Living Hope Trombone/Tuba Sheet Music PDF (Bethel Music / Brian Johnson / Jenn Johnson)
Living Hope Trombone/Tuba Sheet Music PDF (Bethel Music / Brian Johnson / Jenn Johnson)
Living Hope
Bethel Music / Brian Johnson / Jenn JohnsonTrombone 3/Tuba Details
Download the Trombone 3/Tuba sheet music for Living Hope by Bethel Music / Brian Johnson / Jenn Johnson, from the album Victory. This song was arranged by Dustin Loehrs / Daniel Galbraith in the key of C, Db.
SongID | 72297 |
---|---|
Language | English |
Album | Victory |
Artists | Bethel Music, Brian Johnson, Jenn Johnson |
Authors | Brian Johnson, Phil Wickham |
Arrangers | Dustin Loehrs, Daniel Galbraith |
Publishers | Essential Music Publishing |
CCLI Song No. | 7106807 |
File Type | |
Pages | |
Original Key | Db |
Available Keys | C, Db |
Meter | 4/4 |
Tempo | Slow |
Theme | Christ, Cross, Death, Easter, Forgiveness, Freedom, Good Friday, Grace, Grave, His Name, Hope, Jesus Christ, Lent, Life, Mercy, Modern Hymn, Promise, Resurrection, Salvation, Sin, Victory, Shame, Chains, Christmas Worship, Darkness, Graduation, Christmas Eve, Christmas Day |
Lyrics
Featured In These Lists
Explore popular worship songs from India, blending traditional elements with contemporary worship sounds. These songs express deep devotion and reverence. Download chord charts, lead sheets, orchestrations, and multitracks to share these favorites with your congregation.
The top 100 new worship songs of 2019 introduced inspiring themes of God's faithfulness, surrender, and the hope we find in Christ. These songs resonated with congregations through powerful lyrics and fresh melodies, fostering deeper moments of worship and reflection. Download chord charts, lead sheets, orchestrations, and multitracks to incorporate these impactful 2019 worship songs into your services, creating an atmosphere of heartfelt praise and connection with God.
Celebrate Easter with popular French worship songs that convey themes of hope and resurrection. These songs add reverence and joy to Easter services. Download chord charts, lead sheets, orchestrations, and multitracks to introduce these meaningful French Easter songs to your worship.
Explore Swedish Easter songs that bring themes of renewal and celebration to worship. These popular songs uplift congregations with meaningful lyrics and melodies. Download chord charts, lead sheets, orchestrations, and multitracks to incorporate these Swedish Easter songs into your worship.
Find top Easter worship songs sung in churches across The Netherlands during the season of Lent and Passion Week. Download chord charts, vocal sheets, orchestrations, patches, and multitracks.
We include the piano sheet within the full piano vocal pack of a song where available. but sometimes you just want the single sheet for your pianist. Download accompanying chord charts, lead sheets, choir sheets, and orchestrations to fill out the worship team.
Celebrate faith with popular worship songs in France, featuring powerful lyrics and melodies that inspire devotion. These selections connect congregations with the spirit of worship. Download chord charts, lead sheets, orchestrations, and multitracks to incorporate these French favorites.
Download Easter sheet music for wind instruments to bring a vibrant and celebratory sound to your Easter worship services. This collection includes arrangements for instruments such as flute, clarinet, trumpet, and saxophone, perfect for enhancing the joyful celebration of Christ's resurrection. Access chord charts, lead sheets, orchestrations, and multitracks to equip your wind section in delivering these powerful Easter favorites, creating a memorable and uplifting worship experience.
Jesus did for us what we could never do for ourselves. His great sacrifice is the only means by which we could ever obtain our greatest gift of salvation. Out of grateful hearts, we sing songs of praise and adoration for who He is. Here is a list of songs about our Savior, Jesus Christ.
