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  <title>&amp;quot;Hope Against Hope&amp;quot; — 5th April 2026</title>
  <description>&amp;quot;Hope Against Hope&amp;quot; — Easter Sunday Sermon Vijay opens with a vivid image: a man walking through a village destroyed by a storm finds a rooster standing on the wreckage, chest out, crowing with full confidence. It seems absurd until you realise the rooster isn't responding to the ruins. It's responding to the risen sun. That image sets up the whole sermon: Christians can speak of hope even amid devastation, because of what God has done through the resurrection of Jesus. The central idea is that hope is not denial of reality. It's giving more weight to God's promises than to what circumstances look like. Vijay illustrates this through two Old Testament figures. Abraham, old and childless, receives God's promise of countless descendants. Everything about his situation says it's impossible, yet he trusts God's word over his own circumstances. Jeremiah, with Jerusalem on the verge of falling to the Babylonians, is told by God to buy a field. A seemingly ridiculous act that only makes sense if you truly believe God will bring His people home one day. Both men hope against hope, not because things look better, but because they trust the God who made the promise. Hope, Vijay argues, rests on two things: God's faithfulness, meaning He always keeps His word, and God's power, meaning He is able to do what seems impossible in order to keep it. This all builds to Easter. Jesus arrives, doing things only God can do, looking every bit like the fulfilment of God's long-promised restoration. Then He is crucified, and hope appears to die with Him. His followers scatter, devastated. But on the third day, God raises Jesus physically from the dead, not as a symbol or metaphor, but as proof of just how far He will go to keep His promises. The resurrection, Vijay says, is not a one-off miracle from the distant past. It is God's guarantee of what is still to come. Jesus is described in the Bible as the &amp;quot;firstfruits from the dead&amp;quot;, meaning what happened to Him will one day happen to all who trust in Him. Even death is not the final word. The sermon closes with a challenge: God's promises will not fail, but they have to be received. Like a fully paid train ticket that's yours for the taking, the journey is real, the destination is waiting, but you have to choose to get on board. The ruin we see around us is real, but the risen Son is more real. And that is what Easter proclaims. </description>
  <author_name>Sermons from Aberdeen Christian Fellowship</author_name>
  <author_url>http://www.aberdeencf.com</author_url>
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