Dictionary: Trust
Showing 2651 to 2675 of 3488 results

Sermon
James Merritt
A couple in Sweetwater Texas had a lot of potted plants, and while watching TV the weatherman predicted a cold front coming through. The husband suggests that they bring in the potted plants. The wife goes outside to bring them indoors to protect them from freezing. It turned out that a little garden grass snake was hidden in one of the plants and after it got warm, it crawled out on the floor. The wife saw it just as it went under the couch and she begins screaming hysterically. Her husband who had ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... a “get out of jail free” card when it comes to the prison of guilt and it is called “confession.” What we confess completely, God forgives totally. On March 5, 2010, a lawyer named Mario Gonzalez lodged a complaint with the Spanish Data Protection Agenda against a newspaper and against Google. Three years earlier, Gonzalez’s house had been auctioned off to pay his social security debts and a newspaper ran an article about it. The newspaper found out about it, because when you Googled his name this ...

Sermon
... what the kingdom is all about. Sometimes we can ignore people’s’ needs, but not Jesus. He was moved with compassion by the people’s needs and he sought to help them. He viewed them as sheep without a shepherd, lost and helpless, without guidance, nourishment, or protection. Jesus not only had compassion on the crowd; he was also moved to help them. Many people look on others in need with compassion; only a few are moved to help them in their need. “What a pity,” we say when we see a person on the ...

Sermon
... good health and longevity, his high value and regard for his physical well-being through the years were also major factors in his celebration of healthy and vital living. That is Ken’s heritage. Ken inherited his dad’s value system and thus is protective of his own physical health. He says that no dessert, no serving of macaroni and cheese (no matter how good), and no other fattening food or drink, for him, outweighs being fit and healthy. Cigarettes, recreational drugs and excessive alcohol are out of ...

Eulogy
Thomas Gray
... incense kindled at the Muse’s flame. Far from the madding crowd’s ignoble strife, Their sober wishes never learned to stray; Along the cool sequestered vale of life They kept the noiseless tenor of their way. Yet even these bones from insult to protect, Some frail memorial still erected nigh, With uncouth rhymes and shapeless sculpture decked, Implores the passing tribute of a sigh. Their name, their years, spelt by the unlettered muse, The place of fame and elegy supply: And many a holy text around she ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... . If her father had given his friends food, they would have been too ashamed to accept it. But under the guise of his “drunken” parties, he was able to help his friends and keep them from “losing face.” He had made himself look foolish in order to protect his friends’ pride. In her father’s sacrifice, Yasuko began to understand the love of a God who gave up His own power and died to save us from our sins. If her father had acted normally, many of his friends would have gone hungry. (3) Let me ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... the people were so excited about having him visit their city. But regardless, as Jesus was leaving the city he encountered some desperate people with nowhere else to turn. Let me describe the situation to you. Ancient cities were surrounded by a wall to protect them from attack. At nightfall the gates in the wall would be closed for security. During the day, you could always find beggars just outside these gates. They were the forgotten people, cut off from their family and friends. Their only hope was that ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... of wars and rumors of wars, do not be alarmed. Such things must happen, but the end is still to come . . .” There have always been natural disasters and there will always be such disasters. Fortunately, particularly in this country, we are better protected against such disasters than any generation that’s ever lived. We have never experienced disasters in the scope of those experienced by other nations and other generations. For example, on July 5, 1201 in Egypt and Syria, the deadliest earthquake in ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... his faith gave him. Natives in the area found Hargesheimer after a month. They showed him a note written by an Australian soldier that said that they could be trusted because they had saved other pilots. They were Christians, and at great risk they protected the American pilot from capture by the enemy. Eventually, Hargy made his way off the island by submarine. Years later, while corresponding with a missionary, he discovered his native rescuers needed a school. All on his own, Hargy raised $15,000 for a ...

Sermon
R. Robert Cueni
... too limited. You work with the definitions of this present age wherein marriage is the primary vehicle for eternity. In this understanding a man has the right to take a woman in marriage. In exchange for this taking, the man offers the woman protection and support and the woman is expected to provide children, particularly sons to inherit the family wealth and carry the family name. In this understanding, eternity is to live on in one's children and grandchildren. That is the understanding of this present ...

Sermon
Wayne Brouwer
... tears. Advent brings us to a place like that. It takes us, at the end of our journey, to the "sanctuary" of God for a time of praise. "Sanctuary" is refuge, fortress, safe house, security, arms of love, a place where someone cares enough to swallow our tears and protect us from the worst that could harm us. Madeleine L'Engle paints a picture of such a sanctuary in one of her children's books. She tells of a young couple on a desert journey through wilderness in a rough caravan. They're on their way to Egypt ...

Sermon
Maurice A. Fetty
... by guns? Many of the gun-toting youngsters interviewed came from families that were messed up in some way or other. Many seem to shoot and kill with no remorse or guilt. A terrible amorality seems to prevail. The gun seems to represent protection and macho power. It also, says the Time reporter, represents a "defense against the inexplicable despair that torments so many American teenagers. Today's miscreants know that a pistol says much more than long hair or a pierced nose ever could. Not just louder ...

Luke 2:1-14 (15-20)
Sermon
Wayne Brouwer
... the Bible. The very term "gospel" means "good news." In a world that is plagued with bad news, Jesus' coming and presence reminds us that God wants to love us, care about us, and help us understand the ethics and morality of the kingdom of God that protects and affirms us. That's why the preaching of the church is always about Jesus. And it begins with the gospels. Luke starts his gospel with a quick personal note to Theophilus, who is a friend and recent convert to Christianity. Theophilus may have been a ...