Standing in a grocery store line up, the woman ahead of me told the cashier, "I sure hope this virus doesn't stop us from taking our trip south!" I gave a small smile, hidden behind my mask, acknowledging the collective loss of trips, plans, and how many have had their hopes dashed. Something about the phrase rattled around inside my brain. It had nothing to do with the pandemic but how we use the word 'hope.' Hope is a word that is overused, oversimplified, and watered down. We hope it doesn't rain on the weekend of our backyard party. We hope we make it to the gas station or the store before the mall closes. We hope our Amazon purchases arrive on time. There is zero confidence connected to this use of the word hope. Someone gets terrible news ... "Oh, I hope they are ok." What do we mean? Something about this feels hollow. These everyday uses of hope feel like pleas into thin air; this kind of hope lacks substance, becoming mere wishful thinking. It sounds a bit whiny, if I'm honest. We've heard and said it countless times. Merriam-Webster defines hope as follows: "to cherish a desire with anticipation: to want something to happen or be true." That definition makes hope seem closer to a wish. We often use hope to indicate a wish or desire for something to change, improve, and suit us better. Compare that hope with the heavenly hope found in Jesus. Biblical hope is the confident expectation of what God has promised. But those who hope in the Lord[a strong and confident expectation]will renew their strength.They will soar on wings like eagles;they will run and not grow weary,they will walk and not be faint.Isaiah 40:31 (NIV) Sit and reflect on this for a moment. When we sing the verse "Jesus Christ, my living hope", I have to believe, this hope is something I can trust. Heavenly Hope was born in a barn, crucified and three days later, was resurrected. Heavenly Hope resides within us. His Hope rests on us like a weighted blanket. Our spirits groan inwardly knowing His presence is close by. We are renewed by this hope and in this hope, we can trust. Now faith is confidence in what we hope [a strong and confident expectation] for and assurance about what we do not see. (Hebrews 11:1, NIV) Worldly hope is wished for or comes by chance. Heavenly hope holds promise. The hope in scripture is strong, confident, and feeds our faith. Our watered-down uses of hope offer no guarantees. Biblical hope is a robust and confident expectation, resting with assurance in God's promises. For in hope we have been saved, but hope that is seen is not hope; for why does one also hope for what he sees? But if we hope [a strong and confident expectation] for what we do not see, with perseverance [persistence, determination, insistence, resolution, tenacity, purpose], we wait eagerly for it. (Romans 8:24-25, NIV) A hope that is this confident and assured changes our waiting, softens our disappointment, and strengthens us when we suffer trials. When we have tasted and seen the goodness, faithfulness, and love of the Father, we have a different kind of hope for the future. We have glimpsed the glory and promises to come. Our steadfast hope rests on His promises for our salvation, redemption, and restoration. Not only so, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption to sonship, the redemption of our bodies. (Romans 8:23, NIV) This hope is living in us. I can put all my eggs in this basket. I can drop my anchor here, ...in this, I can believe: The work is finished, the end is written, Jesus Christ, my living hope. We know that our lives before Him were lost and hopeless. Because we believe in His death and resurrection, we have a confident assurance that our life with Him will be forever. That's HOPE! Not because of anything we have done, but all because of what He accomplished. He humbled himself, became a servant, died a criminal's death for you and for me. He took our place, nailing our sin with Him to that cross. And now, because of this gift, we have eternal life. Hope allows us to hold fast and secure to the ending of the story. Our hope stands steady with the roar of the Lion who stepped out of the grave! It's not simply a hope that the future is going to get better one day, but it's a hope that starts coming alive in our actions and our words and our plans and our dreams. It starts forming everything we are, so it becomes a living thing in us ... This unfathomable, uncrossable chasm between our unholiness and God's holiness, and how Jesus bridges that gap, burst into our darkness." - Phil Wickham (worshipleader.com) He is our living Hope! Tracey Dahl, M.A. is a writer and Registered Clinical Counsellor (RCC) in Langley, BC (Canada). She is married to Ryan Dahl (Founder of PraiseCharts) and the mother of four grown children. Living Hope was written by Phil Wickham and Brian Johnson.