A good friend recently wrote, “My usual optimism is fading.” I responded, “I am sorry to hear that your optimism is waning—but that is not necessarily a bad thing, for it is better to be realistic than optimistic. And don’t give up hope; there is a difference between hope and optimism.”
So, what
is that difference, and can a person actually be hopeful but not optimistic?
Defining
Terms
Some definitions
of optimism and hope sound as if they are synonyms. Here is the definition from Dictionary.com for optimism: “a disposition
or tendency to look on the more favorable side of events or conditions and to
expect the most favorable outcome.”
By contrast, hope means to work for and to wait
for something with the confident expectation and anticipation that it will at
some point, sooner or later, be fulfilled.
Optimism is an aspect of a person’s
disposition or temperament. People with a sunny temperament are usually
optimists, people with dark dispositions are mostly pessimists.
Hope, though, is a theological virtue. As Jim
Wallis writes in his 2019 book Christ in Crisis, hope “is not simply a feeling, or a mood . . . . It is a choice, a
decision, an action based on faith. . . . Hope is the engine of change. Hope is
the energy of transformation” (p. 264).
Later in
that book, Wallis reiterates what he has often said: “Hope means believing in
spite of the evidence, then watching the evidence change” (p. 281).
And here are wise words from an Irish poet:
So, yes, a
person can be hopeful even if he/she is not optimistic. Thus, I like what Black
theologian/philosopher Cornel West tweeted back in January 2013: “I cannot be
optimistic but I am a prisoner of hope.”
Emphasizing
Action
A key
difference between optimism and hope, as defined/described above, is this: optimism doesn’t demand anything of us (everything is going to be all
right!), but hope entails effort as we endeavor to actualize that for which we
hope.
Like the Kingdom of God, hope also demands
that we work for what we hope for, knowing that it might well be a long time
before that hope will be realized.
The New Testament says that “now faith,
hope, and love abide, these three; and the greatest of these is love” (1
Cor. 13:13, NRSV). But faith and hope are a close third and second.
Further, the New Testament also declares that “faith
without actions is dead” (James 2:26, Common English Bible). But isn’t it true
to say that not just faith, but both love and hope without actions are also dead?
Love is not simply a feeling or an emotion. It
is often said that "love is a verb,” and I believe that is true. Love is
something that is best expressed not in words, but in action.
And so it is with hope.
Assessing the Future
So, linking this to my
10/25 post, what about the future of this country under the current
President and Congress?
To be honest, I am not very optimistic about
this year’s pending legislation or about the elections of 2022 or 2024. But I
am hopeful for the future. If this year’s legislation doesn’t turn out well, I
will do what little I can to help elect better members of Congress in 2022.
And if the elections of 2022 turn out to be a
disappointment, again I will do what little I can to elect the best President
and Congress possible in 2024.
If the latter is also a disappointment, then I
will begin working for 2028 (although there may be little I can do, for that is
the year I turn 90, if I make it that far).
Regardless of what happens, though, I will continue to be hopeful, believing that things will get better later, if not sooner. That is because I trust in the “God of hope.” Accordingly, these words from Romans 15:13 (NIV) is my prayer for all of you.
Well said, Leroy!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Anton!
DeleteJust as Anton was posting his brief comment, Thinking Friend Sue Ann Wright here in Liberty was writing the following comments that she sent by email:
ReplyDelete"Leroy! I found your blog very helpful this morning. At the moment we are working toward renewed health for one of our dear ones by Acting Out Hope! You helped me remember that Hope isn’t a dithering old notion. It’s a super word. It gives us legs to a destination, no matter how far away that place may seem."
Thank you for reading and responding to this morning's blog post, Sue Ann. I am so pleased that you found it helpful, and I pray that your "dear one" will experience renewed help.
DeleteA few minutes ago, Thinking Friend Andrew Bolton in England sent the following thought-provoking comment:
ReplyDelete"Bishop Lesslie Newbigin was a Bishop for the Church in South India for many years. He spoke fluent Tamil and preached in that language impressively according to one Indian friend who heard him. His is a significant theologian and missionary both East and West. This week I heard this story about him. He was once asked if he was an optimist or a pessimist. He replied,"I am neither an optimist nor a pessimist. Jesus Christ is risen from the dead."
