Dictionary: Trust
Showing 2751 to 2775 of 4978 results

Sermon
Paul W. Kummer
... As a little aside to the main point of our text, are we astonished when people become Christians, especially unlikely candidates in our estimation of things? Maybe that is our problem. Our estimation is too low of what God can and wants to do. We don't expect enough from our great and faithful God. Think about what the Trinity has done to effect the salvation of all who will only receive it. God desires all to be saved. The Holy Spirit's most important work and one that he does continually is wooing people ...

Sermon
Paul W. Kummer
... !), and uses us to carry the message of the gospel in all we do. Does God care about every decision? Should we pray about each one? Well, as you stand in front of your hanging clothes in your closet, though he does care about how you look, don't expect him to guide your hand to the dress of the day or the perfectly coordinated tie. And sometimes we paralyze ourselves and wait for an answer when common sense says, "Do it! You must!" There are simply some things we as Christians are called to do, and we can ...

Sermon
Paul W. Kummer
... was showing a horror flick. The protagonist, the good guy, had just gotten in trouble and was killed. "Is he really dead -- forever?" the movie watchers wonder. Or will he be supernaturally (and unrealistically) resurrected before the end of the movie? The eleven expected Jesus to come back immediately. He said he would and they only cared about their present condition! And they were stuck in their knowledge of the past, too. The only people they knew of who had ever been bodily assumed into heaven were ...

Sermon
Robert P. Hines
... Abraham want to leave town and go to some unknown place?" "Why would Moses put his liberty and life in jeopardy by going back to Egypt?" "Why would James and John leave their father in the boat and follow this stranger?" When you do crazy things, you can expect people to wonder about your sanity, or at the very least, your sense of direction in life. But of all the crazy things done by people in the Bible, perhaps the craziest was the action of Jeremiah as described in this passage. At the time this event ...

Sermon
Alexander H. Wales
... . But that kind of demon possession only serves to make this story more distant, rather than helping us realize how many demons there are all around us. You see, demons were the supernatural creatures that took control of an individual when they were not expecting it. They made individuals act in ways that were not acceptable. The individual was lost, and the demon became central in all that the individual did. That is why Jesus was able to speak with the demon that possessed this man. It was as though ...

Luke 3:1-20, Luke 3:21-38
Drama
Dallas A. Brauninger
... us toward living with a greater purpose. We take these vows as symbols of the presence of the holy. I pondered many things that day by the river. Will you people in the approaching millennium still allow yourselves the joy of being filled with expectation? People of your time follow the wrong river when you wonder if any of these "institutional" or organizational acts of commitment still count for anything. In your day, few stand on the pedestal of perfection. What does the setting aside of a person for ...

Sermon
Gerald Whetstone
... and placed before the council where he preached passionately and eloquently. They only became more deeply enraged, and dragged him out of the city and stoned him to death. According at least to Luke's account, this then was the first Christian martyr. What had Stephen expected? The seven had been chosen to assist in the distribution of food to the widows. They were to wait on tables in order to free the apostles to devote themselves to prayer and to serving the word. To this end they received the laying on ...

Sermon
Thomas G. Rogers
... century American short stories, just to name a few of the categories. It is all "good literature," but each of the works are also very, very different from one another. A student should be careful not to read an ancient Greek tragedy with the same expectations one would bring to a 20th century American short story. The reader needs to be aware that belief systems and writing conventions differ from century to century and from genre to genre. The Bible is very much like an anthology. When we read the book ...

Sermon
Thomas G. Rogers
... took the candle in her hands gripping it tightly. She then clutched the candle against her and said, "During these last months I have often thought of myself as a candle about to go out. I thought that everything I am is tied up in being able to see. I expected that when blackness came then there would be nothingness." She then said, "Now I'm blind. It's dark." She held the candle tightly. "But the candle is still here. I'm still here. I'm still me. God is still God. It's going to be okay somehow." Perhaps ...

Children's Sermon
Robert B. Lantz
... morning, full of excitement and anticipation, to find that the only thing in your stocking was a black lump of coal? I remember hearing stories as a child about how disobedient or naughty children only received a lump of coal in their stockings on Christmas morning. I always half expected that to be my fate. Aren't you glad that what you receive on Christmas Day has very little to do with whether you deserve it or not? Some of us would be in real trouble if we only got what we deserved, wouldn't we? Do you ...

Sermon
Gerald Whetstone
... no longer simply a prophet, or even a healer. He is his Lord. And the man worships him. Jesus did not heal and desert him. Nor will he fail to provide and care for us. Of course, it may not always be when and how and as we expect. Not only does he provide us with food and clothing, home and family (though we dare never take these precious gifts for granted), but also he provides for us the constant reassurance of his abiding love and forgiveness, his gifts of discernment and determination, the strength and ...

Sermon
Richard Hasler
... 's two comings. The first coming includes his birth, life, death and resurrection. The second coming points to the day when he will appear in glorious triumph. In the meantime, "between the times" believers are to be awake, alert, ready to expect Christ's presence at any time. Today's lectionary text played a decisive role in the conversion of Augustine, the influential early church father. In his autobiographical Confessions he tells of his early emotional and intellectual struggles as a young man living ...

Matthew 6:19-24, Matthew 6:16-18, Matthew 6:5-15, Matthew 6:1-4
Sermon
Charles M. Mills
... with his friends for music-making. On the road he encountered a man whose cart had become stuck in a muddy and watery ditch. Herbert stopped and helped the pedestrian. Due to his good deed the poet arrived at his friend's house later than expected. One of the musicians chortled, "Looks like you've missed all the music." Herbert replied, "Yes, but I will have songs at midnight." Herbert had the satisfaction of doing the Christ-like thing. His motivation in helping another was pure and loving.1 Peter Marshall ...

