Dictionary: Face
Synonyms: countenance, physiognomy, profile, features, expression, facial expression, look, appearance, air, manner, bearing, guise, cast, aspect, impression, grimace, scowl, wry face, wince, frown, glower, smirk, pout, moue, side, flank, vertical, surface, plane, facet, wall, elevation, dial, display, (outward) appearance, nature, image, front, show, act, false front, facade, exterior, mask, masquerade, pretence, charade, pose, illusion, smokescreen, veneer, camouflage, respect, honour, esteem, regard, admiration, approbation, acclaim, approval, favour, appreciation, popularity, estimation, veneration, awe, reverence, deference, recognition, prestige, standing, status, dignity, glory, kudos, cachet, effrontery, audacity, nerve, gall, brazenness, brashness, shamelessness, look out on, front on to, look towards, be facing, have/afford/command a view of, look over/across, open out over, look on to, overlook, give on to, give over, be opposite (to), accept, come to accept, become reconciled to, reconcile oneself to, reach an acceptance (of), get used to, become accustomed to, adjust to, accommodate oneself to, acclimatize oneself to, be confronted by, be faced with, encounter, experience, come into contact with, run into, come across, meet, come up against, be forced to contend with, beset, worry, distress, cause trouble to, trouble, bother, confront, burden, brave, face up to, meet head-on, dare, defy, oppose, resist, withstand, cover, clad, skin, overlay, dress, pave, put a facing on, laminate, inlay, plate, coat, line
Showing 2501 to 2525 of 4533 results

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... .2 Why, then, do you keep on clinging to the bad memories of the past, to the regrets, to the suspicions, to the bad habits? God has forgotten them; you can too! Are you concerned about what other people or what society says about you, what your image in the community is? That does not matter either. God does not count such views. He has forgotten them along with the sins you have committed. What a freeing Word! All the behaviors and memories or the slanderous impressions others have of you, that have held ...

Haggai 2:1-9
Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... our nation’s plight.) Once again Martin Luther offers some helpful insights. In a 1520 treatise when he talked about Christians as both lords of all and servants to all, he put it this way: The inner man [the Christian], who by faith is created in the image of God is both joyful and happy because of Christ in whom so many benefits are conferred upon him; and therefore it is his one occupation to serve God joyfully and without thought of gain, in love that is not constrained.6 The love that Christians show ...

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
Freedom is such a lovely word, a compelling image. What is freedom? How would you define it? What does it mean to you? Webster’s New World Dictionary defines freedom as being exempt from control or from arbitrary restrictions. Freedom is said to be the ability to choose or determine one’s own actions. That was the sort of ...

Sermon
John W. Wurster
... surgeon’s knife. We want God to play on our terms and that usually means out of sight, out of mind. We want God to do what we want, when we want it. But the locked up god, the god at our beck and call, the god formed in our image does not exist. Ours is a time and a place very different from ancient Israel, eighth century B.C. We are a people very different from those people. Yet we are the same in that God would be entirely justified in giving up on us, faithless as we are, disloyal ...

Sermon
John W. Wurster
... continuity between what happens inside and outside the sanctuary. A God who hates sin, but won’t stop loving sinners. Do you know a God like that? A mysterious God, above our manipulations and outside our control, a God who will not be cast in our image. Above us, before us, beyond us. Around and behind and within us. Far, yet near. Close, yet distant. Do you know a God like that? Not a weak god. Not disinterested, nor distracted. Demanding, but not coercive. Patient, but not forgetful. A down-to-earth ...

Sermon
Carlyle Fielding Stewart
... and despair. Many of the Hebrews left Egypt with Moses because they no longer wanted to live as victims but wanted to claim sweet victory over their victimizers by denouncing oppression and permanently leaving Pharaoh’s house. Some of the Hebrews carried the oppressors’ image of them in their minds when some of them, after being sent to scout out the new land, exclaimed that it was impossible to conquer because they looked like grasshoppers in the eyes of their enemies. The mind and heart of the victim ...

