Dictionary: Hope
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Sermon
Robert Leslie Holmes
... human story. Of all the gospel writers, only John writes, "He [Jesus] himself knew what he was going to do" (John 6:6 NRSV). The New International Version translates it, Christ "already had in mind what he was going to do." The Things We Have In Mind The disciples, even though they had witnessed many miracles, were frustrated for they did not know what the sovereign Lord "had in mind to do." Life is full of farfetched demands for which our resources seem inadequate. According to Matthew, Mark, and Luke, the ...

1 John 5:1-12, 1 John 4:7-21
Understanding Series
Thomas F. Johnson
... God’s once for all, decisive act of love in sending Jesus Christ as our Savior (vv. 9–10, 14; cf. John 3:16). It is God’s love which enables authentic agapē love among Christians. (While it is a worthy sentiment, the Elder does not have in mind generic, human love; he limits his argument to what is or ought to be happening among those who claim to be Christians). The self-sacrificing nature of divine love calls forth among believers the same grateful response of costly love (cf. 3:17–18) in return ...

1 John 4:7-21, 1 John 5:1-12
Understanding Series
Thomas F. Johnson
... God’s once for all, decisive act of love in sending Jesus Christ as our Savior (vv. 9–10, 14; cf. John 3:16). It is God’s love which enables authentic agapē love among Christians. (While it is a worthy sentiment, the Elder does not have in mind generic, human love; he limits his argument to what is or ought to be happening among those who claim to be Christians). The self-sacrificing nature of divine love calls forth among believers the same grateful response of costly love (cf. 3:17–18) in return ...

Understanding Series
Norman Hillyer
... and amend their ways” (Josephus, Ant. 1.73–74). “Noah preached repentance, and those that obeyed were saved” (1 Clement 7.6). And seven others (ogdoon): lit. the eighth, a common Greek idiom for “seven others.” But there are more possibilities Peter may have in mind. He could mean that Noah was the eighth from Adam along the line of faith represented by the genealogy of Seth and Enoch (Jude 14; cf. Heb. 11:5). Or Peter may be alluding to the eschatological symbolism of the number eight. Early ...

Understanding Series
Norman Hillyer
... ), and on this rock (petra) I will build my church” (Matt. 16:18), to be followed (when Peter sought to deflect him from the way of the cross) by the rebuke, “Get behind me, Satan! You are a stumbling block (skandalon) to me; you do not have in mind the things of God, but the things of men” (Matt. 16:23). Destined: The NT nowhere teaches a rigid predestination to eternal perdition. The possibility of salvation which personal repentance turns into reality is open to all in this life; cf. Rom. 11:11, 23 ...

2 Corinthians 3:7-17; 4:1-6
Understanding Series
James M. Scott
... both the Sinaitic covenant and the new covenant produces the same result, that is, judgment and death (cf. Num. 17:13; 1 Cor. 10:9–10). This provides yet another direct comparison between the ministries of Paul and Moses. Furthermore, Paul may have in mind here specifically his opponents in Corinth, who have rejected both his message and his apostleship. 4:4 Paul explains the (Satanic) source of the hard-hearted, veiled state of those who have rejected his apostolic message. The full expression the god of ...

John 1:1-18, Matthew 2:1-12, Luke 2:8-20, Luke 2:1-7, Luke 1:26-38, Genesis 3:1-24
Drama
H. J. Hizer
... One: Well, for instance, when somebody does something good, we could give them some green stamps. Two: Right, Lord -- then they could turn the stamps in for prizes. Five: Aah -- what kind of prizes did you have in mind? Three: Well, we could give them little prizes for a few stamps -- a year of good health for example. Four: Stereos, color T.V., and hi-fis will be big in about two thousand years -- we could pass out a lot of those. Five: Oh? Really? What else? One: Donkeys, ...

