Dictionary: Hope
Showing 2551 to 2575 of 4754 results

John 6:51-58, Revelation 7:9-17
Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... is Jesus! And I'll fall on his neck with joy! Interestingly, Revelation 4:6 describes the area around God's throne as "a sea of glass." Like the lake surface on a perfect summer morning, in God's presence, there is not a ripple of care, pain, doubt, worry, or sin. In short, we shall live in the Lord's presence undisturbed forever. Who Gets In? A final question, the most important question of all, is: "Who is allowed into heaven?" Have you ever read "The Fisherman's Prayer"? It goes like this: I pray that ...

Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... you need to do is approach the next step with study and prayer and reflection. Then when you can honestly and by faith affirm him as the Savior, you can go on to consider him as your personal Savior and then finally, your Lord. This is what Doubting Thomas did. "I won't believe," he said, "unless I see!" And, beginning there, he made his investigation which led to the highest affirmation of Christ ever uttered by human lips in scripture, "My Lord and my God!" (John 20:28). Conclusion He walked here only 33 ...

Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... is full of blank stares, but no one asks any questions for fear of being the only dummy in the class. It's sort of like Abe Lincoln once said, "It's better to keep your mouth shut and be thought a fool, than to open it and remove all doubt." And people play on our pride, don't they? They profit from our unwillingness to show our ignorance, don't they? How many tactful salesmen come into your home and say, "I'm sure you're an intelligent person; you understand how this vacuum cleaner with its new pulsating ...

Sermon
Cathy A. Ammlung
... waters, blinking (and, if we're infants, probably wailing) in the ordinary light of our everyday world, we do so with our Lord's wounded but glorified arms embracing us. We're reborn not to escape from but to return to a world of doubts, disease, divorce, and death. In this life we'll always struggle with unspoken words, unfinished business, unmet milestones, and countless "what ifs." We do so, though, with Jesus' life filling and strengthening us. Like Lazarus, we live with the worst part of death behind ...

Sermon
Fredrick R. Harm
... still lies before us. What will we do with it? Perhaps it's not too late to reflect on two New Year poems that have often challenged the hearts of God's people. O year that is going, take with you Some evil that dwells in my heart. Let selfishness, doubt, With the old year go out, With joy I would see them depart. O year that is going, take with you Impatience and willfulness, pride; The sharp word that slips From these too hasty lips I would cast, with the old year, aside. O year that is coming, bring with ...

Sermon
Fredrick R. Harm
... with a divine identity. In Christ, everybody is somebody. He knows your name! One little fellow aged six, one night said a new prayer he had just learned. "Our Father who art in New Haven, how do you know my name?" Without realizing it, this child asked doubt's most stubborn question. How does our divine Friend know our name? With all of New Haven to look after, that question seems not entirely out of order. Then add to that, the measure of our insignificance is not only New Haven, but also the whole world ...

Sermon
Fredrick R. Harm
... could find no answer except this: "Look at my face and see." How does Christ answer our perplexed questions about ourselves, our companions along the way, and the meaning of this world and the mystery of the world to come? How does he make our doubts depart -- those gloomy thoughts that rise up and haunt us in lonely sorrowful hours, when we wonder if any duty is certain and whether any sacrifice is worthwhile? Our Lord does not respond by giving us definitions or explanations. He simply confronts us with ...

Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... to work with commitment and hope through troubled relationships in companies, marriages, or institutions. The next toy, the next sexual encounter, the next fix, the next drink, the next bonus is what we need, we think. In fact, I believe without a shadow of a doubt that these are all symptoms of a deep, deep suffering of the spirit, which comes from being cut off from our Creator. Our umbilical cord between God and us, through which the true nourishment of meaning and life is intended to flow, has been ...

Romans 4:1-25
Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... booming voice. "I am the Lord. I am here to save you!" The man was beyond relieved. "Oh, thank you. Thank you, Lord! But please hurry. Do something!" The Lord returned, "I will, my son. All you have to do is follow my every direction without doubting or fear." "Fine. Fine," hollered back the man. "Anything! But please hurry! What do you want me to do first?" The booming voice came back, "Let go." The man was silent for a moment. Finally he hollered out, "Is anyone else up there?" This business of "having ...

Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... a long-percolating vision of obedience began to take its final form. Palm Sunday was the day when a string of events began that would change Jesus' life and the life of the world. Palm Sunday was the day when obedience won out over any hesitation or doubt, though there may well have been lingering, human fear of what obedience might bring in pain or suffering. But it would be worth it, to say the least. Jesus was unique in his relationship with God and with his sacrifice for all of humanity. However, Jesus ...

Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... the everlasting arms of God, seen, heard and touched in Jesus, and proclaimed by those first disciples. Those first disciples were hoping and praying that those who have not touched or seen or heard with their own eyes might believe their testimony, even as Jesus told doubting Thomas, "Blessed are those who don't see and yet believe...." Those first disciples are rooting for you and for me today. Do you hear them? Will we respond with faith? Ah, the joy of sharing the truth of God, even across the eons of ...

Ephesians 1:15-23
Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... of God's raising Jesus from the dead following the crucifixion on Good Friday. Following the resurrection there were a number of appearances of the risen Lord to his disciples and to others, the most memorable ones being his appearance to Mary Magdalene near the tomb, to Doubting Thomas, and to the two followers on the way to Emmaus (cf. Luke 24:13ff, John 20:11ff and 26ff, Acts 1:3, 1 Corinthians 15:1-8). Often people saw him but didn't recognize him at first, making it clear that his resurrected body was ...

