Search Results
Found 12 articles matching "hope"
A clear guide to covenant in Scripture as God’s binding relationship of promise, obligation, faithfulness, and redemptive purpose.
Scripture shows that courage to obey God grows from His presence, His command, His faithfulness, and the fear of Him above every lesser fear.
Scripture answers fear of the future by grounding the heart in God’s rule, daily provision, promised presence, and final hope in Christ.
A biblical guide for remaining faithful during long seasons of delay, when outward circumstances stay the same but God is still forming endurance.
Scripture teaches that waiting on an answer is not empty delay, but a place where faith, patience, prayer, and hope are formed under God’s timing.
Hope in hardship is not a natural emotional response — it is a sustained theological posture that requires specific practices, specific anchors, and specific communities to maintain. These seven principles draw from Scripture to show what remaining hopeful in genuine hardship actually involves.
Scripture does not treat uncertainty and adversity as obstacles to trust in God — it treats them as the specific conditions in which trust is most genuinely exercised and most deeply formed. These seven principles draw from across the whole Bible to show what that trust looks like in practice.
A verse-centered biblical study showing that gratitude in hardship is not denial of pain, but worship that remembers God’s goodness within unresolved affliction.
Faith in God's plan is not the optimism that circumstances will improve — it is the act of reading present circumstances through the lens of God's declared character and purpose. These verses illuminate what that faith actually looks like across the biblical witness.
A verse-centered biblical study showing that healing from illness in Scripture belongs to God’s restoring mercy, reaches deeper than the body alone, and points toward final wholeness in Christ.
When Elijah collapsed under a juniper tree and told God he had had enough, the angel's response was not a theological correction or a call to renewed faith. It was a cake baked on coals and a cruse of water. The biblical account of hope in suffering begins not with the spiritual demand that the sufferer rise to the occasion but with the God who meets people at their actual condition.
The Hebrew word rapha — translated "heal" throughout the Old Testament — carries a meaning broader than the removal of physical symptoms. These verses reveal what Scripture actually means when it speaks of healing, and why the concept spans the body, the spirit, and the nation alike.
Explore Related Topics
Quick searches to discover verses, topics, and articles.