Sermon
Gerald Whetstone
... only because they realized they were in the presence of the most holy God who wields the power of life and death? Or perhaps they now realized how faithless they had been, how little they had understood. What would God do with them now? What might they expect should they see the Lord, now risen from the dead? Whatever the cause, Jesus overcomes their fear. He appears among them bringing peace. He walks with them on a country lane and breaks bread with them at their table. He makes a fire on the beach and ...

Sermon
Michael B. Brown
... won over by their consistent, persistent attention. That's what still wins people over to Christ. It's the consistent witness we live before them: the kindness and gentility that are consistently evident, the willingness to listen without judging and to help without expecting something in return, the smile that's always there, the warm hug or handshake that we can count on, the friendship that doesn't blow hot and cold, the faith that is evident in good times and other times, as well. We articulate Christ ...

Sermon
Sandra Hefter Herrma
... person who will embarrass us. This does not mean that we want ambassadors who will "give away the farm" either! Ambassadors need to be firm, need to be clear about where their government stands, and need to be able to state those stands and expectations in a way which will be understood without being rude, if possible. Words must sometimes be chosen very carefully to get the message across without precipitating war or the eviction of the ambassador from the host country. In the same way, God doesn't intend ...

Sermon
Sandra Hefter Herrma
... the baby cries, mothers who are nursing find that their bodies automatically "let down" the milk, and even if they wanted not to listen to their babies, they must, or suffer severe pain. Baby needs that milk, because it cannot grow without it. After all, babies are expected to grow up, and if we find this baby six months later, unable to hold its head up, not responding, not even moving away from the mewling sort of cry she had at birth, we begin to understand that something is wrong. And if a child gets ...

Sermon
Richard Hasler
... Peter's words. The apostle begins with a confession: "I truly understand that God shows no partiality ...." He could hardly believe what he is saying. Nonetheless, he begins rehearsing the story he has told so many times before, but this time to an audience he never expected to address. The story is about Jesus, beginning with his baptism by John in the Jordan River. In Jesus' baptism God announces to the disciples and to all present that this man is his beloved Son who is anointed and set apart by the Holy ...

Ephesians 4:17--5:21
Sermon
Sandra Hefter Herrma
... ... believe in the light, so that you may become children of light" (John 12:46 and 36). Paul never knew Jesus in the flesh. Peter could talk about the stories Jesus told, could call on his personal experiences with Jesus in times of difficulty. We might expect Peter to be singing hymns in the darkness of a prison. But Paul is like us. He never knew the man Jesus, never heard him preach, never saw him raise a friend from the dead nor heal a Gentile woman's daughter. Everything he learned about Jesus ...

Sermon
Michael B. Brown
... the greatest theological mind of the twentieth century, lectured many years ago at The University of Chicago. Following his lecture, a question-and-answer time with the audience was scheduled. As the story goes, a certain student asked a question, obviously expecting to receive a deep and cerebral answer. "Dr. Barth," he queried, "what is the greatest truth of the Christian faith?" Pondering only a moment, the profound theologican answered: "The greatest truth of the Christian faith is this: Jesus loves me ...

Sermon
Sandra Hefter Herrma
... result, you are doomed to die, because the wages of sin is death" (Romans 3:23 and 6:23). If I am only as good as the next person, I am clearly in trouble! After all, how often do we say (in a tone that indicates we have given up expecting good), "Well, you know how people are!" as though we were not to be included in that category? Really, most of us share the secret understanding that if people knew what we were really like, they wouldn't like us (an understanding, by the way, that causes us to expend ...

Sermon
Michael B. Brown
... . Every time we met she was wearing the same big toothless grin. One day I mentioned how refreshing it was to know someone like her, a person who was always happy. She replied, "I ain't got nothin'. I ain't never had nothin', and I don't ever expect to get nothin'. So, I got nothin' to worry about, do I?" What we worry over says volumes about our priorities. Jesus must have stepped on countless toes when he said: "Do not be anxious about what you eat or drink or wear. For the Gentiles seek these things ...

2 Corinthians 5:11--6:2
Sermon
Sandra Hefter Herrma
... to fear us, no matter what we do, or what threats we could make. So here is the unbelievable, prodigal nature of God: Hat in hand, God's ambassador approaches us, telling us that God has surrendered. Although our lives are nothing of what we had hoped and expected, lacking any great accomplishments to show for our time spent here, and although we have refused to take seriously the claim God has on our lives, God does not want to be our enemy, but our friend! God does not despise us; God loves us. God does ...

Children's Sermon
Robert B. Lantz
... of the year? (Response -- Resolutions.) New Year's resolutions may be a good way to remind us of things we want to change in the days ahead, but it is not just at one time of year that God wants us to look at our lives and make changes. He expects the process of growth and change to take place continually as we become the new people that He wants us to be as the people of his kingdom. Here is a brand new year that I am putting into your hand. May it be happy in the Lord. (Pass out ...

Psalm 77:11; 118:24
Children's Sermon
Kenneth Mortonson
... a picture to color, to a treat, to a sticker, to whatever is available to you in an amount to cover the number of children present. Lesson: Have you ever had a nice surprise? ... What is a nice surprise? ... (Something nice happens to you that you did not expect to happen.) We have surprises happening to us every day. When someone gives you a smile and says hello to you, that is a nice surprise. Do you know what you will have for dinner today? ... Maybe it will be a nice surprise. When you watch television ...