Sermon
Carlyle Fielding Stewart
... eyes? Why should I allow my eyes to show fear and trembling and sickness unto death? Why should I allow the ridicule, disdain, and arrogance of my enemies to cause me to look away from thee? I am your son. Your face is my face. I am made in your image. I will not hide my face. Cowards hide their faces. The devil hides his face. Those who are less than honorable and righteous hide their faces to do evil. But I will not hide my face. It is the face of love, truth, and righteousness in the face of hatred ...

Jeremiah 33:1-26
Sermon
Harry N. Huxhold
... how it could be again. The prophets, like Jeremiah, were not afraid to deliver this word within the courts of the kings. Now Jeremiah said that God would restore the fortunes of God’s people by sending One who would be a Second David, One who would resurrect the image of the king as God wanted the kings to be. In making that promise God demonstrated how God runs all of the past through a sieve to make it work for the benefits of the future. God had a painful memory of how poorly the kings had performed ...

Drama
Dave Marsh
... time? I think you round up only in school. This is a church. In church, you round down, like you are kneeling or something. Okay, round down. That brings it to $60. Dave: $60? Hmmm, it’s got a 6 in it. God doesn’t like 6’s. Could you imaging if I had to tithe $6.66? No way! Gotta get rid of that 6. Gotta cut that 6 off! So let’s cut it in half! Let’s see, that would be $30. Thirty sounds okay I guess. Except it rhymes with dirty. I mean, it would be like ...

Drama
Dave Marsh
... Get it? It’s a play on "Got Milk?" Isabelle: Dave, I don’t think… Dave: And look at this! It’s my new website! People are going to be falling all over themselves to get into the church when they see this. See that? It’s an animated image of our church. Isabelle: What are those? Dave: Those are angels. Isabelle: Are those bow ties? Dave: Yeah, classy huh? What do you think about the snow I’ve got coming down? Isabelle: Are those happy faces? Dave: See, now you’re getting it. Now, the next thing ...

Luke 23:26-43, Mark 15:33-41, Luke 23:44-49
Sermon
James W. Moore
... . It is the measuring stick by which we gauge our forgiveness of others. Listen! If you ever wonder, “Should I forgive that person who has wronged me or hurt me? If that question, “Should I forgive? Ever comes into your mind… just remember the image of Jesus hanging there… nailed to a cross totally innocent… and saying, “Father, forgive them.” Joe Smith was his name. He was a 16-year-old high school freshman. He was a remarkable person – kind and compassionate and committed to Christ. His ...

2512. Setting the Prisoners Free
Luke 4:14-30
Illustration
Brett Blair
No greater image of oppression and captivity exist today than that of World War II's Nazi concentration camps. Elie Wiesel, a teenager then, witnessed the death of many family members. He recalls the day when he, as well as the other prisoners, were finally liberated from Auschwitz by the allies. On that ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... the world of the poor and the world of the affluent. It seems that our very culture here in the United States, and any other place that has a great deal of commercialization to it, is teaching us to live rich. We are occasionally presented with the images of the poor but we never are tempted to assume that life style. It is shocking to read Luke’s Beatitudes as an admonition to live unencumbered by worldly wealth. But as soon as we are reminded that Jesus calls us to sacrificial living we are immediately ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... a donkey to the shouts of Hosanna, fulfilling an old prophecy in Zechariah 9:9. 2. On Monday he walked into the Jerusalem Temple overturning tables where money exchange occurred, Roman drachmas were being exchanged for Jewish shekels. Roman coins were not allowed. The image of Caesar was a violation of the second commandment. But the Temple authorities were using the Commandment as means to cheat the people and making the Temple a place of profit rather than a place of prayer. 3. On Tuesday Jesus taught in ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... nothing of flying, we would hardly suspect that this pile of rubbish had once soared above the earth. The material would be the same; the capability of flight, however, would be lost. What we have lost is our understanding of what mankind once was: obedient, righteous, the image of God, and a reflection of the divine. This is what Jesus reminds Satan. Bread is not how mankind lives, not solely, and not primarily. He lives in obedience to the word of God. If we come to God we come because we belong with him ...

