Dictionary: Trust
Showing 2751 to 2775 of 4985 results

Sermon
Richard Gribble
... Paul advised his friend Timothy, "Proclaim the message; be persistent whether the time is favorable or unfavorable" (2 Timothy 4:2). Yes, the presence of God is all around us, but are our senses open? How do we perceive the presence of God? This is an important question to ponder, especially as we await Jesus' birth. As we light the fourth candle of the Advent wreath, look at the calendar, and hear readings of God's call, we know that the Lord is near. God is certainly present in events. The Lord is present ...

Sermon
Schuyler Rhodes
... one. We don't have to do it all today. Even God took another six days to get the thing finished. It's day one, and the question isn't how we'll finish the job, it's how we'll get it started together. What can we do now? What things can happen ... Testament, means "to trust." So let's not ask whether you believe in God's love in Jesus Christ. Let us ask ourselves today this life-changing question: Do you trust in the love of God in Jesus Christ? Do you trust God with your life? With your soul? If we do, if we ...

Deuteronomy 18:14-22
Sermon
Schuyler Rhodes
... . Yet, millions of people see these reports and accept them as truth. You can see the problems mounting as we humans endeavor to speak for one another. How then, does it go when someone decides that they are speaking for God? For my own part, the same questions emerge. Did the person get this information from the primary source? Was it a one-on-one meeting? Did the person write it down? Are they exaggerating? I mean, think about it. The prophet who exaggerates could have a really bad impact. God told him to ...

Sermon
Schuyler Rhodes
... to some degree or other, there is now a pervasive sense that people are evaluated by the tasks that they accomplish. What's the first question anyone asks you when you meet someone? No one asks, "What's your favorite color?" or "Do you like Indian food?" People don't ask questions about your life when they meet you, they ask about your job. The ultimate and constant first question in an introduction is, "What do you do?" And, if what you do somehow doesn't meet the accepted criteria, you are pigeon-holed ...

Sermon
Schuyler Rhodes
... an exclusive relationship with our Creator and our Redeemer. No room for others. So we see how Hosea addresses this concern using the story of his marriage. We see a people gone astray after other gods. And we see God's forgiveness upon their return. It begs the questions: Is our relationship with God solid? Do we bow down before idols today? Do we cede power and control in our lives over to entities and processes that are not of God? If so, what are the details? What are the idols? What are the idols that ...

Job 42:1-6, Job 42:7-17
Sermon
Mary S. Lautensleger
... going through a test," she remarked.4 As I began to study the book of Job, I confess that I came to it with a deep conviction. I believe that it is in the struggle of our spirit, in life's precarious moments, when we are asking difficult questions at difficult times, that our faith is strengthened the most. Yes, I have experienced this truth through my own suffering, and I grew to believe it as I matured in my own faith and understanding. Our earliest understanding of suffering may come at a young age, when ...

Matthew 22:34-40
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... only way to deal with entropy is to change the playing field. The only way to deal with the storms on the horizon is to get in the boat with the One who out-stormed every storm. The Pharisees confronted Jesus with this question: “What commandment is the greatest?” The real question they wanted answered is better stated this way: “How can we stack the deck in our favor?” You can almost hear the sub-text: Jesus, tell us the biggest fish, the best bet, the most “bang for the buck” in terms of Torah ...

2758. Through Your Actions
Matthew 23:1-39
Illustration
King Duncan
... land where I have been persecuted. I have always had food to eat. I don't honestly know by experience the meaning of hunger. My family has never been tortured or murdered. I don't honestly know how I would respond if they were." Then he answered the man's question, "I have experienced the love and intervention of Jesus Christ in my life. I share with you what God has done for me. And I hope, I pray, that even though the words may sound hollow, that when you hear me say, `Jesus loves you' that you also see ...

2759. Would We Be Ready?
Matthew 25:1-13
Illustration
Michael L. Sherer
... myself hoofing it down to K-Mart for an oil-flask-refill, trying to hedge my bets, while the host arrived and closed the door without me. The pastor of one Florida congregation, who has made an outreach program famous, uses one question which offends some people by its tone. He asks: "If you should die tonight, why should God let you into his heaven?" The question is worth asking. For those of us who live in the grace of God, who celebrate his "Yes!" to us each day we live, a better-focused version of the ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... minute matters of manners that determine the quality of our lives, the integrity of our existence. Few of us personally confront on a daily basis the issues of murder, or political corruption, or nuclear responsibility. We do, however, continually face such ethical questions as, "Shall I keep my word?" or "Can I honor my commitments?" As Christians we should be able to reflect a distinctive attitude which sets us apart and distinguishes us from the rest of society. We should hear Jesus over and over ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... this is also the age where future plans are sketched out - waiting for a later stage to make them a reality. The question individuals in this age ask one another: "What do you do for a living?" 3. The Third Age - What we used to consider ... 1930 it was 60; in 1970 it was 70; in 1990 some say it is over 90.) Finding themselves able to contribute to society in myriad ways, the question of the Third Age is less "Have you made your peace with God?" or "Are you ready to go?" than "What are you going to do with the ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... where he looked for it. His prayer was answered, not in voices from heaven, but in the soft snoring of his sleeping disciples. His prayer was answered, not with a crown, but with a cross. A small boy was asked if he ever prayed. In answering the question the boy made a wise and profound distinction. He said, "Sometimes I pray, but sometimes I just say my prayers." We all taste the dust of a drought-stricken prayer life at one time or another. There is a world of difference between "saying our prayers" and ...

