Hope and Redemption: Embracing Our Divine Journey

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These stories and characters have what we call archetypes, many of which appear through history and scripture, as well as folktales and pop culture. These story archetypes, they draw us into, into a tale. And they often transcend time, they transcend the setting, and the individual characters. (00:00:44)

Sort of like how Jesus was seen by others as nothing more than a carpenter's son from Nazareth, but as he embarks on his ministry, it's revealed that he's the son of God who conquers sin and death. The hero's journey. (00:01:45)

Hope is the common theme among each of these archetypes. Hope to overcome, hope to redeem and restore, hope to be valued, honored, and be made new. In order for hope to be more than simply a fleeting desire, a dream that's just out there, it must be promised by someone who is both capable of fulfilling the promise and trustworthy to. (00:06:31)

Mary asked the angel, how can this be, since I have not had sexual relations with a man? The angel replied to her, the Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of God will be with you. The power of the Most High will overshadow you. Therefore, the Holy One to be born will be called the Son of God. And consider your relative Elizabeth. (00:08:22)

Mary was a young woman of great faith, a faith that surpassed that of Zechariah, who was a priest ministering in the Lord's temple when Gabriel greeted him. Her faith in God, her faith in God's great power was more powerful than Zechariah's. She recognized that in God, nothing is impossible. (00:12:17)

He used, He uses our rags for riches to reveal His glory. God, through Gabriel's words, gave Mary hope and a promise to be fulfilled. Hope always starts with a promise. Genuine hope, real hope, confirmed, verified, solid hope always starts with, with a promise. (00:13:16)

Before hope can be carried, it must first be promised. Before our rags can be turned to riches, the one who sits on the throne of heaven forevermore must clothe us and trade our stripes for his. Hope is promised. Will your faith be like Mary's, who had the courage to carry hope through many trials of life, including childbirth, child rearing, and even witnessing her grown child die so that more than just herself can also carry hope? (00:15:07)

And when hope is carried, we hope bearers can recognize one another. We can encourage one another in our great and glorious burden for Jesus Christ. See, like calls out to like. Kind recognizes kind. Blessed one meets blessed. Blessed one and encouragement abounds. (00:16:28)

The two women carried different children, each with a different purpose. One carried the messenger of hope, the other carried the realization of hope. Of course, John the Baptist would leap inside his mother's womb when in Jesus's presence, the Holy Spirit responds to itself. Hope ignites hope. Joy builds upon joy. Hope carried reveals hope. (00:18:48)

The hope Jesus gives us removes our rags of sin and clothes us with the riches of his righteousness. He returns to us like the highwayman. What was taken from us by sin, restoring our broken relationship with God and he draws us into his grand adventure through faith and perseverance conquering sin and death guarding us from temptation toward our hope in eternal life we get to carry the hope of Jesus together encouraging one another along the way. (00:19:37)

We need each other for support, for encouragement, to remind one another that whatever present chaos in which we may find ourselves will have an end, that hope is coming. Hope is with us. That joy in the Lord, a joy that we share with each other, isn't diminished because of trouble or fear or fire. (00:27:08)

Hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead and into an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading. Kept in heaven for you. Our hope in Jesus is absolutely worth all of life's fires. Let's stand and sing. (00:29:54)
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