Dictionary: Trust
Showing 251 to 275 of 4364 results

Sermon
King Duncan
... with a group of inner-city pastors from Chicago. As many of you know, Joni was left paralyzed many years ago from a diving accident. As she talked about disability ministry with these inner-city pastors, she couldn't help wondering, "Now am I supposed to say African-American?' Or would they prefer black?' Hmmm . . .it's OK," she thought, "to say people of color.' " Joni thought about her husband, Ken, who is of Japanese descent. His mother prefers the word "oriental" while he prefers "Asian," but his dad ...

John 20:24-31
Sermon
King Duncan
... that's just a chemical reaction of the brain, it's a defense mechanism, that was just a dream, no matter how realistic." It makes no difference that they have no more proof than you, they will try to convince you that what you experienced was not real. Or suppose you have made a miraculous recovery from cancer. The doctors had sewn you up and sent you home and said there's nothing more we can do for you. Six weeks - maybe six months at the outside, but don't make any long-term plans. But your friends began ...

Children's Sermon
King Duncan
... were asked by their father to do some chores. One of them said, "Sure," but he never got around to doing them. The other put up a big fuss, but later he realized that he really ought to help around the house and went ahead and did what he was supposed to do. Which one of them did what his father wanted? That's right, the one who fussed, but still did his chores. Doing our chores around home is one way we show our parents that we love them and appreciate what they do for us. Of course, if we ...

Ephesians 1:1-14
Children's Sermon
King Duncan
... a member of your family--your grandparents or an aunt and uncle--lived hundreds of miles away. Suppose it was not possible for your family to visit them or for them to visit you. And suppose they had never seen you. Your parents are very proud of you. Now imagine that they want to tell your family members all about you. How could they do it? They could send a letter like this one, couldn't they? They could describe the color of your hair and ...

Children's Sermon
King Duncan
... we heard that someone in our neighborhood was quite ill"”and we offered to rake their lawn for no pay. That would be nice, wouldn't it? Or suppose we ran errands for an elderly person? Or went out of our way to be kind to disabled person, etc?) But suppose after doing this good thing, we were punished for it? That wouldn't be fair, would it? In today's scripture the Apostle Paul is in jail because he told other people about Jesus. He had been doing something very good, and he was being punished for ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... . Just ask Arthur Andersen or officials of Enron about the consequences of ignoring these laws. But the importance of ethics in business is much more critical than mere fraud. Suppose no one anywhere felt any compulsion to be honest? Suppose you could not buy a carton of milk without the fear that someone had placed some dangerous chemicals in it. Suppose the builders of bridges decided to substitute rubber for steel in the building of bridges. What if you could not trust anybody any of the time? That's ...

Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... was sent in love becomes a condemnation. It is not God who condemns...God only loves...we condemn ourselves.” From time to time people in our churches become upset when church groups or pastors speak out against the sins of society: greed, racism, poverty, or war. I suppose that our proper response to them ought to be, “Can you tell me just where in the Gospels we are told that what we do is out of harmony with what our Lord told us to do?” Those persons who react in hostility toward Christ or toward ...

Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... whole sect (the “Zealots”) who believed that any and all means were permissible in fighting against the hated Roman occupiers of their land, much like the terrorists in our own day who justify the wanton murder of hundreds of innocent people in the name of a supposedly “higher cause.” “You’ve got to fight fire with fire,” they say. But the problem with this is that if we fight fire with fire, then everybody gets burned! If we become a devil in fighting the devil, then the devil has won all the ...

Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... their theology through the medium of bumper stickers. I have wondered ever since I read about the fellow who honked when he saw the bumper sticker, “Honk if you love Jesus,” only to be greeted by an obscene gesture from the driver of the other car. I suppose “Have a nice day” is harmless enough, but I recently came across one which said: “Don’t tell me what kind of a day to have!” A few years ago there was a campaign which plastered bumper stickers on cars with the caption, “Have you found ...

Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... one thing, every good sermon should help the listener to understand the Bible better. But the real business of preaching is not the elucidation of a subject, but the transformation of a person. Its goal is to bring about a change in human lives. It is supposed to inspire, motivate, persuade, and move. In Acts, chapter 26, you have the dramatic event of St. Paul on trial for his life, and giving a defense before Herod Agrippa II. (Probably held in the theatre of an ancient Roman City we know as Caesarea by ...

Mark 10:35-45
Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... Good Friday. They wanted the crown without the cross. They did not yet realize that the two places at Jesus’ right and left hands would soon be occupied by persons hanging on a cross! And so Jesus had to teach them. He said, “You know that those who are supposed to rule over the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great men exercise authority over them. But it shall not be so among you.” (Mark 10:43) But down through the ages it has been so. The world’s standards have been absorbed by the church ...

Sermon
Paul E. Flesner
... the mountain toward the greatest vision of God's glory yet to come: a cross and an empty tomb! A rugged cross and a rough-hewn grave. There's the true glory of God. But there must be a mistake somewhere. Glory is supposed to be "glorious." Glory is supposed to be "spectacular." Glory is supposed to be "magnificent." The cross and tomb are none of these. Rather, they are the marks of a suffering servant who gave his life as a ransom for humankind. Let me make a long story short. It wasn't until Pentecost and ...

Sermon
Fredrick R. Harm
... the more precious we discover life to be, the more terrible the fact of human sin becomes. Robert Luccock offers an excellent analogy.1 Suppose I hold a cup in my hand. At first glance it looks like any other cup -- perhaps like one purchased at a local ... men and women like us in a way comparable to the way lovers of china would evaluate the Limoges cup in my hand. But now suppose I deliberately smash the cup on the floor! This is precisely what sin does. Not that I have broken the cup, but that I have ...

