Hope Or Hopelessness
“But I would not have you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning them which are asleep, that ye sorrow not, even as others which have no hope.”
I Thessalonians 4:13
“Now the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, that ye may abound in hope, through the power of the Holy Ghost.”
Romans 15:13
“But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts: and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear:”
I Peter 3:15
Introduction:
- Hopelessness is an evil blight and curse on men; hope is a great gift from God for your joy and peace.
- Tonight you have one of several thoughts about the future – despair, delusions, or hope. Which is it?
- A Christian has the word of God to save him from despair and delusions and to give him much hope.
- A few have shown God and us that you have sustaining hope for victory over terrible circumstances.
- Life without hope is not worth living, but the Lord, His word, and this church can increase your hope.
What is Hope?
- The confidence and expectation that a thing desired will be obtained sometime in the future.
- Hope = expectation of a desire (Psalm 10:28; 11:7; 13:12; Philippians 1:20).
- Hope for something not desired is dead; desire for something not expected is painful.
- If you already have something, then hope cannot be exercised toward it (Rom 8:24-25).
- How does hope differ from faith? We do believe they are separate, but yet closely connected.
- Faith is confidence in God and His word – Hope is the patient waiting for future things.
- Faith gives life and reason to hope – faith is the substance of things hoped for (Heb 11:1).
- Hope is not baseless, or it is only fantasy and wishful thinking: it is not delusional optimism.
- Hope plans on God’s promises coming to pass, regardless of circumstances or doubts.
- Hope expects deliverance by God’s goodness, regardless of circumstances or doubts.
- Hope is based in God and His character and His words (Psalm 33:22; 38:15; 39:7; 62:5; 71:5; 130:5,7; 131:3; 146:5; Jeremiah 14:8; 17:13,17; 50:7; Joel 3:16).
- Hope is reasonable and can be defined and explained by those truly having it (I Pet 3:15).
- It is one of the great graces of Christianity, given by God to His elect people (I Cor 13:13).
- The natural man does not have all or any of these glorious gifts of the Holy Spirit to the elect.
- It is remembering God is the business of reversal of fortune, both now and in a time to come.
- If the spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity, how much more a saint with hope (Pr 18:14)!
What is Hopelessness?
- Hopelessness is belief that nothing will do any good and the future is full of pain and trouble.
- Hopelessness is the soul-destroying resignation that there is no relief from within or without.
- It is a great curse, no matter the situation. If expectations fail, then quitting is the alternative.
- The wicked put their trust in gold and wealth, which is to deny God above (Job 31:14-18); and it cannot do them any good in the real matters of life (Psalm 49:6-14).
- There is no hope after death, though there may be for trees cut down and other things with opportunity or potential still remaining (Job 14:7-12,18-22; Ecclesiastes 9:4; Isaiah 38:18).
What are examples of Hope?
- Abraham hoped against hope that he might be the father of Isaac in his old age (Rom 4:18).
- We may assume Joseph had hope in Egypt, or he would not have obeyed the Lord as he did.
- David at Ziklag encouraged himself in the Lord, which was to take hope (I Samuel 30:1-6).
- David and Bathsheba lost a sick baby, but they gained Solomon instead (II Sam 12:15-25).
- David was forced by Absalom to flee Jerusalem, but he hoped to return (II Sam 15:23-26).
- Manasseh was in prison for great sins, but he took hope of forgiveness (II Chron 33:12-13).
- Job was hopeless at times, but he was full of hope of a future resurrection (Job 19:23-27).
- Hezekiah on his deathbed took hope in the mercy of God for 15 more years (Isaiah 38:1-8).
- Even under chastening there is hope, because God is ever merciful (Jer 31:17; Lam 3:18-36).
- God gave Israel a door of hope for their repentance as a regathered nation (Hosea 2:15).
- The conversion of Saul of Tarsus should build our hope anyone else (Acts 9:10-14; 26:9).
- Paul had a confident expectation of a great reward for his ministerial labors (Phil 1:20).
- Jesus Christ was made to hope while nursing, as God graciously favored Him (Psalm 22:9).
- He saw with great hope the joy set before Him and despised the shameful cross (Heb 12:1-2).
- The body of Jesus Christ rested in the grave in hope of His resurrection (Ps 16:9; Acts 2:26).
- Hope is even of value at death, because the righteous have good things coming (Pr 14:32).
What are some examples of Hopelessness?
- The devils are the most hopeless creatures of all (Matt 8:29; Mark 5:7; Luk 8:28; Rev 12:12).
- The wicked at a funeral or cemetery, who are easily put in bondage (I Thess 4:13; Heb 2:15).
- The wicked have vain hope, and they use false teachers to build it (Matt 7:21-23; Ezek 13:6).
- Many of them resort to alcohol, drugs, antidepressants, and other vanities for their symptoms.
- Hollywood is against all three Christian graces, but its entertainment is particularly hopeless.
- Compare David and Saul, who went for comfort to the witch of Endor and killed himself.
- Job struggled at times with hopelessness in his miserable circumstances (Job 6:11; 7:6), and his hateful friends ridiculed his false or weak hope during his afflictions (Job 4:6).
- Solomon’s observations and analysis of life prove that all is vanity without God (Eccl 1:1-3)!
- If you fail to trust God’s timing, you may foolishly lose your hope unnecessarily (Pro 13:12).
- The wicked are too stupid to recognize there is no hope in their lives (Is 57:10; Ezek 19:5).