2763. What Are You Looking For?
John 1:38
Illustration
Susan R. Andrews
... from John is a "call" story, but unlike so many call stories in scripture this one is not crisp, dramatic, or decisive. Today there is no flashing light, no booming voice, no clear instructions as to what the disciples are to do. Instead, what we hear is Jesus asking a question - a strange, penetrating question. The question is: "What are you looking for?"

Romans 14:1-12
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... admiral chatting on the deck of a U.S. Navy ship with some enlisted men. "What would you do if another sailor fell overboard?" A sailor promptly replied: "I would raise the alarm and toss him a life preserver, sir." The admiral asked a second question: "What would you do if it were an officer?" At this, the enlisted man paused and thought before answering: "Which one, sir?" We choose which ones we save, which ones we love, which ones are worth throwing the life preserver at. The apostle Paul in this ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... in the eye and ask, "Well?" Less baitable mates might have to be lured along a bit further: "Oh, I don't know if this looks very good. What do you think?" Woe to the man or woman who doesn't know how to respond to that question. All of us know that the questioner isn't the least bit interested in hearing the truth or even our opinion. All s(he) really wants to hear is a compliment. Nobody likes to be tagged a show-off or a braggart. But every one of us desperately craves to be praised and complimented ...

Deuteronomy 6:1-9
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... , "What is hateful to you do not do to your neighbor. That is the whole Torah. The rest is commentary; go and learn it." Jesus' response is similar. He combines Deuteronomy 6:4-5 with Leviticus 19:18 to give a two-pronged answer to the scribe's question. Only here in Mark's rendition of this encounter does Jesus recite the line "Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one" (verse 29), which precedes the remainder of the command that "you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with ...

John 18:33-37
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... of the divine mission. Beyond the issue of his kingship is Jesus' whole reason for coming into the world - "to testify to the truth" - a mission that includes Jesus' passion, crucifixion and resurrection. Indeed this is Jesus' answer to Pilate's earlier question, "What have you done?" He has come into the world to save it. John's rendition of this classic confrontation between Pilate and Jesus clearly demonstrates Jesus' growing in strength and glory as the hour of his death approaches. John's penchant ...

1 Corinthians 10:1-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... God pledges to Moses that he will once again stand on this now holy place, worshiping the Lord who has brought him safely out of Egypt. It is the conversation in verses 13-15 that draws us back to this text in wonder. We wonder first of all at Moses' question in verse 13: Are we to understand that Moses does not yet realize to whom he is speaking? What is it that Moses wants to know and why is it so crucial to his role as leader of the Hebrews? Keeping in mind that in ancient Near-Eastern culture, knowing ...

Luke 9:51-62
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... posed in Luke 9:61-62. Elijah is intentionally ambiguous, neither approving nor disapproving Elisha's request for a farewell moment. In what will many centuries later be called good rabbinic style, Elijah simply answers his newly chosen apprentice's question with another question - "What have I done to you?" In Elisha's response any doubt of commitment is washed away. The young man literally "burns his bridges" behind him as he returns to the symbols of his old way of life (the yoked oxen), sacrifices ...

John 1:6-8, 19-28
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... is eager to confess who he is not. The awkward phrasing of verse 20 is probably best translated as an indication of John's immediate, unhesitating, very dramatic answer. "I am not the Messiah." The emissaries are not easily put off. They follow up with another question, as though they are seeking to narrow down the field of possible identities John may care to claim. They next ask if he is Elijah. Their inquiry is rooted in the writing of Malachi 4:5, which declares the prophet Elijah will appear at the end ...

1 Corinthians 12:1-11
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... given for the benefit of the community of faith not just for some individual grandstanding. The abilities to perceive the good and bad spirits in their midst, to communicate the gospel to others outside the Corinthian community, and to understand the questions and insights of these others are all crucial gifts to the successful mission of the growing Christian community. Paul concludes this portion by once again asserting that only a single Spirit lies behind all these various gifts. Paul's insistence on ...

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... at that. He calls up yet another example of apparently random tragedy. Whereas the slaughter ordered by Pilate was an intentional act of bloodletting, the collapsed tower of Siloam is one of those freakish incidents of nature and physics. Again Jesus answers his own question with the same emphatic rejection as in verse 3, "No I tell you." Only now in verse 5, after rejecting the notion that only the especially sinful on this earth suffer, does Jesus introduce the topic that should be the focus of both these ...

John 21:1-19
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... Peter is unusually humble, even demure. While once he gladly boasted of his loyalty to Jesus, even to the point of his own death (John 13:37), Peter now calls on Jesus himself to verify the love that he feels "you know that I love you." Jesus repeats his question to Peter three times, not because he doubts Peter's basic love for him, but in order to give Peter a chance to realize for himself how deep and genuine is his love for Jesus. Jesus is bestowing upon Peter a leadership role that of a shepherd which ...

John 18:33-37
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... of the divine mission. Beyond the issue of his kingship is Jesus' whole reason for coming into the world - "to testify to the truth" - a mission that includes Jesus' passion, crucifixion and resurrection. Indeed this is Jesus' answer to Pilate's earlier question, "What have you done?" He has come into the world to save it. John's rendition of this classic confrontation between Pilate and Jesus clearly demonstrates Jesus' growing in strength and glory as the hour of his death approaches. John's penchant ...

1 Corinthians 10:1-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... God pledges to Moses that he will once again stand on this now holy place, worshiping the Lord who has brought him safely out of Egypt. It is the conversation in verses 13-15 that draws us back to this text in wonder. We wonder first of all at Moses' question in verse 13: Are we to understand that Moses does not yet realize to whom he is speaking? What is it that Moses wants to know and why is it so crucial to his role as leader of the Hebrews? Keeping in mind that in ancient Near-Eastern culture, knowing ...