Sermon
Maurice A. Fetty
... and said, "But I didn't want to cross the street!" The Good Samaritan gave the help that was needed. Note further his help was immediate, personal, and direct. He did not leave the victim in the ditch and resolve to lobby for better police protection along the road or determine to urge the road commission to improve the road to discourage bandits. He did not hurry on to form a committee for the improvement of Jericho Road while the victim expired from exposure. Instead, he gave the victim what he ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... his skill and expertise. As a consultant to the FBI and thousands of corporations around the world, he is now known as one of the world’s leading experts on fraud. (3) He is also a polished public speaker addressing corporations about how to protect themselves from people like him. True story. Frank Abagnale, like Alan Simpson, is a man who could testify, “Thank God for second chances.” Here’s something we should note. A second chance implies that something we’ve done is wrong. We need to consider ...

2666. Trust The Equipment
Illustration
Michael P. Green
... experiences to convince the beginner that it is better to depend on the belt. In the Christian life, God wants us to climb by depending on him. When we are hurt by splinters, we should recognize that they are reminders that we need to depend on his strength and loving protection.

2667. Why Was It Built?
Illustration
Michael P. Green
Traditions are often an attempt to either protect us from something that can harm us or keep us in the place where we are most likely to do well. Not all traditions are so characterized, and some are nothing more than outmoded responses to situations that no longer exist. Nevertheless, this old saying remains true: “Never tear down a fence until you find out why it was built.”

2668. The Tree's Trials
Illustration
Michael P. Green
... down a mountain stream. When asked why he did this, the logger replied, “These may all look alike to you, but I can recognize that a few of them are quite different. The ones I let pass are from trees that grew in a valley where they were always protected from the storms. Their grain is rather coarse. The ones I have hooked and kept apart came from high on the mountains. From the time they were small they were beaten by strong winds. This toughens the trees and gives them a fine grain. We save them for ...

2 Chron 22:10–23:21
Understanding Series
Louis C. Jonker
... at the hands of Athaliah, who, following Jehu’s purge, is the last ruler of the house of Ahab. . . . She [Jehosheba] is also the wife of Jehoiada the priest. Thus, she has commitments to both dynasty and temple, and she uses the latter to protect the former, embodied in the baby Joash.” 23:1–7 In the seventh year of Athaliah’s substitution the priest Jehoiada took the initiative to plan for Joash’s enthronement. The expression Jehoiada showed his strength is formed in Hebrew with the familiar verb ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... 13:5, 13; 15:36–40. At a later date he was associated also with Peter (see disc. on 3:7f.; 10:14, 34–43; 12:1–5). 12:15 It must be his angel: The notion of a guardian angel capable of assuming the bodily appearance of the person protected is found in the Scriptures. We see it at both the corporate and the individual level: the angels of the churches (Rev. 2 and 3) and the angels of “these little ones” (Matt. 18:10). Compare also Gen. 48:16; Dan. 3:28; 6:22; Tobit 5:4; Heb. 1 ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... were still far from suppressing the wild clans of Pisidian robbers who made these mountains their home. Antioch lay on the lower slopes of the mountain now known as Sultan Dagh and on the banks of the river Anthius—a commanding position well protected by natural defenses, as it needed to be, for in earlier days this had been the borderland of Pisidia and Phrygia, with Antioch a Phrygian city (Strabo, Geography 12.557). Later, when these had no political significance, the Roman province of Galatia now ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... guess at some of the locations in this story and must assume certain lapses of time. Perhaps, then, Paul and Barnabas had returned to their lodging when news reached them that the priest of Zeus, whose temple was just outside the city as the protecting deity (v. 13), was about to offer bulls to them in sacrifice (cf. Ovid, Metamorphoses 4.755; Persius, Satires 2.44). The wreaths were those used to garland the victims and perhaps also to adorn the priest, the altar, and the attendants (cf. Virgil, Aeneid ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... , but by the beginning of the second century A.D., and almost certainly earlier, the possibility existed of sending the accused for trial in his own province. “The point,” then, “of the question put to Paul, in mid-first century, was not to protect the rights of the accused …, but to enable the procurator … to avoid a tiresome affair altogether, if he felt inclined, either by expelling an accused person from a province to which he did not belong, or by a refusal of jurisdiction” (Sherwin-White ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... , Paul had not fallen in with the suggestion, but had appealed, asking to be held over for the Emperor’s decision (v. 21). This wording throws a new light on the affair. Not only was Paul looking for Roman justice, he was appealing for Roman protection. 25:22 Now that Paul had appealed, it had become incumbent on the governor that he should “investigate the matter” to get what information he could for the dossier that would accompany the prisoner (v. 20; cf. v. 26). Agrippa’s visit was therefore a ...

Acts 25:23--26:32
Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... reference is to visions (cf. esp. 22:17–21; but also 18:9f.; 23:11). 26:17–18 These verses detail Paul’s calling and at the same time provide an outline of his life from his conversion to the establishing of churches among the Gentiles. He was promised protection from your own people and from the Gentiles (v. 17), but only in the sense that he would be enabled to fulfill his calling, not that he would be spared any suffering in the process (cf. 2 Tim. 2:9). He was given a commission to open the people ...