. But here's what's interesting. It says there that angels never get tired of thinking about and looking at the gospel, what Jesus Christ did for you. Wouldn't you think they figured out by now? Wouldn't you think, I mean, at this point to keep looking at the gospel would be boring? Why wouldn't the angels say, oh yeah, gospel? Hey, I've known about that for a million years. It says actually even angels long, the word long is a strong word. It means to lust for something. Their tongues are hanging out. There's nothing greater for an angel than to look at what Jesus Christ did to save humankind. And every day they see a new glory, every day they see a new application, implication to you. That's how you're going to heal your heart of the existential despair that we have until we rest our hopes in a living hope, in the imperishable hope. Keep looking at the gospel. Look at it over and over again. That'll heal your heart. Let's pray. Father, thank you for the hope that you have given us, the living hope that we're born into. And now, as we continue to worship together, stir up our hopes, help us see what you've done. Teach us how to look like the angels do at the gospel until we're changed more and more into the likeness of your son, Jesus Christ, in his name we pray. Amen. Thanks for joining us here on the Gospel and Life Podcast. If you were encouraged by today's teaching, you can help others discover this podcast by rating and reviewing it. And to find more great Gospel-centered content by Tim Keller, visit gospelandlife.com. Today's sermon was recorded in 2014. The sermons and talks you hear on the Gospel and Life Podcast were recorded between 1989 and 2017, while Dr. Keller was senior pastor at Redeemer Presbyterian Church. Thank you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you.