Dictionary: Trust
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Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... :6, 14, 15), and Job employed them himself to describe God’s hostile attack against him (19:8, 12). Zophar’s use of these same images here in his description of the complete and utter destruction of the wicked leaves little doubt about his intent to consign Job firmly to this category and its consequences. Although much of what Job had possessed or held dear—his treasures, as Zophar calls them—has already been taken from him, Zophar holds out hope only for more loss as even what is left in his tent ...

Matthew 16:13-20, Exodus 1:1-22, Exodus 2:1-10, Isaiah 22:1-25, Isaiah 51:1-16, Romans 11:33-36
Sermon Aid
Russell F. Anderson
... to the groans about us and respond with Christ's liberating love Old Testament: Isaiah 22:19-23 1. Sermon Title: The Keeper Of The Keys. Sermon Angle: This lesson should be linked to the gospel story of Christ consigning the keys of the kingdom to Peter and company. This lesson shows that God consigns the keys of authority on whom he wills. He took them away from one man and gave them to another. It appears that Shebna, the king's steward, was utilizing his authority for his own glory rather than in ...

Exodus 20:1-21
Sermon
Frank H. Seilhamer
... Testament particularly, is a locked-up, untapped treasure for so many people. Somehow it is imagined by many to be outdated, irrelevant and impossible to understand. Hence, it frequently has been consigned to that "Never-Never-Land" of respected, but ignored, things, people and ideas. And that consignment is tragic because in that treasure chest are some of the most relevant, life-giving and life enriching experiences and perspectives one can encounter. The Commandments are among these. Because they have ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... unusual manifestations such as epilepsy have been considered demonic in a pre-scientific world? Most scholars are convinced that this is the nature of so-called demon possession in the Scriptures. Does this mean that we should forget these stories and consign such problems to modern medicine and psychiatry? Absolutely not! Jesus still casts out demons whether they be physical, emotional or spiritual. GOOD RELIGION HEALS THE BODY. Modern science has helped us see more clearly than ever before that there is a ...

Genesis 45:1-28, Isaiah 56:1-8, Romans 11:11-24, Romans 11:25-32, Matthew 15:1-20, Matthew 15:21-28
Sermon Aid
John R. Brokhoff
... call of God are irrevocable. God called the Jews to be his people and Paul is positive God does not break his promises. Paul has the assurance that one day Jews and Christians will be in the church reconciled to God by faith in Christ. 3. Consigned (v. 32). Paul writes that God consigned all people to disobedience that he might have mercy on all. This is an unusual way of saying that all people are sinners in need of mercy. If people have no sin, they need no Savior. If they are not in trouble, they need no ...

2 Thessalonians 2:1-12
Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... to receive it gladly; see disc. on 1 Thess. 2:13). But they let the opportunity go by and gave him no welcome. 2:11–12 For this reason looks back to the previous verse. Because they refuse to love the truth, those who are perishing consign themselves and are consigned to their fate. Certain spiritual laws of cause and effect come into play (cf. Rom. 6:23), and yet it would be wrong to think of this as something impersonal. Of those whose choice was other than the truth, three times in the opening chapter ...

Ezekiel 26:1-21, Ezekiel 27:1-36, Ezekiel 28:1-19, Ezekiel 28:20-26
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... East India Company shows, this continued to be the case up into the modern period. The references to walls and towers could involve defensive structures on the deck of the ship—or, more probably, the reference could be to the city, without requiring that we consign these verses to an editor. A poem can, after all, shift back and forth freely from the metaphor to the reality described (we have seen this feature before in Ezekiel, e.g., in 16:40–42). The mention of Persia (Heb. paras) is surprising, as ...