Thanks, Andrew! It is good to hear from you again.
DeleteI have been a long-time admirer of Bishop Newbigin, but I don't remember seeing his words that you cited. I think they are quite good and speak to the point of my blog article.
Since you and many other of my blog readers weren't seeing my blog posts back in 2010, here are the links to two articles I posted about Newbigin in February of that year, when my blog was still rather new:
https://theviewfromthisseat.blogspot.com/2010/02/in-praise-of-lesslie-newbigin.html
https://theviewfromthisseat.blogspot.com/2010/02/more-about-newbigin.html
Here are very brief comments, given in their entirety, from Thinking Friend LeRoy Roberts in North Carolina:
ReplyDelete"Encouraging. Thanks for the uplift."
"L with the capital R"
Thanks, LeRoy, for reading and responding.
ReplyDeleteL with the lower case r.
I much appreciate local Thinking Friend Tim Laffoon (who is also my son-in-law) for sending the following excellent YouTube video about hope:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RTPcGoHE5mE&ab_channel=AgapePhil-AmMinistry
A local Thinking Friend wrote, "I’m wondering if your distinction really holds, and wishing you’d just written about hope as you understand it. Your last paragraph can be said of either hope or optimism. Can a non religious person hope for a better time? Or can a religious person simply feel optimistic that better time can come?."
ReplyDeleteI think the answer to your second question is Yes; many religious people are optimistic as well as hopeful, to greater or lesser degrees. But I don't know the answer to your first question. I am sure many non-religious persons are optimistic, but I don't know if a person without any religious faith can, in fact, be hopeful.
DeleteWhile you are free to disagree with my contrasting faith and optimism, which may or may not be completely true, I think I did write about hope as I understand it, and part of my understanding is that is different from, and superior to, optimism.
As for the last paragraph, it was about hope based upon faith in the "God of hope." As far as I know, the Bible says nothing about optimism.
Local Thinking Friend Ed Kail wrote,
ReplyDelete"Thanks for the post. I have often said: Hope is anchored in God and expressed in active faith; Optimism depends upon circumstances which shape our desires. I recommend hope."
Thank you, Ed. I like your good words about hope being "anchored in God and expressed in active faith."
DeleteThe distinction between optimism and hope shows clearly in the climate crisis. Greta Thunberg is hopefully working to save the world, but does not seem very optimistic that world leaders really get it. (I am with her!)
ReplyDeleteThanks for this, Craig. Yes, I think Greta is a good example of a person who is hopeful but not optimistic. And perhaps like her, I am hopeful there will be some significant progress made at COP26 this week, but, sadly, I am not very optimistic that much of substance will be done.
DeleteThank you for your encouraging words in this blog post Leroy.
ReplyDeleteI like the following Amnesty International motto: "Where there is life, there is hope." I think the motto is equally valid when it is reversed: Where there is hope, there is life.
I also like this quote from Bishop Tutu: “Hope is being able to see there is light despite all of the darkness.”
Thanks, Garth, for your comments. I hadn't remembered Amnesty International using that motto, but at the top of their current website are these words: "WE ARE DETERMINED NOT TO GIVE INTO FEAR OR TO LOSE HOPE." I like the way you reversed the motto. And I like the words of Bishop Tutu, who certainly saw a lot of dark days in South Africa before there was much light there for multitudes of the indigenous people.
DeleteIn an email about another matter, local Thinking Friend Fred Heeren made these remarks about this blog post:
ReplyDelete"Enjoyed your blog thoughts on the distinction between optimism and hope. Helpful lesson - we all need hope in our lives! Optimism is just a trait, or a mindset like positive thinking, which doesn't necessarily get us off our duff to help make good things happen."
The election yesterday with the results from Virginia and what it foretells for future elections certainly doesn't give me any reason for optimism. I guess I'll go with hope instead.
ReplyDeleteYes, Clif, I had the upcoming Virginia elections in mind when I wrote that I was hopeful but not optimistic--and now I remain hopeful but not optimistic about the 2022 elections.
DeleteJust today I saw these words of Rabbi Jonathan Sacks (1948~2020): “Optimism is the belief that things are going to get better. Hope is the belief that we can make things better. Optimism is a passive virtue, hope is an active one. It takes no courage to be an optimist, but it does need courage to hope.”
ReplyDelete