May 13
2009Faith and Hope by Kenneth Copeland
Filed Under (Gloria Copeland, Kenneth Copeland, Kenneth Copeland Ministries) by admin on 13-05-2009
Tagged Under : faith, Faith and Hope, God's Word, Hope, prayer

We’ve already learned from that scripture
that hope must be present for faith to
produce. But the reverse is also true. Hope
can’t produce anything without faith! Faith
is the substance.
I remember years ago when I first started
studying the subject of faith, I discovered that
many people were trying to get by on hope
alone, and it wasn’t working. They’d say,
“We’re just hoping and praying,” and I’d know
right then they wouldn’t get anything, because
without faith their hope had no substance.
Hope is only the blueprint. You can’t take
a blueprint all by itself and make a house
out of it. You won’t be able to live in the
thing because it’s paper. But if you’ll take
some substance—lumber and steel and
stone—you can follow the blueprint and
build a place fit to live in. Faith and hope.
Blueprint and building materials. You must
have them both.
Remember though, as I said before, the
only truly workable blueprint comes from
the Word of God. All other blueprints will
let you down.
That’s why you often hear people say,
“Don’t get your hopes up.” They’ve had
experience with natural hope (hope based on
circumstances and human knowledge instead
of on the Word of God), and they know that
kind of hope will leave you disappointed
more often than not.
In Colossians 1:23, Paul warns us not to
be moved away from the “hope of the gospel.”
That’s because any other hope besides “gospel
hope” can be spiritually dangerous.
Say, for example, you were dealing with
a physical disease and your doctor told you
that you only had a small chance of recovering.
He’d say that because, based on the
natural information he’d have, that might be
all he could medically expect—and he
wouldn’t want to offer you a false hope that
might leave you disappointed.
But the Bible says when we operate in
the hope of the gospel, we’ll not be ashamed.
So, instead of clinging to that flimsy thread
of limited hope which man has offered you,
you’d be much safer going to the Word of
God that says, “By [his] stripes ye were
healed!” Because those words aren’t based on
fragmented human information. They’re
based on the knowledge of God Himself.
Instead of holding on to natural hope, if
you built up supernatural hope by meditating
on that truth and looking at it night and day,
you’d soon have some inner images of strength
you could wrap your faith around. You’d even
be able to use that supernatural hope to
combat the natural evidence around you. Then,
instead of having a small hope for recovery,
you could have a sure hope for recovery!
Look at Romans 4:18 and you can see
what happened when, in the midst of a naturally
hopeless situation, Abraham chose to
build his life on that kind of supernatural
hope. He had received a promise from God
that he would become the father of many
nations. The problem was, he was already
old. So when he turned around and looked
at his 90-year-old wife and then looked in
the mirror and saw a 100-year-old man, he
had no natural hope.
Natural knowledge told him there was
no way he could ever have a child. Don’t
you know that negative knowledge
bombarded his thinking? So what did he do?
He took the promise of God, and the hope
of that promise, and combated the negative
hope coming against him which said, “No
way, you can’t do it. It’s hopeless.”
The Bible says, “He hoped against hope.”
In other words, he used supernatural hope
to overcome natural hope. He locked his
mind onto what God said and drove out
everything else.
Verse 19 says, “Being not weak in faith,
he considered not his own body now dead…
neither yet the deadness of Sarah’s womb.”
Now, how did he do that? How can you
consider not your own body when you’re 100
years old and thinking about having a baby?
It would be tough, but Abraham was able to
do it because “he staggered not…through unbelief;
but was strong in faith, giving glory to God;
and being fully persuaded that, what [God] had
promised, he was able also to perform” (verses
20-21). God’s promise was at the center of his
hope, his faith and his persuasion.
Abraham was fully persuaded. You can
be fully persuaded, too. But you can’t get
that way by sitting around watching television
or by spending all your time messing
around with the world. You get fully
persuaded by purposely meditating on the
promise of God until it gets inside you so
deeply that no one can get it out.
Another thing that caused Abraham to be
fully persuaded was the fact that God changed
Abraham’s name. God stopped calling him
Abram and started calling him Abraham, which
means “father of a multitude.”
If you’ll pay attention to this principle,
you’ll find you can use it in your own life.
For example, I learned a long time ago to
stop calling myself “poor boy.” It didn’t
matter that on the outside I looked broke. I
decided—based on the Word of God—if
anyone hollered, “Poor boy!” I wouldn’t
answer, ever again.
Now, if they were to start hollering for
someone who has all his needs met according
to God’s riches in Christ Jesus, I’d come
running. But I decided I wouldn’t go by what
things looked like anymore. I wouldn’t go by
what I felt. I had based my life on something
bigger than feelings. I had gotten the hope of
the gospel inside me.