2 Corinthians 5:11--6:2
Understanding Series
James M. Scott
... trembling” directed toward God (Phil. 2:12). M. Thrall (Second Corinthians, vol. 1, p. 403) suggests that there is a certain circularity in Paul’s appeal to the Corinthians’ conscience in judging his apostolic integrity, since the apostle must have in mind the standards that have emerged by implication in his own description of apostolic ministry in the preceding chapters. This overlooks, however, that the Corinthians themselves know Paul and have experienced the effects of his ministry in their midst ...

1 Peter 4:1-11
Understanding Series
Norman Hillyer
... the use in 4:6 of euangelizesthai, the more usual NT verb for preaching the gospel, is almost certainly deliberate (it also appears in 1:12, 25, where Peter refers to the first preaching heard by his readers). By those who are now dead Peter appears to have in mind men and women who were once friends and relatives of his present readers, who heard the gospel in their lifetime and responded to it, but who have since died. What is their situation? On the one hand, as is the case with all human beings, they ...

Sermon
Thomas G. Rogers
... Paul, God sends yet another revolutionary letter -- this one is addressed to the Christians at Philippi. The letter says, "The Peace of God, which passes all understanding, will keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus." "Yes," God says, "the kind of peace that I have in mind for you does pass understanding. It passes all understanding." God goes on to say we will have this peace when our hearts and minds are "in Christ Jesus." And what does that mean? Think about it. If our hearts and minds are in Christ ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... , he urges the Philippians to persevere in this situation with him. Here he contrasts “all of us . . . who are mature” with those who “think differently.” The word used for “mature” has the idea of a goal toward which one is striving; those who are mature have in mind the same goal as Paul. Yet Paul does not seem to be particularly concerned about those who might be less mature or think differently, since he is so confident of the truth he has stated that he can invoke the aid of God to illumine ...

Jeremiah 1:1-19
Sermon
Richard L. Sheffield
... know more than how to make a living. We need to know the meaning of our living, if we're to truly live. We need to know what God has in mind for our lives. Not how God is manipulating me to get what he wants; but what does God have in mind for me that will give me what I want, which is to live a life full of joy. The search for meaning is a search for the mind of God. God spoke his mind to Jeremiah: I know you better than you know yourself, and "I appointed you a prophet ...

Sermon
Wallace H. Kirby
... Then he asked, "To how many in this room is God real?" Only one hesitant hand was raised. If we paraphrase this question and make it read, "How many can see God?" we come very close to the thinking of Jesus. When he speaks of seeing God, he does not have in mind either physical or mental sight. What Jesus means when he speaks of seeing God is that we know him as a presence that is real. Just as with the eyes of the body, we can grasp tangible images, so with the eyes of the heart can we grasp the certainty ...

Understanding Series
Donald A. Hagner
... of the sabbath-rest, namely, peace, well-being, and security—that is, a frame of mind that by virtue of its confidence and trust in God possesses these qualities in contradiction to the surrounding circumstances. In short, the author may well have in mind that peace and sense of ultimate security “which transcends all understanding” (Phil. 4:7). This interpretation has the further advantage of making the argument very pertinent to the needs of the readers—a concern never far from our author’s mind ...

1 John 3:11-24
Understanding Series
Thomas F. Johnson
... 11 The word message (angelia) occurs only twice in the NT: here and in 1:5. It may signal a major division within 1 John after which love and faith are primary issues and before which light and truth were the principal concerns. Both sections have in mind the false teachers who have broken away from the fellowship and whose teaching actively threatens the Elder’s loyalists. In 1:1 “the Word of life” was “from the beginning, which we have heard.” In 1:5 “God is light” was “the message we have ...

Understanding Series
F. F. Bruce
... some of a Gnosticizing tendency who reckoned Paul’s understanding of the gospel to be curiously immature and unenlightened. There were others, no doubt, who were not sure where they ought to stand in relation to him. Here, however, Paul seems to have in mind people who preach what he recognizes as the genuine gospel, whatever their motives may be. Why should some preach the gospel out of envy and rivalry? Perhaps they were envious of Paul’s achievement in carrying the message through so many provinces ...