- They are so committed to sin and under bondage that they are hopeless (Jer 2:25; 18:12).
- The wicked do not have faith in the truth, so they lose their groundless hope (Ezek 37:11).
- Some sailors lost all hope of being saved in a ship in a storm, but Paul did not (Acts 27:20).
- Gentiles were hopeless before Jesus Christ secured their hope in the gospel (Eph 2:12).
- Children with neglectful or overbearing parents often end up very hopeless (Col 3:21).
- Nothing should be hopeless … marriage? God will change your spouse (I Pet 3:1-2), replace your spouse (I Sam 25:37-42), or be your spouse (Ps 73:24-25; Luke 2:36-37; Heb 13:4-6)!
What is our Hope?
- The hope of Israel to Paul was the resurrection of the dead (Acts 23:6; 24:15; 26:6-9; 28:20).
- The appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ is our blessed hope (Titus 2:13).
- Eternal life is a glorious promise that we expectantly wait for (Titus 1:2; 3:7; I Peter 1:3).
- Heaven, the dwelling place of the most High, is the object of our hope (Colossians 1:15,27).
- Though we may be troubled here, we will obtain everlasting consolation there (II Thes 2:16).
- Our hope and expectation are to be clothed in the righteousness of Jesus Christ (Gal 5:5).
- We shall bask for eternity in the glory of God as His heirs (Rom 5:2; 8:17-25; Col 1:27).
- The glory of the future is entirely superior to any present pain (I Cor 15:19; II Cor 4:17-18).
What is Hope good for?
- It is the God-ordained and sure antidote and cure for despair, discouragement, or depression.
- It is the present expectation of future gladness that sees you through any trials (Prov 10:28).
- It provides the basis and motive for patience for persecutions and temptations (I Thess 1:3).
- God loves His children hoping in Him, and He will bless them (Ps 33:18; 147:11; Jer 17:7).
- Hope is the evidence of eternal life, which should provoke us to maintain it (Hebrews 3:6).
- Hope is an anchor for our souls, which are prone to be tossed to and fro (Hebrews 6:17-20).
- Hope is a cause for joy, because all that is coming is glorious for the elect (Romans 12:12).
- Hope is the cure for envy, because it sees a reversal of fortune (Prov 23:17-18; Ps 73:1-24).
- Hope is an agent for holiness, because it directs us to live in light of His coming (I Jn 3:1-3).
- Hope is the basis of personal evangelism, because it provokes others to ask you (I Pet 3:15).
- There is no cause for despair when you sin, because there is hope of forgiveness (Ezra 10:2).
Where does Hope come from?
- It is a gift of God’s grace to grant the ability and the basis for hope (I Cor 2:9; II Thess 2:16).
- Regeneration, which gives us a new man with hope, is to a hope of resurrection (I Peter 1:3).
- Abounding in hope is a blessing provided through the power of the Holy Ghost (Rom 15:13).
- Hope comes when a child of God hears and believes the gospel (Job 33:19-28; Col 1:6,23).
- It is based on the surest foundation of God’s promise, immutability, and oath (Heb 6:17-20).
- Parents must build hope in God and in the rest of a child’s life (Ps 78:7; Eph 6:4; Col 3:21).
How do I build Hope?
- Hope is a choice, and you choose to have hope by addressing your soul (Ps 42:5,11; 43:5)!
- Gird up the loins of your mind from discouragement, be sober, and choose hope (I Pet 1:13)!
- Choose to put on the helmet of the hope of salvation against despair (I Thess 5:8; Eph 6:17)!
- Act with courage upon your faith and hope in God, and He will strengthen you (Ps 31:24).
- Increase hope by reading and remembering God’s works (Psalm 71:14-24; 78:7; Rom 15:4).
- Increase hope by reading and remembering God’s words (Psalm 119:43,49,74,81,114,147).
- Ask God to give you hope and confirm it (Ps 119:116; Jer 17:17; Rom 15:13; Eph 1:17-18).
- Remember how God has delivered you in the past (Rom 5:3-5; Psalm 5:11; 63:7; 116:1-9).
- Observe and remember God’s merciful deliverances of others (Job 5:16; Romans 5:2-5).
- Increase hope by hearing the gospel of the New Testament (Col 1:15; Heb 7:19; II Cor 3:12).
- And then take measures to not move away from the hope of the gospel (Col 1:23; Heb 3:6).
- You must learn more about the Lord Jesus Christ, Who is our hope (I Tim 1:1; Col 1:27).
- Remember the resurrection of Jesus Christ, which is proof for our hope (I Peter 1:20-21).
- Comfort, encourage, and exhort one another in the church body (I Thess 4:13,18; 5:11).
- Good works prove eternal life and build hope (Heb 6:10-11; I Tim 6:17-19; II Peter 1:10-11).
- Reject any negative thoughts from the inside or outside about your future. The devil is a liar.
- Do not forget to allow God His timing in matters, for He will come in deliverance (Ps 9:18).
- Hate hypocrisy, for the hope of hypocrites is short and vain (Job 8:13-14; 11:13-20; 27:8).
- The hope of the wicked is vain and that will not happen (Prov 10:28; 11:7; Matt 7:21-23).
For Further Study:
- The sermon outline, “When Things Seem Hopeless,” generates hope in God for bad circumstances and doubts.
- The sermon outline, “The Life of Faith,” describes and encourages a growth in faith to be great for God (see also).
- The sermon outline, “Your Thoughts Can Destroy You,” deals with the debilitating effect of negative thinking.