MARCH — DAY 28: When Hope Is Misplaced
Date: Saturday, March 28, 2026
Focus Scripture:
“When a wicked man dieth, his expectation shall perish: and the hope of unjust men perisheth.” — Proverbs 11:7 (KJV)
What You Will Walk Away With
- The Distinction Between Hope and True Hope — You will discover that hope itself is not enough; hope must be rightly placed. Misplaced hope may feel strong but eventually collapses.
- Why Disappointments Reveal Misplaced Hope — You will understand that many disappointments in life are not caused by hope failing, but by hope being placed in things never designed to carry it.
- God’s Mercy in Redirecting Your Hope — You will see that God exposes misplaced hope not to shame you, but to invite you to transfer your trust from fragile supports to His unchanging promises.
Devotional
Hope itself is not enough — hope must be rightly placed.
This is one of the most important distinctions in the Christian life. We often speak as if hoping itself is the virtue, regardless of what we hope in. But Scripture makes a sobering distinction between having hope and having true hope.
Misplaced hope may feel strong for a season. It can be intense, passionate, and consuming. You can hope in a relationship with all your heart. You can hope in a career with all your ambition. You can hope in your own abilities with all your confidence.
But misplaced hope eventually collapses because it rests on foundations that cannot endure.
Proverbs 11:7 states this starkly: “When a wicked man dieth, his expectation shall perish: and the hope of unjust men perisheth.” The wicked man’s hope perishes because it was anchored in the wrong things—in his wickedness, in his unjust gains, in his self-built kingdom. When death comes, it all collapses.
Many disappointments in life are not caused by hope failing, but by hope being placed in things that were never designed to carry it.
Think about the common places we misplace hope:
- Careers — We hope in our jobs for security, identity, and meaning. But careers change. Companies restructure. Industries disappear. Retirement comes. A career can provide income, but it cannot carry the weight of your soul’s hope.
- People — We hope in relationships to make us happy, complete, and secure. But people disappoint. They fail. They leave. They die. Relationships are gifts, but they cannot bear the weight of ultimate hope.
- Strength — We hope in our abilities, our health, our youth. But strength fades. Bodies age. Minds slow. What you could do at twenty, you cannot do at seventy. Physical strength is temporary; it cannot anchor eternal hope.
- Systems — We hope in governments, economies, institutions. But systems fail. Kingdoms rise and fall. No human system has ever delivered lasting peace or justice.
When hope is tied exclusively to these things, despair is almost inevitable. Not because these things are bad, but because they are finite. They were never designed to carry the weight of your eternal hope.
God does not expose misplaced hope to shame us, but to redirect us.
When your hope collapses because it was built on sand, God is not standing over you saying, “I told you so.” He is inviting you: “Come, build on rock.” He exposes the fragility of false foundations not to mock you, but to save you from building your life on them.
He invites believers to transfer hope from fragile supports to His unchanging promises.
Correction, in this sense, is an act of mercy. It hurts to have misplaced hope exposed. It hurts to admit that you have been trusting something that cannot hold. But that pain is the pain of surgery—cutting out what is killing you so that you can live.
True hope survives correction because it is anchored in truth.
When your hope is in God, you can examine it, test it, even question it—and it will hold. It is not fragile. It does not collapse under scrutiny. The more you examine hope in Christ, the stronger it becomes, because you keep finding that He is faithful.
Christ-Centered Focus
Jesus consistently invited people to reorient their hope.
He called fishermen away from their nets—not because fishing was wrong, but because He had something greater for them. He called the rich young ruler away from his wealth—not because money is evil, but because his hope was in riches, and that hope would fail. He called the religious away from their performance—not because righteousness is unimportant, but because self-righteousness cannot save.
He did not come to destroy hope; He came to purify it. He came to strip away every false foundation so that hope could be anchored where it belongs—in Him.
Christ does not destroy hope; He purifies it.
To the woman at the well, He offered living water—hope that would never leave her thirsty again. To the man born blind, He offered sight—hope that went far beyond physical healing. To Martha at Lazarus’s tomb, He declared, “I am the resurrection and the life”—hope that transcends death itself.
Hope properly placed in Christ does not perish; it matures. It grows deeper, stronger, more resilient. It is tested by fire and comes out as gold.
Conclusion
Hope becomes secure when it is placed where it was always meant to rest — in Christ alone.
Today, examine your hope. Ask God to show you where it has been misplaced. It may be painful to see, but it is merciful to know. Because only when you see the false foundations can you build on the true one.
Let Him redirect your trust. Let Him re-anchor your hope. Let Him strip away everything that cannot hold so that you can rest in the One who never fails.
Prayer
Wise and faithful God,
Search my heart and reveal where my hope has been misplaced. Show me the places where I have trusted in careers, people, my own strength, or earthly systems to carry what only You can carry. Gently redirect my trust back to You. I confess that I have often built my hope on sand. Forgive me. Establish my hope on what cannot perish, fail, or fade. Let my hope rest in Christ alone.
In Jesus’ name,
Amen.
Declaration
- I declare that hope itself is not enough—hope must be rightly placed, and I place my hope in Christ alone.
- I declare that I will release expectations anchored in unstable things and transfer my trust to God’s unchanging promises.
- I declare that hope properly placed in Christ does not perish—it matures and endures forever.
Action Points
- Ask God to reveal misplaced hopes. Sit quietly before Him and pray: “Search me, O God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me—any misplaced hope—and lead me in the way everlasting.”
- Release expectations anchored in unstable things. Identify one area where you have been hoping in something finite and consciously surrender it to God.
- Consciously re-anchor hope in Christ. Write down three promises of God that are unchanging, and thank Him that your hope in them will never perish.
Memory Verse
“When a wicked man dieth, his expectation shall perish: and the hope of unjust men perisheth.” — Proverbs 11:7 (KJV)
📖 Bible Reading Plan
- 1-Year Plan: Deuteronomy 19-20; Luke 7
- 6-Month Plan: Joshua 21-22
📘 Tomorrow: Holding Fast to Hope
Written by: Dr. Abraham Peter
📲 Share & Discuss
- Can you identify a time when you experienced disappointment because your hope was misplaced? What did you learn?
- Why do you think we so easily place our hope in finite things rather than the infinite God?
- How can you tell the difference between hope that is anchored in Christ and hope that is anchored elsewhere?
Pastoral Anchor: Hope flourishes when it rests where it was designed to rest — in God alone.








