Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

This automated analysis scores the text on the likely presence of emotional, language, and social tones. There are no right or wrong scores; this is just an indication of tones readers or listeners may pick up from the text.
A score of 0.5 or higher indicates the tone is likely present.
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Human Hope
Hope
there are several ways that hope is defined.
*As a noun...
1.a feeling of expectation and desire for a certain thing to happen:
A: "he looked through her belongings in the hope of coming across some information"
B. "I had high hopes of making the Olympic team"
2.a feeling of trust:
A: "our private friendship, upon hope and affiance whereof, I presume to be your petitioner
*As a verb...
1.want for something to happen or to be the case:
A: "he's hoping for an offer of compensation" ·
B. "I hope that the kids are OK"
In regards to humanity , hope is similar in meaning to a biblical interpretation or meaning.
the main difference is that the worlds hope is solely and completely in this world only and nothing else.
(no hope for an afterlife)
it is based on the design or plan man made and not of divine nature.
what i do or make it and nothing else.
therefor, man does have a type of hope that often brings temporary happiness and joy....but for a short time only.
we don’t just merely randomly hope that something is going to happen because of our efforts, but rather, a hope and anticipation according to the word of God.
not blind hope/faith, but hope based on truth or faith.
hope goes beyond a mere desire for things to happen in a worldly sense.
but towards both a present and future spiritual sense.
this is sometimes why many people search for hope in many worldly vices..
they are looking for that inner satisfaction and finding nothing permanent but only temporary.....
this is because only God can give that true inner peace
Godly hope is an anticipation, longing and desire for, not only Godly things in this present world, but in the eternity to come.
GODLY HOPE: The confidence that, by integrating God’s redemptive acts in the past with trusting human responses in the present, the faithful will experience the fullness of God’s goodness both in the present and in the future.
in other words: having full faith and belief in the things accomplished by Christ in the past and trusting God for the things present and future
we have a hope of not only today but for an eternity that God will do what he said he would for us in redemption.
there are many words in the bible used for hope.
but two main words used in the old testament for hope are:
Yakhal: which means to simply wait for something
as in the story of Noah....Noah had to wait (or Yakhal) for weeks for the flood waters to recede
Qavah: which also means to wait...
it comes from the Hebrew word “Qav” which means cord...
when you pull a Qav tight....you create a state of tension until there is release..which is Qavah.
this is the state of tension and expectation while you wait for something to happen
Hope is about
waiting or
tense expectations
but waiting for what?
or that he would Qavah for him.....
the hope that Isaiah had in those days was the hope for the fulfillment of Gods plan and redemption or (the coming of Gods’ kingdom and power)
we find this type of waiting all through the old testament writings.
what they are waiting for is simply “God”
in this passage they are using both Qavah and Yakhal in waiting and anticipation
Biblical hope is based on a person which is different then optimism
Optimism is about seeing, in any circumstance, how things could work out for the best.
but biblical hope is not really based on circumstances but rather on the hope that God is in control of all things and will accomplish all things for us through him for the better
though, at times, situations seem hopeless....we can still have hope
like the Prophet Hosea who lived in a time of great oppression from great empires..
though this situation existed, he chose hope...rather than despair when he said...
God could turn this valley of trouble into a door of hope
Biblical faith rests on the trustworthiness of God to keep His promises.
The biblical view of hope is thus significantly different from that found in ancient Greek philosophy.
The Greeks recognized that human beings expressed hope by nature; however, this kind of hope reflects both good and bad experiences.
The future was thus a projection of one’s own subjective possibilities (Bultmann, “ἐλπίς, elpis,” 2.517).
Biblical hope avoids this subjectivity by being founded on something that provides a sufficient basis for confidence in its fulfillment: God and His redemptive acts as they culminate in the birth, life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ
we have a hope in a resurrected savior...therefor we have hope for the future by looking back at the death, burial and resurrection.
if Christ had not resurrected we would have no hope
the empty tomb opened up a new door of hope described in the greek as “ELPIS” as the sense of anticipation.
the apostle Peter said that because of the resurrection of Christ...we have a new and living hope
this type of Elpis or hope....is a hope not blind or faithless, but rather is based on a person....the risen Savior
hope is the faith and knowledge that our current and future rest completely on Jesus Christ and his promises
deliverance from the stain of sin and judgement that was our end but now is swallowed up in victory
what was once our sorrow and despair, is now our Joy and rejoicing....or hope.
the bible doesn’t say that we cannot have hope in this current life, but rather, not just in this life, but more importantly, in the life to come…eternity.
if the God of creation is our God indeed…he is the God of our past, present and future...
if in this life only....
hope is not optimism based on the odds, but rather, a choice we make to wait and put our trust in God to bring about a future resurrection for us as Christ was resurrected.
although, all hope is not just merely waiting by doing nothing....
hope compels us to action....
hope is not a wish…but rather, an active anticipation and participation, that drives our purpose and sets our goals...
to fulfill Gods purpose in this life
hope is a many faceted word to include:
an expectation
participation
a looking for
faith
An active service to God
an enduring spirit: unto the end of this life and into the next.
hope is an active anticipation based on past events and promises.
Where there is a belief in the living God, who acts and intervenes in human life and who can be trusted to implement his promises, hope in the specifically biblical sense becomes possible.
Such hope is not a matter of temperament, nor is it conditioned by prevailing circumstances or any human possibilities.
It does not depend upon what a man possesses, upon what he may be able to do for himself, nor upon what any other human being may do for him.
There was, for example, nothing in the situation in which Abraham found himself to justify his hope that Sarah would give birth to a son, but because he believed in God, he could ‘in hope’ believe ‘against hope’ (Rom.
4:18).
Biblical hope is inseparable therefore from faith in God.
Because of what God has done in the past, particularly in preparing for the coming of Christ, and because of what God has done and is now doing through Christ, the Christian dares to expect future blessings at present invisible (2 Cor.
1:10
we see that by looking back we look forward in hope.
Godly faith and hope are in essence..inseparable.
because faith is the substance of hope
we have hope because of our faith or belief in the word of God and his promises.
faith is believing....
not in some random things, but in the signs and life of Jesus Christ..
in the word and plan of God
in what he has already done for us...
in the model that he has set forth.
we have an anticipation and a longing for the things of God, to live, breath and participate now and in the future.
Hope what you please; but remember, that hope without truth at the bottom of it, is an anchor without a holdfast.
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