“You were chosen according to the purpose of God the Father and were made a holy people by his Spirit.” 1 Peter 1:2 (GNT)
Many people in our broken world wonder why things so often don’t go the way they should. They want to know, “Is there any hope?”
Hope is essential.
We need genuine hope—not just optimism. Optimism is psychological; it’s based on the way I think. Hope is theological; it’s based on who God is and his relationship with me. Optimism is positive thinking. Hope is passionate trusting.
The book of 1 Peter is a letter of hope. Peter wrote it to Christians who were suffering persecution in the Roman Empire.
In the first seven verses of 1 Peter, God gives five roots of radical hope.
The first root of radical hope is this: God chose you before I chose him.
The Bible says, “You were chosen according to the purpose of God the Father and were made a holy people by his Spirit” (1 Peter 1:2 GNT).
My salvation is no accident. Long before I chose God, he chose me. I was his idea. Before God even created the universe, he decided he wanted to create me.
Look again at 1 Peter 1:2. It says, “You were chosen according to the purpose of God.” That means God has a purpose for my life. What is that purpose? He wants to make me holy for heaven.
In other words, God has chosen me to spend eternity with him. That’s a big deal! In fact, it’s the highest honor I could ever receive.
And it’s the first reason I can have hope, no matter what’s going on in my life.
Let this root of radical hope grow down deep in my life: Before I chose him, God chose me to spend eternity with him.
In summary:
In a broken world where many question whether there is hope, 1 Peter reminds me that true hope is not based on optimism or positive thinking, but on trusting who God is and His purposeful relationship with me. Hope is theological, not psychological—it is rooted in God’s character and promises. The first foundation of radical hope is knowing that God chose me before I ever chose Him, and that my salvation and life are no accident. According to 1 Peter 1:2, God intentionally chose me and is shaping me by His Spirit to be holy (set apart) and to spend eternity with Him. This truth—being chosen by God for an eternal purpose—is a powerful, unshakable reason for hope in every season of life.
Bottom Line:
My hope is secure because my life is not an accident—God chose me on purpose, is shaping me by His Spirit, and has called me to an eternal future with Him.
Next Step:
This week, clearly articulate and share (in one place) the truth that identity precedes impact: before we do anything for God, we are chosen by God. Turn this into a short devotional, LinkedIn post, coaching prompt, or opening framework for your workshops that helps people move from performance-based living to purpose-driven living.
Start with this line: “Before you ever chose God, He chose you—and that changes how you lead, decide, and endure.”
When I help people settle their identity, I empower them to live with confidence, resilience, and hope—and that’s exactly the impact I'm aiming to make.
