The dictionary defines hope as
a feeling of expectation and desire for a certain thing to happen.
I’ve always found that definition a little fragile.
Because feelings change.
Expectations disappoint.
And desire doesn’t always mean fulfillment.
If hope is just wishful thinking — just wanting things to turn out a certain way — then it’s easy to lose when life doesn’t cooperate.
But Scripture speaks about hope differently.
Biblical hope isn’t rooted in circumstances or outcomes.
It isn’t dependent on how things look today, or whether prayers are answered quickly, or whether the story unfolds the way we imagined.
Biblical hope is confidence — not in what will happen, but in Who is holding it all.
It’s the kind of hope that remains when the waiting is long.
The kind that stays when answers don’t come right away.
The kind that doesn’t collapse when life feels uncertain.
This kind of hope isn’t passive or naïve.
It’s anchored.
It doesn’t say, “Everything will work out the way I want.”
It says, “God is still good, even here.”
And sometimes, that’s the difference between despair and endurance.
On days when hope feels thin, I’m learning to come back to this truth:
Hope isn’t pretending things are easy.
It’s choosing to trust that God is faithful — even when things are not.
That kind of hope doesn’t fade when circumstances change.
It deepens.
And that’s the kind of hope I want to hold onto.
“We have this hope as an anchor for the soul, firm and secure.”
— Hebrews 6:19 (NIV)
A pillar grounded in unmovable soil, a promise that will never fail! What strength, what a God! Love and prayers!
LikeLiked by 1 person