1 Corinthians 3:1-23
Understanding Series
Marion L. Soards
... remain responsible for our works before God (2 Cor 5:11); for the life of believers is service.” 3:16 As Fee (Epistle, p. 147) has pointed out, if Paul is still thinking eschatologically in this verse, as he clearly was in the preceding verses, he may have in mind the realization of God’s promise to dwell among the people at the end of time. 3:17 As is usually the case in this letter, Paul’s focus is on the community. This verse is often contorted and applied merely to matters of personal piety, but ...

Matthew 16:13-20, Matthew 16:21-28, Matthew 17:1-13
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... third day be raised to life. Peter took him aside and began to rebuke him. “Never, Lord!” he said. “This shall never happen to you!” Jesus turned and said to Peter, “Get behind me, Satan! You are a stumbling block to me; you do not have in mind the concerns of God, but merely human concerns.” Then Jesus said to his disciples, “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me. For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their ...

1 Corinthians 12:1-11
Understanding Series
Marion L. Soards
... from God through the speaker to the people. The person who was so gifted was privileged to talk to God in different kinds of tongues. This reference itself generates debate, but from Paul’s comments one can see almost certainly that Paul does not have in mind the speaking of other known, human languages that the speaker had not studied in a normal fashion. In fact, such speech is thought to be unintelligible both to the one speaking and to the majority of those who might hear the speaker. Such Spirit ...

Romans 6:1-14, Psalm 90:1-17
Sermon
Robert Noblett
... Malamud's novel, God's Grace, where God declares: "From the beginning, when I gave them the gift of life, they were perversely greedy for death." This points to death's negative dominion over life. We've seen enough television and watched enough films to have in mind the procedure a doctor follows when he is examining a person to see if physical death has occurred. The doctor feels for the pulse and listens for the heart. It's all rather cut and dried, although with the development of medical technology and ...

1 John 1:5--2:14, 1 John 2:15-17
Understanding Series
Thomas F. Johnson
... s) or commands (cf. John 14:15, 21–25). “Keeping his commands is the sure test that we have come to know God” (Culpepper, 1 John, p. 25). One’s claim must be validated by one’s conduct. The evidence is obedience. What commands does the author have in mind? In the context of 1 John it can only be faith in Jesus and love for other Christians (1 John 3:23). There is no substantial evidence anywhere in the letters of John for any other moral or ethical concern. The opponents are never accused of other ...

1 John 2:15-17, 1 John 1:5--2:14
Understanding Series
Thomas F. Johnson
... s) or commands (cf. John 14:15, 21–25). “Keeping his commands is the sure test that we have come to know God” (Culpepper, 1 John, p. 25). One’s claim must be validated by one’s conduct. The evidence is obedience. What commands does the author have in mind? In the context of 1 John it can only be faith in Jesus and love for other Christians (1 John 3:23). There is no substantial evidence anywhere in the letters of John for any other moral or ethical concern. The opponents are never accused of other ...

Understanding Series
Norman Hillyer
... Sovereign (despotēs) and also (kai) our Lord (kyrios) Jesus Christ.” The word despotēs (absolute owner, one who has complete power over another), when used in the NT of God, always refers to the Father (apart from 2 Pet. 2:1). So Jude appears to have in mind both God the Father and the Son of God: the intruders disown both. Additional Notes 3 The affectionate agapētoi, “beloved ones,” which appears again in vv. 17 and 20, derives from the verb agapan (“to love with God’s love”), used in v. 1 ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... them, 'Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it; and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the air and over every living thing that moves upon the earth.' What shall we make of it? What did God have in mind? What did He mean us persons to be? Are those pretentious and presumptuous questions to ask? Who knows the mind of God? There is the story that the great naturalist, Agassiz, customarily began his lectures with the words, "Gentlemen, we shall seek to think God's ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... them, 'Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it; and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the air and over every living thing that moves upon the earth.' What shall we make of it? What did God have in mind? What did He mean us persons to be? Are those pretentious and presumptuous questions to ask? Who knows the mind of God? There is the story that the great naturalist, Agassiz, customarily began his lectures with the words, "Gentlemen, we shall seek to think God's ...

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