The feeling that what is wanted can be had or that events will turn out for the best: to give up hope.
Hope, verb:
To believe, desire, or trust: I hope that my work will be satisfactory.
Hope, bible translation:
By its very nature, hope stresses two things: (a) futurity, and (b) invisibility. It deals with things we can’t see or haven’t received or both:
1 Peter 1:3 - He has given us new birth into a living HOPE through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead
According to the worldly definition of this word, hope almost seems wishy washy, with doubt in the air. When you take the word from the bible, at this original Greek root word, it literally means "a strong and confident expectation".
In the Bible, hope is never a static or passive thing. It is dynamic, active, directive and life sustaining. This is everywhere obvious as we read the Word. Take a concordance, look up the word “hope” and you will find reference after reference pointing out the active results of hope in the lives of those who truly have a biblical hope and live accordingly.
In other words, a biblical hope is not an escape from reality or from problems. It doesn’t leave us idle, drifting or just rocking on the front porch. If our hope is biblical and based on God's promises, it will put us in gear.
Personally, my future is in God's hands. I have hope that I live every day in His grace and mercy, my promises come to pass in the right time, and I don't miss a single moment to be an idiot, in the eyes of the world, for God. Like Craig Groeschel said, "My answer's yes, now what's the question?" What he meant by this is, "God, what do you want me to do, and when do you want it done." To the world, I'm an idiot!