Kenneth Copeland — Exposing the Deadly Nature of Grief Pt 2

Grief and sorrow are dangerous. Years ago, God started jerking the wraps off them and unveiling their true nature to me in a startling way. He showed me that they’re not the innocent emotions we’ve thought they were. They are actually spirit beings sent by the devil himself to steal, kill and destroy.
In fact, grief and sorrow were part of the devastating, satanic barrage Jesus took on Himself when He died on the cross. Isaiah 53:4 says: “Surely he hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows.” That phrase, “griefs and sorrows,” can also be translated sickness, weakness and pain. But any way you translate it, they’re all pieces of the same destructive puzzle.
Grief and sorrow are part of the devil’s game. They are the ever-present, shadowing companions of death. Jesus bore them on the cross, so we wouldn’t have to. Yet countless Christians are still shouldering them today. In doing so, they’re ignoring the direct command in 1 Thessalonians 4:13-14, where we are clearly told to “sorrow not!”
Let’s read that scripture: “I would not have you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning them which are asleep, that ye sorrow not, even as others which have no hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and
rose again....”
Stop there and notice that according to those verses, sorrow is only for those who have no hope, who don’t believe that Jesus died and rose again.
So, obviously, it’s not for you! As a believer, you do have hope—not just where physical death is concerned but in every other circumstance as well. In order to partake of sorrow about a particular situation, you’re going to have to reject the hope you’ve been given through Calvary concerning that situation. You can’t have hope and sorrow at the same time!
Kenneth Copeland Ministries
Kenneth Copeland — His Commitment To Your Long Life

Deuteronomy 5:16
KJV—Honour thy father and thy mother, as
the Lord thy God hath commanded thee; that
thy days may be prolonged, and that it may
go well with thee….
AMP—Honor your father and your mother,
as the Lord your God commanded you, that
your days may be prolonged and that it may
go well with you….
Moffatt—Honour your father and your
mother, as the Eternal your God has ordered
you, that you may have a long life and that all
may go well with you….
NIV—Honor your father and your mother, as
the Lord your God has commanded you, so
that you may live long and that it may go well
with you….
Psalm 33:18-19
KJV—The eye of the Lord is upon them that
fear him, upon them that hope in his mercy;
to deliver their soul from death, and to keep
them alive in famine.
AMP—The Lord’s eye is upon those who fear
Him [who revere and worship Him with awe],
who wait for Him and hope in His mercy and
loving-kindness, to deliver them from death
and keep them alive in famine.
Moffatt—The Eternal’s eye rests on his
worshippers, who rest their hopes upon his
kindness, that he may rescue them from death,
and during famine-days keep them alive.
NIV—The eyes of the Lord are on those
who fear him, on those whose hope is in his
unfailing love, to deliver them from death and
keep them alive in famine.
Psalm 56:12-13
KJV—O God...thou hast delivered my soul
from death: wilt not thou deliver my feet from
falling, that I may walk before God in the light
of the living?
AMP—O God...You have delivered my life
from death, yes, and my feet from falling, that
I may walk before God in the light of life and
of the living.
Moffatt—O God...thou hast saved my life from
death, my feet from stumbling, that I might live,
ever mindful of God, in the sunshine of life.
NIV—O God...you have delivered me from
death and my feet from stumbling, that I may
walk before God in the light of life.
Psalm 66:8-9
KJV—O bless our God, ye people, and make
the voice of his praise to be heard: Which
holdeth our soul in life, and suffereth not our
feet to be moved.
AMP—Bless our God, O peoples, give Him
grateful thanks and make the voice of His
praise to be heard, Who put and kept us
among the living, and has not allowed our feet
to slip.
Moffatt—Bless our God, O ye nations, sound
his praise aloud, who keeps us safe in life, and
never lets us come to grief.
NIV—Praise our God, O peoples, let the sound
of his praise be heard; he has preserved our
lives and kept our feet from slipping.
Kenneth Copeland Ministries
Kenneth Copeland — God’s Riches in Glory