Sermon
James W. Moore
... nothing. It’s over! We’d just as well face it. What is this Holy Spirit business anyway? Maybe we misunderstood Him. Just then they heard a sound. The breath of God began to blow on that place like the rush of a mighty wind. Images of fire danced around them. Suddenly, their fear was gone, replaced by peace and confidence, courage and strength and unity and they began to speak and communicate the word of God boldly and amazingly people from all different backgrounds heard and responded and 3,000 people ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... freedom of speech or of the press. We are serious about freedom. Why? Because we are called to be free. Those are Paul's words and they are deeply theological but they are the bedrock on which our country is founded. God gives humans freedom. We are made in his image free to live and think and act and in Christ he gives us freedom from the Law, the grace to be at liberty from our sins. Now let us be sober for a minute. There always has been and always will be those who are opposed to freedom. Paul faced ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... of our sins, blood crushed from his body running down the cross to the world below. Luke describes the pressure Jesus suffered that evening: “Being in anguish his sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground.” It is an image of the gathsemane crushing the oil from the olive fruit. Gethsemane ever since has come to symbolize suffering. And my friends the world is crowded with gethsemanes, Herods slaughtering the innocent. Look around the United States: Oklahoma City, Heath High School, Columbine ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... and the world of the affluent. It seems that our very culture here in the United States, and any other place that has a great deal of commercialization to it, is teaching us to live as the Rich Man in the story of Lazarus. We are occasionally presented with the images of the poor man Lazarus at our gate but we are immediately reminded of the next car we ought to by and the next meal we should eat. We are slowly and methodically told it is O.K. to live our life of luxury while others live their life of ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... white marble block called religion. We must then take the mallet in hand and set to work. Religion is not our goal but we must first start there. Now there are many names for religion. At times we do call it religion but we often use other words and images to describe it. Sometimes we call it our faith. Jesus spoke in terms of the Kingdom of God. We say we are the Church, Christians, or Disciples. There are many names with varying nuances of meaning but in the end they all describe the same thing. We are a ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... crops needed help or the enemy was about to storm the gates, the youngsters saw Daddy go in and talk to that statue. Hmm! To the immature young mind, there would be no distinction between the idol and the god it was supposed to represent - the image would BECOME God. "NO idols." People become confused and are misled into trusting things that are not worthy of trust. Ultimately, that is unjust. Commandment #3: ""You shall not misuse the name of the Lord your God." Or in the language of the King James Version ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... through them to God's people down through the ages. "They are not a recipe for gaining God's favor, Israel already has God's favor...They are a description of what it will be like to live as God's own people."(4) No other gods; no images; do not use the Lord's name foolishly; keep the sabbath; honor your father and mother; do not kill; do not steal; do not commit adultery; do not bear false witness; and do not covet. Ten commandments to define both vertical and horizontal relationships: that between God and ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... is to recognize that you have it. They agree that their mouths have gotten them into this trouble. "Now Moses, please, please, please pray to the LORD to take away the serpents from us." So he does. Moses intercedes in prayer, gets this strange instruction about making a bronze image of a serpent and hanging it on a pole in the center of the camp. Then he is to inform the people that anyone who is bitten will survive if he or she will just cast their eyes toward the snake. Strange. Why not just get rid of ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... have an influence on the outcome? Why not? Did Jesus in our lesson not say, "I will do whatever you ask in my name?" Are there not players praying in those locker rooms at this very moment? What do you think? My mind is suddenly filled with images of Sunday afternoon heroes, kneeling in the end zone in a brief prayer after scoring a touchdown, or groups of players dropped to their knees, heads bowed, in the middle of the field at the conclusion of a game. I hear post-game interviews with sweaty stars ...

Deuteronomy 31:30--32:47
Sermon
David E. Leininger
... influence that has come from our past. We look back to Godly mothers and fathers, to a sensitive Sunday School teacher or an understanding pastor who took us under their wing. Because of them, we learned that we are not here by accident - we were created in the image of God and have work to do, to "have dominion over," to manage God's creation. By the grace of God, our mentors continued to teach us, and we were led to a new life in Jesus Christ. Our past has very much determined our present. That is ...

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