Advent: Hope: Study Notes
Advent: Hope: Study Notes
Advent: Hope: Study Notes
STUDY NOTES
The other Hebrew word is qavah, which also means “to wait.”
It’s related to the Hebrew word qav, which means “cord.” When
you pull a qav tight, you produce a state of tension until there’s
release. That’s qavah: the feeling of tension and expectation
while you wait for something to happen. The prophet Isaiah
depicts God as a farmer who plants vines and qavahs for good
grapes.2 Or the prophet Micah talks about farmers who both3
qavah and yakhal for morning dew to give moisture to the land.
1. You can read this in Genesis 8:10-12. WATCH THE ADVENT: HOPE VIDEO AND
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2. See Isaiah 5:2.
3. See Micah 5:6.
HOPE IN THE OLD TESTAMENT 01:06 - 02:42
You find this same notion of hope all over the book of Psalms
where these words appear over forty times. In almost every
case, what people are waiting for is God. Like in Psalm 130, the
poet cries out from a pit of despair, “I qavah for the Lord...and
Let Israel yakhal for the Lord, because he’s loyal and will redeem
Israel from its sins.”5
So it’s God’s past faithfulness that motivates hope for the future.
You look forward by looking backward, trusting in nothing other
than God’s character. It’s like the poet of Psalm 39 who says,
“and now O Lord, what else can I qavah for? You are my yakhal.”7
4. You can read these words in Isaiah 8:17. 6. You can read this in Hosea 2:14-15.
5. See Psalm 130:5-7. 7. See Psalm 39:7.
JESUS AS LIVING HOPE 02:43 - 04:07
And this hope wasn’t just for humans. The apostles believed that
what happened to Jesus in the resurrection was a foretaste of
what God had planned for the whole universe. In Paul’s words,
it’s a “hope that creation itself will be liberated from slavery to
corruption into freedom when God’s children are glorified.”10
And that’s what the biblical words for “hope” are all about.
8. See 1 Peter 1:3. 10. You can read Paul’s words in Romans
8:20-21.
9. See Colossians 1:23 and Roman 5:2.