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CAFOD

Jubilee spiritual practices: Hope

Cultivating spiritual practices can help us to live a life that truly reflects God's presence. These practices make our faith more tangible, allowing for deeper engagement and growth.

As the theme of the Jubilee Year is Pilgrims of Hope, we are beginning by exploring Christian hope as a spiritual practice - a way of living that transcends mere optimism and does not seek an escape from the harsh realities of our world. 

Let’s start by hearing from CAFOD’s Chair of the Board of Trustees, Bishop Stephen Wright.

Images of hope

"Hope does not disappoint” but how do we make this tangible? What does hope look like? 

Take some time to look at the images below. Is there one of them which speaks of hope to you? 

Or perhaps there is a different image or short sentence in your mind that expresses hope.

Take some time to ponder this before moving on.

Hope  pictures

Two Picasso paintings

We now invite you to look at two Picasso pictures (both are easily available by Google search).

The first is called “The Charnel House." Picasso painted this as news of the concentration camps spread to France. It’s a pile of bodies and limbs. with three identifiable figures: a woman, a man and a baby.

The second is called “First Steps.” It’s a cubist rendering of a mother supporting her child who’s learning to walk, capturing the excitement of that shared experience.

In her book “Though the Fig Tree Does Not Blossom: Toward a Responsible Theology of Christian Hope”, Professor Ellen Ott Marshall suggests that moving between these two pictures helps us to cultivate hope as a spiritual discipline.

One artwork moves us to grieve and challenge life's hardships and sorrows. The other highlights the potential for love, growth and liberation available to us now.

When we consider these two perspectives together, we can discuss hope authentically, without ignoring suffering or minimising challenges.

This isn't just about famous paintings; it's about continuously connecting with the harsh realities of the world while also recognising the resilience of individuals who, despite difficult circumstances, are actively working to resist violence and support each other.

Hope is a rope

It may surprise you to know that the Hebrew word for hope is related to the word for rope. Think of the things that have been done with a rope in people’s daily lives over the ages, lifting, climbing, gathering up and binding together, rescuing.

Perhaps we can see hope not as a rope that dangles down from heaven to help us escape the difficulties of this world, but as a resource that helps us hold things together. True Hope is about attention, losing sight neither of the horror captured in Picasso’s first picture, nor of the promise of joy captured in the second picture. 

Hope in Jesus

20 May 2025 marks the 1700th anniversary of the opening of the council of Nicaea, which defined the doctrine of the incarnation for the early Church.

The Vatican Theological Association has published a reflection on this which relates to our theme of hope:
“To proclaim Jesus our salvation on the basis of the faith expressed at Nicaea does not ignore the reality of humanity. It does not turn away from the sufferings and upheavals that plague the world and today seem to undermine all hope. On the contrary, it confronts these troubles by professing the only possible redemption, won by the one who experienced the violence of sin and rejection, the loneliness of abandonment and death, and who, from the very abyss of evil, rose to bring us too in his victory to the glory of the resurrection.” 

It goes onto say that the most vulnerable of our sisters and brothers “are Christ among us, in the strongest possible sense.” 

Holding on to hope in hard times

Katy Nembe Katonda

Katy Nembe Katonda