Dictionary: Hope
Showing 251 to 275 of 452 results

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... design for ourselves, given another chance, forgiven, we’ve been saved for eternal life. No wonder that prolific hymn writer, Charles Wesley, the day after his conversion, began to write the hymn: “How shall my wandering soul begin How shall I all to heaven aspire A soul redeemed from death and sin A brand plucked from eternal fire How shall I equal triumphs raise Or sing my great Redeemer’s praise?” Why is God to be praised - because of His mighty deeds, His surpassing greatness - because of His ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... most of us concentrate on all the excuses that Moses made and really do not get down to the heart of the matter. So, the first truth is this: In the Christian life, in our response to and relationship with God, most of us do not arrogantly aspire for too much, we sheepishly settle for too little. So, we are onlookers to God’s activity in history — spectators and recipients — but not actors and participants. Have we forgotten the word of Jesus one of the most amazing words in the Bible. Listen to Jesus ...

Sermon
J. Howard Olds
... have it all worked out, if you never miss the mark, if you do it all right all the time, then, go on home, you do not need to hear the rest of the sermon. But, if you are like the rest of us, if your desires, dreams, hopes, and aspirations are far off the mark of your high calling, then, you belong in this community of the wounded and repenting. Will Willimon tells about visiting with a professor at Duke Medical School who said, “I give thanks to God everyday that I am a Lutheran, not just any Lutheran ...

Sermon
J. Howard Olds
... ONE ANOTHER The love of which I speak is neither the erotic passion of sex nor the sentimental ties of family. Christian love is the determination to do good, and not good only, but the highest good possible. Christians coined a word for it. They called it agape. We can aspire to that kind of love because we have been loved in that sort of way. I’m not asking you to write a check on an account over drawn. I am asking you to drink at the fountain of God’s grace until you have love like an ocean in ...

Sermon
J. Howard Olds
... the disciples. We have heard it all before. We have practiced it, we have read it and yet do we really get it? Life is not about you, or your wants, your wishes, your desires, your needs. Life is not about me or my plans, my goals, my aspirations, my dreams; Life is about serving God by serving others. Paul calls himself a love slave of Jesus Christ, a slave being set free who chose to freely devote himself to his master in total allegiance. Former Astronaut Colonel John B. Irwin was part of the crew that ...

Sermon
J. Howard Olds
... 't want the church to get into their pocketbook. The church can become obsessed with money instead of ministry. The day I offered one of my rabbits to the Lord was one of the happiest days of my life. For a while at least, the early Church was what we aspire to be, a resurrection- powered community of faith, committed to meeting the needs of people. On the firm foundation of Jesus Christ, may we continue to make disciples.

Sermon
J. Howard Olds
... and the finesse with which you play them. It is incredibly freeing to know that you do not need to be pleased in order to be happy says Buddhism. D. ENLIGHTENMENT COMES FROM FOLLOWING THE EIGHT-FOLD PATH 1. Right Understanding 2. Right Aspiration 3. Right Action 4. Right Speech 5. Right Livelihood 6. Right Effort 7. Right Concentration 8. Right Mindfulness St. Paul says in Philippians 4:8, “Whatever is true, noble, right, pure, lovely, admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think on these ...

Sermon
J. Howard Olds
... guru replies, “As you like it." Frustrated now by evasive answers I say, “You can't have you cake and eat it too. Just give me the facts, yes or no." The guru with increasing kindness replies, “God has made different religions to suit different aspirations, times, and countries. All religions are simply different paths to God. So it doesn't matter which way you eat your cake – icing first, straight, sideways–it's still cake. Truth is one, but the wise call it by many names." “So you do believe ...

Sermon
J. Howard Olds
... Gnostic theories, on which the novel is based, were debated and declared heresy in the First Century. Both NBC and CBS have concluded that the secret society that is supposed to be guarding the truth is a hoax established by a Frenchman with political aspiration. The Da Vinci Code will pass away, along with its deceitful assumptions, but the Word of God will stand the test of time. Read novels for entertainment. Read the Bible for instruction in the way of life. - The Bible contains all things necessary for ...

John 15:9-17
Sermon
J. Howard Olds
... natural responses. What we really desire is to make it in life, to get ahead, to be first, to be different. We want to forge our identities by carving out for ourselves niches in life where we can maintain a safe distance from others. We do not aspire to suffer with others. We desire to stay away from the pain. So, we might rightfully ask, “In what condition our compassion might be?" Are we willing to sacrifice, suffer with, enter the pain, and endure the anxiety that is all around us? If every soldier ...

Acts 9:1-5, 10-12, 17-19
Sermon
J. Howard Olds
... that song. Just how much of all am I willing to surrender? What about my assets—are they on the altar? What about my vocation? Is it up for change? What about my place of residence? Is it negotiable? What about my life, my dreams, my hopes, my aspirations? What part of all don't we understand? Or is it our fear of all that keeps us from surrendering? Bob Allred is the pastor of First United Methodist Church in downtown Atlanta. In a sermon on this text he talks about his conversion on a Sunday afternoon ...

Philippians 4:4-8
Sermon
J. Howard Olds
... things: the true, the honorable, the just, the pure, the pleasing, the commendable. This is not a list reserved for the saints. This is a pagan list of desirable virtues. He took it from the Roman world in which the Philippians lived. Even unbelievers aspire to the finer thoughts of life. Whatever is just, right and pleasing, set your mind of things like that. Great British preacher, John Henry Jowett, said, “Gratitude is a vaccine, an antitoxin and an antiseptic. It is a vaccine to prevent the invasion ...

