Hopes and Dreams

It is surprising how a football competition can focus the national aspirations of a country. Whether it is Euro or the World Cup, England’s fans will be desperate to see their team win and bring a trophy back to this land. It is a long time since it last happened. There are fans in other countries with the same hopes and dreams.
For many England supporters, expectations are high. Gareth Southgate, the England team manager, has said that the job of selecting the squad for Euro 2024 has been difficult because there are so many good players to choose from, and he has had to leave out some well-known names. It is certain that the chant ‘It’s coming home’ will be heard in the places where the England team will play their matches, expressing the hopes and dreams of their supporters.
There is a difference between hopes and dreams. ‘Hope’ is defined as ‘expectation and desire combined’. As well as the pictures in the mind of a sleeping person, a ‘dream’ can be defined as ‘a state of mind without proper perception of reality, a conscious indulgence of fantasy’. That sounds much like the dreams of the England football supporters for many years. Perhaps, this year, hopes will be realised. Many have faith in Gareth Southgate and his team that they will indeed triumph. Faith is another level for it is complete trust or confidence in something, or someone, even without proof.
Hopes and dreams are not limited to football, at international or any other level. We all have them in many aspects of our lives - family, job, holidays, our future - all areas where we have aspirations but in which there are also uncertainties about their fulfilment.
It seems to me that the biggest hope or dream for many is in the uncertain future. They have a vision that, when this life ends, somewhere and somehow there will be a perfect ‘home’ for them. For Christian believers, such a future is not a ‘dream’, nor even a ‘hope’, but a certainty. As England supporters have faith in Gareth Southgate to choose a winning team, Christians have faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, that His death on the Cross guarantees God’s promise that ‘whoever believes in Him (that is, in Jesus and His act of saving grace) may not die but have eternal life’ (John 3.16).
St Paul declares that such faith ‘is the confidence that the things which as yet we only hope for really do exist. It is the conviction of the reality of the things which as yet are out of sight’ (Heb.11.1 [Wm Barclay]). That sounds like the trust some people have in Gareth Southgate and the England squad. Our faith is very similar to that, perhaps even stronger because it is complete confidence in an Almighty and Loving God who never fails to keep His promises to those who trust Him and follow His way.
Whether you have faith in the England manager or simply hopes and dreams for England in Euro 2024, I hope you will not be disappointed. You will never be disappointed if you put your faith in the Lord Jesus for your eternal future.








