Dictionary: Trust
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Psalm 119:1-176, Romans 8:1-17, Genesis 25:19-34, Matthew 13:1-23
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... their students go on to do greater and better things than the teachers were ever able to accomplish personally. It is gratifying to have students who are prodded or inspired to go on to greater heights than might have been expected when they were students. 5. Planting Seeds Early in Life. In Russia attempts were made for more than two generations to eliminate Christianity. It was eliminated from the schools, attacked and discouraged. The society was officially atheist. The babushkas (usually grandmothers ...

Mt 13:31-33, 44-52 · Rom 8:26-39 · Gen 29:15-28 · Ps 105:1-11, 45b
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... begin to fade and falter, spiritual growth remains a continual search to the end of life in the flesh. 4. Worth the Risk. Both the person who found the treasure in the field and the merchant who found the valuable pearl took risks to obtain something they expected to give them greater value. The persons who commit themselves to the kingdom of heaven take the risk that they will find in living the life of the kingdom, the truth about the meaning and purpose of life. It is the great gamble. It bets that in ...

Matthew 18:21-35, Romans 14:1--15:13, Exodus 13:17--14:31, Psalm 114:1-8
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... of others and suffering with them even in their failures, we enlarge ourselves. 4. Face to Face Answers. (v. 35) The reciprocal nature of human interaction is asserted in this proverb (see Proverbs 27:19). A. We See Ourselves in Others. The tendency is to expect of others the worst actions we find in ourselves. B. Rising Above Ourselves. Instead of looking at others as a mirror of ourselves, we need to look at others as God sees them. C. Seeing Ourselves in God's Action. We become greater by looking ...

Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... for a day. With the other workers he only agrees to pay them what is right. At the end of the day the landowner instructs his manager to pay each of the workers the normal daily wage. The workers who were hired first and worked for 12 hours expected to be paid more, especially more than those who only worked one hour. When they got the same amount as the others, they complained about its unfairness. The landowner reminds them that they got what they had agreed to as a fair wage. He then poses rhetorical ...

Matthew 21:33-46
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... . When they do, they either must go through a painful reformation or be supplanted by others which are vitalized by the Holy Spirit and produce fruits of the kingdom more faithfully. Homily Hints 1. Produce of the Harvest. (vv. 34, 41) What does God expect as our response to his bounty toward us? What kind of harvest should workers in his vineyard produce? A. A Goodly Life. In personal life the Christian should manifest the works of the Holy Spirit. B. A Faithful Church. Support and encouragement of the ...

Sermon
Mark Radecke
... in our faith are manger and cross. All of us were born and all of us will die. The birth of this holy child transfers those universal realities from the chaotic and divisive realm of fear and terror to the unifying realm of hope and expectation. His birth and death make relative all other distinctions and pointless all divisions based on those distinctions. For if God and mortals are at one in him, then what other distinction -- racial, religious or political -- can divide us, from God or from one another ...

Sermon
Thomas Long
... 19). It is into the emptiness of their community -- and ours -- into the vacuum of confidence, into the void of discipleship that Jesus comes to fill the vacant space with his peace. What Jesus says to the church is remarkable. Given the circumstances, we may have expected that the risen Christ would come with a scold. "Shame on you for your fear and failure. I sent you into the world, not into a locked closet. Now go!" Or perhaps the risen Christ would come to bail out these terrified incompetents and take ...

Sermon
Thomas A. Pilgrim
... us today about a marvelous peace greater than despair. Second, there is a living proof greater than doubt. That is another thing about Easter. When those disciples heard the voice of Jesus they reacted in a way which may surprise us at first. We would expect them to be filled with faith and confidence in the face of this new reality, the appearance of their risen Lord. Instead, Luke tells us, "They were terrified and frightened, and supposed they had seen a spirit." Jesus said to them, "Why are you troubled ...

Sermon
Thomas A. Pilgrim
... simply the best way to live and get along in this world. One time on The Andy Griffith Show Opie had been in a fight. Andy was trying to talk with him about it and how to get along with people. Andy said, "Sometimes you have to give something and expect nothing." Opie replied, "I did. I gave him a sock in the head." Andy said, "Well, you have to do things out of charity." Opie replied, "I didn't charge him nothing for it." Andy said, "You have to give just for the joy of it." Opie replied, "I enjoyed ...

Sermon
Thomas A. Pilgrim
... This is not the road Jesus chose. He took the road which led to Golgotha, the place of the skull, the execution site for the city of Jerusalem. It was the way of the cross. He told his disciples that if they were going to follow him they need not expect anything any different. There would be a cross out there for them on some future lonely road or some hill of one kind or another. If we are true to our Lord we cannot choose the road of safety either. We cannot travel the road of easy living and unconcerned ...

Sermon
Lee Griess
... I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another. This is my commandment: that you love one another as I have loved you. This is my will for you. This is what I expect. This is my desire for all people -- that my joy may be in you and your joy may be full. Love one another. What a model for successful living! When the play Peter Pan first premiered on the London stage in 1904, author Sir James Barrie began to hear complaints ...

Sermon
Roger G. Talbott
... have happened over a decade earlier. It hurts that much to cry for help and be ignored. Being human and a pastor, I know I probably have ignored cries for help. Let me drop the "probably." I know I have. I'm not even counting the ones where I was expected to read people's minds or somehow know that people were in the hospital when they didn't even tell their best friends, to say nothing of calling the church office. I know I have ignored people for a number of reasons. Sometimes I have done it because I was ...

