Offering Hope
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HOPE The confidence that, by integrating God’s redemptive acts in the past with trusting human responses in the present,
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.
the faithful will experience the fullness of God’s goodness both in the present and in the future.
Biblical faith rests on the trustworthiness of God to keep His promises.
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 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;
The Greeks recognized that human beings expressed hope by nature;
however, this kind of hope reflects both good and bad experiences.
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).
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:
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.
God and His redemptive acts as they culminate in the birth, life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.