Dictionary: Hope
Showing 2726 to 2750 of 4972 results

2726. Taking Grace Seriously
Ephesian 1:18-20
Illustration
John R. Steward
... king a piece of fruit which the king would receive and then hand over to one of his assistants. Then the holy man would leave without ever saying a word to the king. This went on for many months and even years. Then one day something happened that no one expected. No one knew that a monkey had gotten loose in the palace. When the holy man presented his gift of fruit to the king, the monkey jumped up on the stage and grabbed the fruit out of the hand of the king. Then the monkey took a bite out of ...

Psalm 32:1-11, Joshua 5:1-12, 2 Corinthians 5:11--6:2, Luke 15:1-7
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... presence of God. The elder brother's refusal to join in the celebration was symbolic of his own alienation from fellowship with God. 14. "Never Disobeyed Your Command." (v. 29) The Pharisees and scribes sought to obey God's laws perfectly. By so doing they expected to merit God's favor. 15. "This Son of Yours." (v. 30) The older son used a contemptuous phrase in referring to his younger brother. It implied that the father was responsible for the younger son's actions. 16. "Son, You are Always with Me." (v ...

Luke 7:36-50, Galatians 2:11-21, 1 Kings 21:1-29, Psalm 5:1-12
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... follow. 4. Internal and External Cleansing. The woman washed the feet of Jesus. That was an act of external cleansing. Simon was concerned that he or Jesus would be contaminated by contact with the woman who was a sinner in his estimation. People often expect that baptism will somehow accomplish a magical cleansing because of the external application of the water. True cleansing of a life is not the result of external applications. It does not depend on what happens to the outside of a person. It depends on ...

Luke 10:25-37, Colossians 1:1-14, Amos 7:10-17, Psalm 82:1-8
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... occupied by Israel since 1967, over to the Palestinians. The peace treaty may be subverted because 450 Jewish settlers have moved into the city amidst about 120,000 Palestinians. Extremists are threatening to try to overthrow the treaty by the use of violence against the side they oppose. Killing is expected to happen after the Day of Atonement is past.

Jeremiah 30:1--31:40, 2 Timothy 3:10--4:8, Luke 18:1-8, Psalm 119:1-176
Bulletin Aid
William E. Keeney
... time. God acts when conditions are ripe, in the time of fulfillment. We need to wait in patient but persistent asking, so that we may discern the right time in God's larger plan. The third reason is that the answer may not be the one we expect. God has surprises. We see the outcomes of prayer only dimly. Sometimes we discover that our prayer was answered, but not in the way we had thought it should be. It may take a look back and a maturing of our spiritual understanding to know that the prayer ...

Sermon
Don M. Aycock
... was to be, the writers of the Old Testament knew his life would not be easy. We have the advantage over the Old Testament prophets. We read the story back to front while they had to try to read it front to back. We know now that the one they expected was Jesus of Nazareth. In Jesus we see that there is something mysterious and even God-like about suffering. Listen to Psalm 22:1 again: My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? Why art thou so far from helping me, from the words of my groaning? And consider ...

Sermon
Charles H. Bayer
... why this text is just right for the first Sunday in Advent. What is the hope of the world? It is that God, quite apart from anything we can do or have done, gives us a gift wrapped in swaddling clothes. We didn't produce it, demand it, earn it, expect it, think it up or will it into being. It is a pure, gracious, unmerited, unexpected gift. God has crept down the backstairs of heaven with a babe in arms, and placed him in a manger at Bethlehem. All we can do is humbly make our way to that place ...

Sermon
Charles H. Bayer
... who insist everything is fine all the time may be sitting on a supply of industrial strength anger, disguised with a grin. Nobody is on top of the world every day. Every human being I know has ups and downs. I do, and so do you; although I expect your moods to be consistent, but to understand that mine vary. Sometimes the world is right, and sometimes it is sour. Sometimes life moves along briskly; we accomplish what we set out to do and we meet our personal goals. And sometimes things get stuck. We look ...

Sermon
Glenn E. Ludwig
... . My friend could find his way around a seminary library; but on a construction site, it was a new world, and he was lost for a while, until someone explained things to him, showed him what to do and how to do it, and helped him understand what was expected of him. Jesus went around doing something of the same thing for people as that foreman did for my friend. We are limited in our understanding of who God is and how God relates to us. And some people,in Jesus' time, had some pretty crazy ideas. They had ...

Sermon
Glenn E. Ludwig
... in his path, some are even putting their own robes down. "Oh, what a great day this is for Israel!" "The Romans will be crushed; we will be free once more." "Hosanna, Jesus is the King." But it is not to be, at least, not according to the crowd's expectations. "Listen, he is going to speak again. Maybe this time he'll outline his plan of attack." "The kingdom that is coming is the kingdom of God." "Oh, no, not that kingdom of God business again. Tell us where we sign up for your great army, "I'm ready to ...

1 John 4:7-21
Sermon
B. Kathleen Fannin
... her head. "You haven't gone over the edge; you've only fallen from a tree." "Oh, fine!" she thought. "I've fallen out of a tree, but am floating to the ground, not plummeting, and I'm hearing a voice in my head telling me I'm not nuts!" Expecting the jarring impact of flesh and bone with solid earth to end her conscious existence at any moment, she marveled again at the sense of peace she felt. And then, unbelievably, she was down. She was down on the ground! And she was UNHURT! "What's going on here?" she ...

2737. An Answer To Prayer
1 Samuel 1:1-20
Illustration
... length she and her husband received the great, long-anticipated news. Her pregnancy test revealed that she would indeed have a baby. The name, what should the child's name be? Should they name the child after a favorite aunt? an uncle? perhaps a friend. No, the now-expectant mother knew what the child's name would be. It would have to come from the Bible, maybe the Old Testament. If it's a boy, then Samuel would be his name. Years later, when the boy had gotten old enough to wonder, he asked one day, "Mom ...