Sermon
Glenn McDonald
... borrowed from Psalm 23 to declare, "I am the Good Shepherd." Then he willingly went to his death on the cross and screamed, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" In the Bible, real security is never very far from real suffering. How are we supposed to make sense of this? One day the evidence for God's presence and power seems to be everywhere. The next day God appears to have vanished from the radar screen. C. S. Lewis in all likelihood delivered the gift of intellectual spiritual certainty to more ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... a method of birth control and had stopped after the fourth or fifth child. Franz Liszt was so sickly that his father ordered a coffin to be made for him. Lord Byron was born with a club foot, and Charles Dickins was small and sickly from birth. Suppose their parents had known what obstetrical science knows today, and had decided to abort. You see? Life is a mystery -- a gift from God -- who are we to make such momentous decisions? (Killinger, Ibid.) Now I don't want to leave it hanging there. The Gospel of ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... one of us? Could he possibly have meant one of us monks here at the monastery? If that's the case, which one? Do you suppose he meant the abbot? Yes, if he meant anyone, he probably meant Father Abbot. He has been our leader for more than a generation. ... is the Messiah. Of course the rabbi didn't mean me. He couldn't possibly have meant me. I'm just an ordinary person. Yet supposing he did? Suppose I am the Messiah? O God, not me. I couldn't be that much for You, could I? As they contemplated in this manner, ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... get the strength, the resources of education or training, to make it on my own." And we fall into both those snares, don't we? We suppose that we can manage our life as if we were God -- and we get to the point where we think that if we could just get a ... take it back to its maker." That's what repentance is. It's a decision that acknowledges the fact that we have been wrong in supposing that we can manage our life as if we were God, and we are wrong in assuming that we have the strength, or can get ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... that this is the physician she has been looking for. There she is in the crush of the crowd. She is in a delicate situation. She can’t cry out about her condition to get Jesus’ attention. The crowd would push her off to the side. No one’s supposed to even touch her. How can they help touching her in a crowd like that? "Unclean! Unclean!" She might even get injured. Who knows what an angry crowd might do? She can’t risk speaking up and having Jesus reach out to touch her, but, she thinks to herself ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... lawful universe. We drop a book, and it falls to the floor. Why? The law of gravity. We drive a car off a ledge and we smash into the canyon floor below. Does a Divine hand reach out of the clouds to stop our fall? It could happen, I suppose. Anything is possible with God. But it is not likely. We live in a lawful universe. And what a magnificent universe it is. Writer Laura Ingalls Wilder, author of the much-beloved Little House on the Prairie series puts it this way: "What a beautiful world this is! Have ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... that had so often been applied to Jesus Christ. (Kathleen Norris, The Cloister Walk, xvii-xviii) After making that confession, Norris told about the monk who was to be her oblate director –that is, the one who guided her studies of the rule (a period that was supposed to last a year but rambled on for nearly three). She spoke with appreciation for this spiritual guide who waited patiently for her to sort out her muddle. Finally she said to him, “I can’t imagine why God would want me, of all people, as ...

Sermon
Phil Thrailkill
... ,” said Jesus, “of false prophets.” Look at the roots and fruits. Many who were on the right side of the racial issue in the 1960's and 1970's have been looking for a fresh cause ever since, and they have found one: a new, supposedly oppressed group that needs their advocacy and liberation from the outmoded moral oppression of the church. It calls up the nostalgia of the old, nobler crusade and makes them feel like real Christians again, taking a prophetic stand against evil at the cutting edge of ...

Sermon
Phil Thrailkill
... to make large.”10 For Jesus, the obedience that is built on a foundation of trust is everything. And if we sever the link between belief and behavior and between faith and the good works that flow from it, then we will be severed, just like these supposed prophets. The admiration of faith is a necessary and repeated beginning; participation in the gifts and powers of the Holy Spirit is an incredible bonus, but what Jesus is after is that we learn to do what he says, and what he expects is not hard to ...

Genesis 28:10-19a
Sermon
James L. Killen
... that it is acceptable to have a religion, but we must keep it a very personal matter. That is to say, we may believe that there is a God, but we must live as if we don't. In that atmosphere, faith tends to wither away. Our beliefs are supposed to shape our actions. When they are not allowed to do so, our actions tend to shape our beliefs. That has left a huge empty spot in the lives of many people and communities where something important ought to be. We rush ahead doing what seems profitable or pleasurable ...

1 Corinthians 1:18-31
Sermon
James L. Killen
... to make a difference in our lives. If it doesn't, why should we bother with it? If the Christian faith is supposed to make a difference in our lives, then we should expect that Christians will be different. And, Christians are supposed to make a difference in the world. We know these things - and yet, we tend to want to minimize the difference. We want to be like everyone else - not to offend anyone - to make our faith more attractive to others. But it is the difference that gives the Christian faith ...

Sermon
Richard W. Ferris
... class for seven-year-olds, one little boy suddenly exclaimed to his teacher, "Can we hurry up? This is boring!" Immediately the little girl to his left gave him a sharp elbow to the side and rebuked him. "Shut up. It's supposed to be boring!" What is this church of Jesus Christ supposed to be? Are we simply in a "church building" that has become stiff and boring, weathered by the years and near extinction? Or are we a "building church," with veins full of life and the empowered goals of still wanting to ...

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