Ezekiel 29:1-21, Ezekiel 30:1-26, Ezekiel 31:1-18, Ezekiel 32:1-32
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... 15–18, are recalled and reused. The command to “wail” recalls 30:2, while the expressions “earth below” and “those who go down to the pit” recall 31:14. As in 31:15–18, Pharaoh and his allies (“the daughters of mighty nations”) are consigned to the underworld. The question “Are you more favored than others?” (v. 19) recalls the question asked of Pharaoh in 31:18: “Which of the trees of Eden can be compared with you in splendor and majesty?” In each case, the point of the question ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... proud Nebuchadnezzar to insanity, God can transform human wisdom into mere gibberish. When God withdraws reason from leaders, they are consigned to wander and grope with no light. As a result, they go off the path into a wasteland (tohu, translated “ ... book, which describes Job as being full of days and blessing (42:17), here in chapter 14 Job concludes that humans are consigned to brief and troubled lives. Job speaks generally, referring not to himself alone but to every human, including both the righteous ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... others, even the most vulnerable people in our society, such as the poor, the elderly, and the homeless. While many people enjoy a good measure of prosperity, there are others who are consigned to desperate, grinding poverty. Within the same city some children profit from an excellent education while others are consigned to inferior schools in which they fall further behind each year. These deplorable and unjust conditions continue without God intervening to stop them. For Job and for us today, this raises ...

Understanding Series
Craig A. Evans
... have been viewed as awesome and extremely dangerous. Why Jesus gave them permission to enter the pigs, instead of consigning them to the Abyss is uncertain (see note below). It could be that since the day of judgment had not yet actually arrived, as ... the demons apparently thought (at which time demons would be consigned to hell, or the “Abyss”), the demons’ fear, as expressed in v. 31, was premature. Nevertheless, Jesus does send them into a ...

Sermon
R. Robert Cueni
... soup. Esau comes in from the field about 4:00 in the afternoon and he is hungry. The smell of that soup fills the tent. He asks his brother for a bowl, just to tide him over until dinner. Jacob offers a deal. If Esau will consign his birthright to Jacob, he can have a bowl of cabbage soup. Several odors emanate from this story other than cooking cabbage. First, take note of the audacity. Those boys had no right to barter the family birthright. Law, tradition and Abraham made that decision. Again, this ...

Sermon
Phyllis Faaborg Wolk
... not in garments of light and joy, but in the rags of criticism, blame and darkness. Yes, some will abuse your invitation. And God will deal with them in his own way. That is not your task. As servants of the king, it is not your job to judge or consign anyone to the outer darkness. That is up to God. Your task is to invite them, one and all, good and bad, into the light of Jesus' love. And for every no, there will be a yes. For every "I'm too busy," there will be a grateful smile and ...

Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... be related to the presence of increasing numbers of gambling boats on the river. Would God impose the suffering on such a wide area to make people aware of the consequence of such an evil? How do you deal with the wrath of God in consigning the unrighteous to outer darkness with weeping and gnashing of teeth? Jesus seems to have presented both a loving, gracious, and forgiving God and an angry, wrathful God. How do you harmonize the two understandings of God's nature? Question 4: Is Christianity exclusive ...

Sermon
Roger G. Talbott
... about rebuilding the relationship in stages one and two. In fact, stages one and two probably need to be tried over and over again in order to restore a broken relationship. However, those who think that this is a formula for excommunication -- for consigning someone we love to the outer darkness, have not looked at the context of this passage: not just the fact that this procedure is sandwiched between a parable about searching for a lost sheep and another parable about forgiveness, but also because of ...

Hebrews 12:1-13
Sermon
Robert R. Kopp
... 's greatest players, explained the efficacy of goal-setting (Golf Is Not a Game of Perfect, 1995): A person with great dreams can achieve great things. A person with small dreams, or a person without the confidence to pursue his or her dreams, has consigned himself or herself to a life of frustration and mediocrity. The sage of Proverbs put it this way, "Where there is no vision, the people perish" (Proverbs 29:18, paraphrase). Before the Reverend Ilona J. Buzick would accept a call to be associate pastor ...

