Faith, hope, love.It's it's 1. Contraction of it is. 2. Contraction of it has. See Usage Note at its. it's it is or it has it's be ~have easy to have hope when life is going well, but the rubber hits the road when bad things happen to good people. In her latest book, Finding Hope: Cultivating God's Gift of a Hopeful Spirit (Skylight skylight Roof opening covered with translucent or transparent glass or plastic designed to admit daylight. Skylights have found wide application admitting steady, even light in industrial, commercial, and residential buildings, especially those with a northern orientation. Paths), author Marcia Marcia can refer to:
2. The facts proved are either possible or impossible, ordinary and probable, or extraordinary and improbable, recent or ancient; they may have happened near us, or afar off; they are public or . "I trust you've found something to place your hope in other than the uncertainty and unpredictability of life on Earth. "I hope that 'something' is God. Because when your ultimate hope is in God, your underlying philosophy of hope is based on the unshakable belief that no matter what happens, God will see you through it. And when you hold on to that belief deep down inside you, the people who threaten to rob you of your hope cannot--simply cannot--have any power over you, nor can they touch the hope that lies within you. "Untouchable untouchable Former classification of various low-status persons and those outside the Hindu caste system in Indian society. The term Dalit is now used for such people (in preference to Mohandas K. hope. That's what we all need. A hope that is steadfast and sure and protected from every effort to destroy it. And that's the kind of hope we need to share with those people who have lost the hope they once had, either because they placed their hope in their circumstances or because they allowed someone to deprive de·prive v. 1. To take something from someone or something. 2. To keep from possessing or enjoying something. them of what little hope they had. "Cultivating a 'no matter what' approach to our faith in God creates that untouchable kind of hope. When we have an untouchable faith, then no matter what happens, we believe God will be with us. No matter what, we believe God loves us. No matter what, God will see us through." |
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