Drama
Dallas A. Brauninger
... with God, he would be powerless. Man: The Pharisees were divided about Jesus. Jesus caused them much distress. He broke Hebrew law at every turn. When the Pharisees questioned me further and I told them Jesus is a prophet, they doubted my credibility. They expected my parents to tell them I was irresponsible. After all, I had been blind all my life. What delightful words reached my ears when my mother and father first owned me, then affirmed my accountability. Interviewing The Parent Of The Blind Man Asker ...

Matthew 15:1-20, Matthew 15:21-28
Sermon Aid
Dallas A. Brauninger
... show us, as Jesus moved toward his approaching death, just how human he was. Asker: Then, what about his power? Does the woman's insistence make Jesus appear less powerful or even humiliate him? Disciple: The woman's action shows us that God has certain expectations of the rest of us. Had she not taken an active role in her daughter's healing, the miracle might not have happened. She helped the miracle take place. She recognized Jesus' power. Her affirmation empowered Jesus at a time of his withdrawal. The ...

Sermon
John R. Bodo
... being, no matter how marginal, is necessarily or finally excluded. Who, Really, Is Our God? Hosea called his nation, Israel, a whore. What would happen to you if you, from the pulpit, called the United States a whore? Every church in our country has, and is expected to display, two flags. If you removed the Christian flag, no one might miss it. If you removed the national flag, even on the best-argued theological grounds, you would be unemployed on very short notice. Who, really, is our God? Can Love Go Too ...

Bulletin Aid
H. Burnham Kirkland
... were sitting ... And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit." And Peter said to them, "Repent, and be baptized every one in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit." Let us come expectantly as we worship God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Invocation O eternal God, the Father of Spirits and the lover of souls, who sent your Holy Spirit upon your Church on the day of Pentecost, and promised that he shall abide with it forever: let that ...

Sermon
John N. Brittain
... sound, this concept lies at the very heart of what all worship is supposed to be, according to the Bible. As twentieth century people we are not given much to praise. We are more likely to be cynical or critical than we are to be found praising someone. We expect people to complain about how they were ripped off or taken advantage of, of how they always get the short end of the stick. Rodney Dangerfield made a career out of lack of respect. In fact, if someone does begin to praise a product or a service we ...

Sermon
John N. Brittain
... behind a comet. The yearning was no less than that felt by people today who are searching anywhere for meaning in life, calling psychic hotlines and falling for every new television guru. But within Judaism at that time and place there was a high level of expectation that God would work in some new way to show God's love and compassion as God had in the days of the patriarchs and prophets. John the Baptist in particular had prepared the way for Jesus, announcing that God was working in a particular way ...

Sermon
John N. Brittain
... AIDS. The story focused on the effect the dismissal had on both the father and the grandfather of the boy, both of whom were Southern Baptist pastors, the grandfather having served for a time as "head" of the convention. Two things struck me. First, the expected bitterness of the young clergyman at his abrupt dismissal. He, like many of us no doubt, felt that in their pragmatism that congregation missed a chance to show the community what it really means to follow Jesus. But more inspiring was the story of ...

Sermon
Alex Gondola
... preacher Martin Copenhaver writes: "All of God's parties are come-as-you-are parties, which is another way of saying that God's parties are be-who-you-are parties. We don't have to try to look like everyone else, or like everyone else expects us to look -- respectable, buoyant, all-together. We can come to this party as people whose lives are unpolished, torn" (Library of Distinctive Sermons, V. 2, Questar Publishers, Inc., pp. 47-48). I want to introduce you to a beautiful and touching piece of music. It ...

Sermon
Alex Gondola
... of society, for the broken, weak, and poor. "When you give a dinner," Jesus says, "invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, and the blind." In other words, have a "soft spot" in your heart for anyone who is needy, and do good for them, without expecting any "pay off" in return. Why? The whole Gospel passage for this Sunday has to do with humility. The first parable, the parable of the Guests at the Wedding Feast, reminds us of the dangers in thinking too much of ourselves. Those who try to build themselves ...

Bulletin Aid
Rolland R. Reece
... . Rather, we continue to mess things up and privately confirm that we are failures. We get angry at ourselves for our failures. We become silent and withdraw from others. Isn't that what failures are supposed to do? If we are not worth our own love, how can we expect the love of others? We have turned on ourselves. But we don't talk about this rebellion. We've hidden this knowledge in a small secret place in our hearts. We don't even want you to know. Then one Sunday we hear ourselves singing: I was sinking ...

Bulletin Aid
Rolland R. Reece
... that everything would go well * the words of the angels' new song? We hope they sensed the importance of the moment and their place in it. We hope the wise men told these caring people how appreciative they were of their service. It's not too much to expect of men who had already sensed, through a dream, the real motive of Herod's supposed interest in worshiping the Christ Child. Dare we intrude upon this scene? What gifts can we bring? Does it matter with whom we stand? Are we watching out of the corner of ...

Bulletin Aid
Rolland R. Reece
... up to you for decades. So pristine in its whiteness, yet containing all the warmth of home. When, O God, did we come to know how important weekly worship is? We've come here when discouraged, doubting, guilty, and defeated. We've come here when happy, expectant, assured, forgiven, and victorious. Either way worshiping you enables us to place the elements of our lives in their proper order. When, O heavenly Spirit, did we first become aware of how much we love all the people who come here to worship? If our ...

1 Corinthians 13:1-13
Bulletin Aid
Derl G. Keefer
... . We are excited for you! Here are all these friends and family to cheer you on and encourage you as you begin this new level of commitment to one another. Right now, eternity sounds almost manageable. Your love has you looking into the future with delight and expectation. And that is just how it should be, for the basis of a life-long marriage can be nothing less than a love that will last through eternity. As you begin married life, here are a couple of reminders about eternal love. One thing you have ...