In this message, we return to 1 Thessalonians 4:13–14 to explore what Paul means when he says Christians are not to “grieve as others do who have no hope.” This sermon speaks directly to seasons of loss, especially during times like Christmas when grief can feel heavier and more present.
Paul does not forbid grief for believers. Instead, he teaches us how to grieve rightly—with hope rooted in truth. Death feels final, oppressive, and overwhelming, even for people of faith. While we may know the promises of God intellectually, our hearts often struggle to feel their full weight in moments of sorrow. This message addresses that tension honestly, acknowledging the doubts, fears, and emotional weakness that can surface when we face death and loss.
Drawing from Scripture, we see that grief itself is not sinful. There is a holy, God-honoring way to grieve and a hopeless way to grieve. Hopeful grieving tells the truth about God—His promises, His power, and His future restoration. Hopeless grieving, by contrast, preaches a lie by treating death as final and God’s promises as distant or irrelevant.
The sermon connects grief to the larger biblical story of redemption, contrasting Christ’s first Advent with His promised second coming. At His first coming, Jesus made comfort possible through forgiveness and reconciliation with God. At His second coming, He will make comfort permanent—wiping away every tear, removing death forever, and restoring all that sin has broken. Because Jesus died and rose again, those who have “fallen asleep” in Him are not lost. God will bring them with Christ when He returns.
This passage reminds us that real hope must be anchored in the resurrection of Jesus. False hopes—whether sentimental platitudes, self-made beliefs, or cultural fatalism—cannot sustain the soul in grief. Only the living hope given through Christ’s resurrection offers lasting comfort and assurance.
Hopeful grief does not deny pain, suppress tears, or pretend loss doesn’t hurt. It weeps honestly while longing confidently for God’s promised resolution. Our grief becomes a witness to the gospel when it reflects a deep expectation that everything sad will one day be made untrue.
This episode encourages believers to grieve faithfully, to preach the gospel to themselves in sorrow, and to anchor their hearts in the promise that Christ will come again. Until that day, we wait, we work, and we grieve—but we do so with real hope.
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