Let me give you an example: You’ve
prayed for your son or daughter to be set
free from a drug habit. You can get such a
clear picture of what that child will be like
after he has been delivered, that he starts
looking great to you now—even though he
still may be giving you trouble!
You’ll actually get to the point where you
won’t see what a louse he or she is being
right now because you’ve seen him in Jesus
with the eyes of your spirit. People will say,
“I don’t know what she sees in that child.”
They won’t understand that you’re looking
at him through eyes filled with hope.
If you’ll continue to look at him that way
and not let the devil shake you, if you’ll
refuse to jump up in that child’s face and tell
him what a sorry thing he is, one of these
days that child of yours will look on the
outside just like you see him on the inside.
He’ll be delivered!
No doubt about it, that kind of hope is
strong spiritual stuff! Where do you go to
get it?
You go to the same place you go to get
faith—the Word of God. You bathe your
brain in that Word every day. You think
about it all the time, wherever you are and
whatever you are doing.
You keep your faith tapes going. You
keep someone preaching to you all the time.
Because as you keep feeding your spirit on
God’s Word, hope will begin to rise up. God’s
pictures will start to develop in your spirit.
You’ll begin to see them on the inside of you.
In fact, they’ll get bigger inside you than the
circumstances around you.
Then, when the devil comes and tries to
show you an image of some beaten-up, run-down
person wearing your name, you’ll just send
him packing. You’ll shake your head and say,
“No sir, that’s not a picture of me. This is a
picture of me...” and you’ll start talking the
Word of God!
As you meditate on those inner pictures
hope has painted with God’s Word, you’ll
begin to believe you are what the Word of
God says you are. You’ll begin to realize
you’re not what the world says you are.
You’re not what your parents or your friends
say you are. You’re not even what you think
you are. You are what GOD says you are!
You’re the righteousness of God in Christ
Jesus (2 Corinthians 5:21)!
When the devil comes at you with his
junk, you’ll reach in, get out that picture
hope has given you, and put it in front of
your eyes. You’ll say, “Devil, I’m not looking
at you. That sick, poverty-stricken, failure bound
person you’re describing isn’t me. This
is me. I’m the fellow with the healed body.
I’m the fellow with all my needs met according
to God’s riches in glory. I’m the fellow
who is more than a conqueror in Jesus!”
Power pictures. That’s what hope
produces. Inner pictures faith can build on.
But you need to understand, these are not
instant photos. The development of hope
takes time.
For instance, when I discovered healing,
I didn’t have any trouble with it. I could
easily see that if God made a body, He could
certainly fix it. That seemed obvious. But I
had a difficult time seeing how God could
ever fix my financial problems. I couldn’t see
the prosperity picture clearly at all.
Kenneth Copeland Ministries
Faith and Hope by Kenneth Copeland

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.
Kenneth Copeland Ministries
Hope: The Blueprint of Faith by Kenneth Copeland

If I asked you to explain to me what
hope is, what would you say? What example
would you give me from your own life?
Would you think back to a time when
you hoped for something, just to have those
hopes dissolve into disappointment?
Most people would. That’s because, in
their minds, hope and disappointment keep
very close company. Such close company, in
fact, that even the word “hope,” has a ring of
uncertainty. “Maybe it will happen—maybe it
won’t,” they say. “All we can do is hope.”
But there’s something very wrong about
that perspective. It flatly contradicts the Word
of God. He says “hope maketh not ashamed,”
or as another translation puts it, “hope does
not disappoint us” (Romans 5:5).
“Brother Copeland, how in the world
can you say hope won’t leave us ashamed?”
you may ask. “There have been many times
when I’ve hoped and prayed with all my
heart and nothing happened. So how can
you stand there and tell me hope won’t
disappoint me?”
I’m not the one who’s telling you! I didn’t
write Romans 5. It was written by the
Apostle Paul under the inspiration of the
Holy Ghost. So it was God, not I, Who said
hope won’t disappoint you. And if He said
it, it has to be true.
That’s why there’s no use in you or
anybody else whining to me about how it
failed you and left you ashamed. I know it
didn’t. HOPE didn’t. If you ended up disappointed,
you must have been using something
other than hope because God says real, Bible
hope won’t leave you that way.
“Well, I guess I must not know what real
hope is, then!” you say.
That’s true. There’s a good chance you
don’t. So maybe we’d better go to the Word
of God and find out.
Hebrews 11:1 says, “Faith is the substance
of things hoped for....”
The first thing we can learn about hope
from that scripture is that faith won’t do us
any good without it. Hope serves as the
blueprint for faith. Without it, faith has
nothing to do. Hope is the plan that faith
carries out. It’s the inner image—the picture
that the Holy Spirit paints on the inside of
you, a picture that’s based on the Word of
God. Its opposite is despair, which is an
image of disaster based on the lies of the
devil. Despair says there is no hope.
Did you catch what I said a moment ago
about hope being based on the Word of God?
That’s most important. You may wish that you
were two inches taller or that you had a
million dollars in the bank. You may even be
optimistic enough to think those wishes might
come true. But you will not have the hopethat-
does-not-disappoint until you go to the
Word and find out what God has promised
you about those things, and then base your
hope on His Word instead of your wishes.
You see, the Bible contains the only workable
blueprint for your life (or any other
human life for that matter). It’s the manufacturer’s
operating manual. If you ignore the
instructions in it, your life simply won’t
work. It’s like putting water in the gas tank
of your car. You can do it, but it won’t get
you anywhere. Your car’s operator’s handbook
will tell you to put water in the radiator
and gas in the fuel tank and then it will
work. The Word is the manual of life.