Sermon
Mark Radecke
... this enigmatic figure. And consequently, many opinions are offered. But one thing at least is certain: In his vision of the coming one, he saw a mighty judge, an awesome and exacting king, someone of uncompromising right-eousness who would no more hesitate to consign a sinner to the unquenchable fire with senses undiminished than you or I would hesitate to squash a cockroach. In terms of the Tinker Creek image, John saw a figure walking across the ice, club in hand, ready to brain and bash every frozen ...

6-16, 2 Samuel 5:1-5
Sermon
Arthur H. Kolsti
... Human proficiency reflected God power. That's the way ancient folk thought about the attainment of celebrity status. If someone became famous, people looked for the Spirit of God at work in him. Today we look for his press agent and image consultant. Jesus consigned the old orthodoxy of Deuteronomy to the wastebasket in his parable of the rich fool. Speaking of a rich fool was a contradiction in terms according to the old piety. Yet that old piety lingers on among us in our cultural definitions that define ...

Mark 13:1-31, Mark 13:32-37
Sermon Aid
Richard A. Jensen
... is particularly fitting for the Advent season lest we sleep through it all overpowered, as it were, with its familiarity and spectacle. Keep awake! The temptation is to end the sermon just here ... just where Jesus ended. Keep awake! To end here, however, is to consign our hearers to life under the law. Do we have the power within us to keep awake? Our best models would surely be those closest to Jesus. And what of those closest ones? They fell asleep. They could not see. They could not hear. They could ...

20. Law and Gospel
Illustration
Richard A. Jensen
... when the commandment came, sin revived and I died, and the very commandment that promised life proved to be death to me (Romans 7:7, 8-10)." The law always kills! That was Luther's dictum about the spiritual use of the law. The law always leaves me helpless, consigned to wrath, doomed to death. This is the proper use of the law and is therefore the proper use of the law in preaching. To preach the law is to render people helpless in their relationship to God. The law kills us and leaves us dead in the eyes ...

Sermon
Barbara Brokhoff
Next to "love," the word "new" is one of the most overworked words in our world. If it isn't new, we immediately consign it to ancient history. A minister friend, tells of speaking to a group of seventh grade confirmands. They were at a rather rustic retreat center. One boy came up to him, saying, "Boy! Is this place old! In the bathroom you have to turn on two faucets to get hot ...

Jeremiah 16:1--17:18
Sermon
Erskine White
... more. Many people are too sure of themselves and too convinced of their own virtue to worry about it. There is a new secular gospel in the land, good news for the New Age, which says, "I'm OK and you're OK," and many people are ready to consign to the scrap heap of history this old Christian idea that God will judge us all according to our ways. I am afraid that even within the Christian church, the idea of judgment has fallen on hard times. In the liberal church, many people, including many preachers, have ...

Sermon
Larry Powell
... the place. Those tomorrows never came. Tomorrow never does. Today is the only sure time we have on the ledger. Tomorrow is overworked. It is too full. There is no way on earth that we could possibly accomplish all the things we have consigned to tomorrow. And yet, there are three kinds of people for whom tomorrow is necessary: (1) The busy. Those whose todays are filled with so much joy, ambition, drive, goals, arid meaningful pursuits that they cannot possibly complete all their dreams and self-driven ...

Sermon
... Man is one that tells our story. It refuses to be left behind in Jericho. It attaches to a desperate need that all of us have known in one way or another - the need, perhaps, created by a desperate outcast feeling, when we have concentrated on our negatives, consigned ourselves to that vast company of little people who are often regarded as of no account. This is not the story of the hot-shot member of the Kingdom from whose up-turned nostrils drip judgments on the little people. It is not the story of a ...

Sermon
Joe Pennel
... today who has shared with me the loss of freedom, and has been confined against their will in a prison. The forty years that have slid by have thankfully dimmed some of the pain that I experienced when, as a twenty-year old captive of enemy forces, I was consigned to spend some months behind the barbed wire of a prison camp ... To live your life totally at the whim of your captor is a frightening and painful experience. To be dependent entirely on the grim grace of your captor for a slab of bread or a cup ...

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