Sermon
Harry N. Huxhold
... as a project of mercy for citizens who had to suffer this awful fate at the hands of the alien government. Fortunately, the Roman soldiers routinely allowed this act of mercy for the doomed criminals. Refused By The Suffering Servant We have become accustomed to expecting the worst from people who have the opportunity to do in their enemies. However, it is not uncommon for those who have to carry out the job of being executioners to show some humaneness in their grizzly work. We can give credit to the ...

Sermon
John A. Stroman
... , beyond anything most of us could imagine. What was his immediate response? Simply, that we need to take the good days along with the bad. It is a remarkable response for a man who has lost so much. This is remarkable because this is not what you would expect. Many would respond with anger and resentment demanding an explanation from God. "Why? Why me and why mine? How could God permit such a thing to happen? Haven't I tried to live a good life?" Because of one's overwhelming loss and pain there is no ...

Sermon
John A. Stroman
... 's resolve to have an "anointed king," as well as God's purpose to use the anointed one to bring well-being and to raise up a king congenial to God's purpose. Therefore, these three motifs -- God's sovereign power (vv. 1-2); God's moral expectation (v. 3), and God's abiding fidelity (v. 5) provide the clues to the shape and significance of David's rule. Brueggemann points out that "this high royal theology is taken up and used by the early church for christological affirmation. The New Testament found this ...

Sermon
John A. Stroman
... wing formation, something that most people know nothing about today. The most significant change over the years has been the deployment of two separate teams, one for offense and one for defense. In my high school days, as a varsity player one was expected to play offensively and defensively. It was not uncommon for a player to play the entire game. Today the modern football player is either an offensive or defensive specialist. Even the cheerleaders have a set of cheers for each team. When the defensive ...

Sermon
John A. Stroman
... has provided for us. A child shows not only appreciation, but respect for his parents by the way the child uses what the parents have provided for him or her. There is no way that a child could repay parents for all that they do. Parents do not expect to be repaid. All that parents desire from their children is gratitude and appreciation, not so much in words but reflected in thankful living. I think the same is true of God, who provides us with all of the beneficial gifts of creation. To use these gifts ...

Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... the king has lowered himself before the people today, dancing half naked like an ape!" From that day on Michal and David barely speak. Most marriages that fail do so not from a blow out, but from a slow leak. We get into marriage with such high expectations. We're in love, choosing to act in one another's best interests. "Forsaking all others I will keep myself only unto you so long as we both shall live." Early marriage is exciting, and we pursue it with verve! Then there is a fight, some disappointment ...

Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... . We get to die a little, because we already have been forgiven. We already have the seats of privilege in the kingdom. We give away our money in an offering. Can you imagine it -- giving away the most important source of power and prestige in our society and expecting to get nothing in return, giving away our money for the sake of others, for the sake of the mission of the church? At the end of the service we are reminded, "Go in peace. Serve the Lord." Serve the Lord! Give ourselves away for the sake of ...

Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... of money is brought up in the church. Money seems too secular, too worldly, not spiritual enough. Some churches are so concerned about this taboo that they make a special effort in their worship services to remind any of their visitors that they are not expected to make a financial contribution when the offering plate is passed. Asking for money is too personal. It is impolite, rude, inhospitable. It is taboo. Why is the subject of money so often taboo in the church? Some complain that such a worldly matter ...

Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... the perspective of unfaith. It is the resignation of someone who no longer trusts the promises of God. Jesus literally meant what he said. It was no metaphor or figure of speech. He did not intend to mean something other than what he actually said. Jesus expected the end to come in "this generation." And it did. If the Last Day, the end of the world, means the final and ultimate judgment of the whole universe, then that has already happened. It happened when Jesus was nailed to the cross, when he suffered ...

Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... don't know the truth. And because they don't know the truth, they can't recognize the truth about themselves. And the truth about themselves is that they are not free at all. They are slaves -- to sin. Of course, these Jews, who probably expected Jesus to treat them better (after all, they had been respectfully listening to what Jesus had to say), were not too happy with what Jesus had to say about them. They were descendants of Abraham. They were part of a proud ethnic tradition. Their genes guaranteed ...

Sermon Aid
Harold H. Lentz
... about his being there preaching. Quickly so great a mass of people assembled that the house where he was conducting a service was jammed, while an overflow surrounded the house. This created a problem for a quartet of men who were carrying a badly crippled friend, expecting to put him down before Christ in the hope of a cure. But those who bore the pallet were not to be thwarted by the crowd. They possessed two qualities: persistence and ingenuity. The houses of that day were one-story buildings with a flat ...

Sermon Aid
Harold H. Lentz
... of the boys noticed it was going farther and farther from shore. One of the boys decided to retrieve the ball. After entering the water he realized that it was farther from shore than he had thought. Grabbing hold of the ball proved more difficult than he had expected, for it was riding high on the waves. Each time he sought to grip it, the ball slipped out of his hands. About this time he noticed that he was quite a distance from shore, and realized, too, that he was getting tired. At that point some fear ...

Isaiah 63:7--64:12
Sermon
William L. Self
... have this; I'll have to ask when I get to heaven. I think heaven is going to be a wonderful place, beyond anything we can imagine.'" While we wait, we live toward what we cannot begin to imagine. It's winter now; it's exile now; but what we expect on the other side, God's presence, his revelation, his salvation, determines how we wait. The Christian in winter can wait for God to do what God has promised, knowing that nothing can ever tear us away from the love at work on our behalf. By waiting patiently and ...