Sermon
Glenn McDonald
... what Jesus did for all of humanity. He came down and experienced the junk of our lives, the thorns that stab human flesh, and the dark drama of hearing the Father say, "No." Why did he do it? He did it for us -- so that we'd never have to doubt that he is really there and he really intends our good -- even when it hurts.

Sermon
Glenn McDonald
... lived a blameless life as a monk, I felt that I was a sinner with an uneasy conscience before God. I also could not believe that I had pleased him with my works. Far from loving that righteous God who pun-ished sinners, I actually loathed him ... I always doubted and said, "You didn't do that right. You weren't contrite enough. You left that out of your confession." True guilt demands action. Our actions will never be adequate to take guilt away. But God's grace, in the midst of our guilt, is this: God has ...

Ephesians 3:14-21
Sermon
Harold Warlick
... for priests. In the temple's interior was the most holy place, which was shrouded from view and from visitation (except once a year by the high priest) by a thick curtain. When Jesus died, the curtain was torn from top to bottom. There is little doubt that Matthew intended the reader to conclude that this was an act of God. Now, through God's own initiative, the doorway to the fullness of spiritual life is opened to everyone -- male or female, Jew or Gentile, clergy or laity. What Jesus did once in ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... , these “idols” are as miserable a group of people as he has ever met. “Most have troubled or broken marriages. Nearly all are hopelessly dependent on psychotherapy. In a heavy irony, these larger-than-life heroes seem tormented by incurable self-doubt.” He has also spent time with servants. “People like Dr. Paul Brand, who worked for twenty years among the poorest of the poor, leprosy patients in rural India. Or health workers who left high paying jobs to serve with Mendenhall Ministries ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... you own and bring the proceeds here and let’s divvy them up. Some of us who don’t own much would come out all right. Those of you who own a lot would be a little reluctant, I suspect. The early Christians were a radical sect. No doubt about it. They simply didn’t worry about material blessings. They were living so powerfully in the light of two events, the resurrection of Christ and the coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, that all they lived for was the impending return of Christ. Later, when it ...

Sermon
Curtis Lewis
... who snipped away at the emperor moth's cocoon. For the first time since ascending the throne, David is in a position to snip the cocoon from which he had been emerging. David is established in his new house and is secure from his notorious Philistine enemies. No doubt David has become bored and wants to emerge from the cocoon in which God has placed him. In so doing, he focuses on himself and his own insecurities. In this mind set, David decides that he must build God a house. In his own mind he has already ...

Jeremiah 30:1--31:40
Sermon
Richard Gribble
... Father so he could be faithful to God's will, the message he was to proclaim, and the mission and kingdom that he was asked to inaugurate. We know and believe that Jesus was divine, the Son of God, but he was human as well and, thus, most assuredly had doubts and was at times uncertain. But he was obedient to the end to God's plan in his life. Jesus did not take the fancy, exciting, or fun-filled route to the completion of his work. He knew that ultimately there was one and only one way to do what ...

Sermon
Richard Gribble
... and, that day especially, for the Four Horsemen of Notre Dame. Who were the Four Horsemen? Elmer Layden, Harry Stuldreher, Jim Crowley, and Don Miller were the talented offensive backfield for the Notre Dame football team in the late 1920s. There is no doubt that they were great players. Football fans then and now remember their names and their exploits on the gridiron. All four have been enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame. Most people know, however, that there are eleven players on a football ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... , I don't know what I'm going to do." (1) And he probably didn't know what he was going to do. What he did know was this--his world would never again be the same. The Civil Rights movement was a shock to American society, but who can doubt it was led by the Spirit of God? When the Spirit moves, walls come down. So generally when we come to this text, that's the first thing we see is how the Spirit batters down the walls that separate people. But we might also see what this move by ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... , or at Memorial Day parades in the towns of America. But here -- here where we are on this occasion and this place, what's the right word? If we summoned those whom we remember in this service -- if we summoned them to answer the question, there's no doubt in my mind what they would say. The right word for their memorial is the word of their life -- the word they lived and preached: "Jesus Christ, Alive -- Alive forevermore – and hopefully alive in you and me. We can recall some of the words of Jesus in ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... them acceptable in your sight, for you are our strength and our Redeemer. Amen. There’s some people who are special in our life, even though we do not know them personally, even though we’ve never met them. Thomas Murton is such a person for me. I doubt if there’s been a person that I’ve read with greater appreciation and prophet than Tom Murton. He was a Trappist Monk who lived out his life in the monastery of Gethsemane, Kentucky. And I think as much as any other person in this Century, was an ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... you, which was also in Christ Jesus who took the form of a servant. But not many of us want to be servants, do we? Yet, it is clear as we read the New Testament that this was the most distinctive quality of Jesus’ ministry style, and Jesus leaves little doubt that it is the style to which he calls us. Listen to Jesus. “The disciple is not superior to his teacher, nor the slave to his master. Anyone who wants to be great among you, must be your servant. Just as the son of man came not to be served ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... acting. It was this way of thinking that caused Jesus to condemn the Pharisees, admonishing them about straining at a gnat and swallowing a camel. The most common pattern into which we humans tend to move is what I call a negative cycle. I doubt if there’s anything more devastating to daily living, to our effective functioning, to creative and growing relationships, and nothing is more dramatically counter to the Christian spirit and style than to be ensnarled in a negative cycle. On every level of life ...