Hebrews 11:1-40
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... “everything’s jake” to the “cat’s pajamas” to “bees knees” to “groovy,” “fat,” “sweet” and now “ridiculous.” But even though a flash-in-the-pan pop song proclaimed “It’s Hip to Be Square,” no one has ever really aspired to being rectangular with equal sides until Nickelodeon made it “ridiculous” (now synonymous with “cool”). SpongBob SquarePants was such a dorky, goofy, lovable guy, he truly made it “hip to be square” for the first time in a very long time ...

Ephesians 5:8-14
Sermon
David O. Bales
... and now — here in worship, now in Lent — can we be honest and ask how much are we pleasing God? How much are we trying to just please ourselves? Let God enlighten your thinking. Allow the Holy Spirit to expose your sins against God and your aspirations for God. God can use them both, and our admitting both is a healing and healthy practice. "Sleeper, awake. Rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you." The Holy Spirit polishes your life to reflect Jesus' light. Wherever you are and whatever you are ...

Sermon
Larry Lange
... you pack your rapture bags (no liquids or gels, please), there's some bad news. Or good news, depending on your point of view. Melody grew a white tail. According to some rabbinical authorities, even two white hairs are enough to disqualify any heifer aspiring to be the heifer that will change the world. Lucky for Melody. She was only going to get burned anyway. Now she and an unnamed bull are cavorting in a high security pasture in an undisclosed location attempting to get the apocalyptic ball rolling ...

266. When Bullies Take Hold
Luke 19:45-48; Mark 11:15-19
Illustration
Brian Stoffregen
... it means the change would give the church a chance to thrive again. Later on he makes this statement with boldface: I'm convinced that one of the main sins of the Church is that we have taught ourselves to be nice instead of Christian. In spite of aspiring to be Jesus' disciples, we teach that the essence of Christianity is to be nice. Near the end he states: One of the basic lessons I'm learning as a consultant: Before renewal begins in a church or denomination, normally someone has to leave or be denied ...

267. Love the Questions
Luke 20:27-40
Illustration
Brett Blair
Rainer Maria Rilke's was a famous German poet and correspondent with an aspiring American poet. The letters were published in a book titled, "Letters to a Young Poet?" In the letter the "young poet" has many questions about their art form. Rilke doesn't mind. In fact she relishes the questions and says to the young poet: "Love the questions themselves as if ...

268. Don't Ever Say That Again
John 1:29-34
Illustration
Keith Wagner
... , we still have to apply ourselves. Les Brown had to work hard to finish high school. But, he was now motivated to learn. Our children need to hear from us that we believe in them. Our students, who could be our friends, relatives, or co-workers will be motivated to aspire to greater things when we believe in them.

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... a Center on Wealth and Philanthropy. For the past couple of years they have been surveying 165 households with an average net worth of $78 million. These multi-millionaires were asked such questions as “How would you describe the ultimate goal or deepest aspiration for your life?” They have recently published the results of their study, and Graeme Wood in The Atlantic (April 2011) summarized the summary. Are you ready? “If anything the rich stare into the abyss a bit more starkly than the rest of us ...

John 12:20-33
Sermon
David E. Leininger
... hope, there is life."[2] If we read the newspaper or watch the evening news, we might feel we are living in a world devoid of hope. War, famine, natural disasters, one right after another. Add to that the countless homes where dreams are crushed down and aspirations are snuffed out each day. We wonder how anyone survives in this life. We survive by the measure of our hope. The hope of your heart and my heart is Jesus. 1. Bill Adams, Trinity Episcopal Church, Sutter Creek, California, via Ecunet, 12/29/96. 2 ...

2 Kings 2:1-12
Sermon
David E. Leininger
... just the very rich and very poor while leaving the vast middle at risk? Changes in the tax structure that more fairly reflect an individual's and an industry's ability to pay? Immigration reform that neither rewards bad behavior nor penalizes someone's legitimate aspirations for a better life? More attention paid to issues of poverty, not just the millions of our own people considered by the government as living below the poverty line, but the one billion people in the world who eke by on less than $1 per ...

Sermon
Robert J. Elder
... us to do. This story is not about Mary, it is not about angels; it is about God and the purposes of God. The reason we remember it better than the mundane stories of our own or others' lives is the spectacular response of Mary. I once heard an aspiring young Bible student ask, "I wonder how many other stops Gabriel made that day before he found a young girl who would say, ‘Yes.' " We'll never know if there is an answer to that question, because the Bible is only interested in the question asked of Mary ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... be observed, weighed, measured, calculated, dissected, and repeated. A scientist must stand apart from that which is being studied, always keeping it in an “objective” relationship. Allowing subjective feeling into the scientific process — emotions, hopes, aspirations, expectations — “taints” the results and the researcher. We like to pride ourselves on being “objective.” The era when the scientific method took root and took off is called “The Enlightenment.” Dissecting the world into ...

274. The Pitfalls of Success
Illustration
Donald McCullough
... international law, said at the last, "I have accomplished nothing worthwhile in my life." John Quincy Adams, sixth President of the U.S., not a Lincoln, perhaps, but a decent leader wrote in his diary: "My life has been spent in vain and idle aspirations, and in ceaseless rejected prayers that something would be the result of my existence beneficial to my species." Robert Louis Stevenson wrote words that continue to delight and enrich our lives, and yet what did he write for his epitaph? "Here lies one who ...

275. Twain's Christmas Wish
Illustration
Staff
Mark Twain was once asked to record a Christmas message on an early gramophone. This is what he said, "It is my heart-warm and world-embracing Christmas hope and aspiration that all of us, the high, the low, the rich, the poor, and admired, the despised, the loved, the hated, the civilized, the savage every man and woman of us all throughout the whole earth may eventually be gathered in a heaven of everlasting rest and peace and bliss, except the inventor of the telephone."

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