Dictionary: Face
Synonyms: countenance, physiognomy, profile, features, expression, facial expression, look, appearance, air, manner, bearing, guise, cast, aspect, impression, grimace, scowl, wry face, wince, frown, glower, smirk, pout, moue, side, flank, vertical, surface, plane, facet, wall, elevation, dial, display, (outward) appearance, nature, image, front, show, act, false front, facade, exterior, mask, masquerade, pretence, charade, pose, illusion, smokescreen, veneer, camouflage, respect, honour, esteem, regard, admiration, approbation, acclaim, approval, favour, appreciation, popularity, estimation, veneration, awe, reverence, deference, recognition, prestige, standing, status, dignity, glory, kudos, cachet, effrontery, audacity, nerve, gall, brazenness, brashness, shamelessness, look out on, front on to, look towards, be facing, have/afford/command a view of, look over/across, open out over, look on to, overlook, give on to, give over, be opposite (to), accept, come to accept, become reconciled to, reconcile oneself to, reach an acceptance (of), get used to, become accustomed to, adjust to, accommodate oneself to, acclimatize oneself to, be confronted by, be faced with, encounter, experience, come into contact with, run into, come across, meet, come up against, be forced to contend with, beset, worry, distress, cause trouble to, trouble, bother, confront, burden, brave, face up to, meet head-on, dare, defy, oppose, resist, withstand, cover, clad, skin, overlay, dress, pave, put a facing on, laminate, inlay, plate, coat, line
Showing 2851 to 2875 of 3167 results

Matthew 13:1-9, 18-23
Sermon
King Duncan
... .” Campolo says that when he rises after engaging in this centering kind of prayer, he senses a fullness in his soul. With that fullness there’s awareness that God is a living and guiding presence within him. He feels like he will be led into encounters with others in which he will have opportunities to share something of what God has given him. One rather dramatic example of this took place one day as he stood on a street corner on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania, where he once taught ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... missionary. And she got her opportunity. After a brief stint in Japan, she was posted to India. Carmichael had a strong spirit. The hot and unfriendly climate of India did not deter her from fulfilling her dream. Neither did the dangers missionaries often encounter. However, she suffered dreadfully from neuralgia which oftentimes left her no choice but to run her mission from her bed. When her condition grew worse, she was moved back to her home in Ireland. After a period of rest she again returned to ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... she should “take a walk.” It was crazy, it was cold outside, but she could not deny the power of this strong urge. And so, on this chilly Christmas Day she said to Herman, “I’m going to take a walk.” Reaching their store, she encountered two young boys. They were poorly dressed. Their clothes barely covered them against the cold. When they saw her one of them exclaimed, “There she is. See, I told you she would come.” “What brought you boys here,” Elizabeth queried. “We came looking for ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... ? The children thought that their father had been especially generous that Christmas. (1) Well . . . Christmas is a time for generosity. That is what Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol is all about. Ebenezer Scrooge, the miser, has his heart opened by his encounters with the ghost of his former business partner Jacob Marley and the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Yet to Come. After their visits Scrooge is transformed into a kinder, gentler man who becomes a model of generosity. Christmas is a time ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... faith is about. This is critical. Many Christians, even today, settle for being law abiding. They are nice, moral people, but they don’t have a clue what God really expects out of them. This was the situation of many of the Pharisees that Jesus encountered. They kept the letter of the law but not the spirit of the law. Pastor John Ortberg tells about a group known as the “blind and bleeding rabbis.” They were called that because, in order that they could never be accused of violating the commandment ...

Sermon
Don Tuttle
... and exalted, so that those who believe in him might be saved. In effect, he’s saying to Nicodemus: “To be born of God, to enter the kingdom of heaven, is to believe in me, to trust me, to follow me.” Unfortunately, that’s where this encounter between Nicodemus and Jesus ends. And while the text doesn’t say so, I can’t help but imagine Nicodemus trudging home in the dark, scratching his head, still baffled by what he’d heard. The question for us to contemplate is this: Why didn’t Nicodemus ...

Sermon
Don Tuttle
... Philo suggests he wasn’t a man with which to trifle. He was corrupt, cruel, inflexible, relentless, vindictive, and possessing of a fierce temper. He also was known to almost enjoy antagonizing the Jews.[i] Yet we don’t get that sense of Pilate in his encounter with Jesus. He seems much more reasonable as he asks Jesus if he is the “King of the Jews,” a secular translation of the Hebrew term “Messiah.” And he doesn’t even seem to be put off by Jesus’s answer: “You have said so.” We ...

Mark 16:1-8, John 20:1-9
Sermon
King Duncan
... today who have difficulty believing in the resurrection. There are many people for whom this is a nice story, but they cannot allow themselves to believe it is true. And we understand why they might feel that way. After all, none of us has ever encountered anyone who has risen from the dead. I mean, the so-called “Zombie Apocalypse” is popular right now in a specific genre of motion pictures. But that’s only a fictional thing. And besides, does it really matter that Christ is risen from the grave ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... this tree, only to be drenched in drops of acidic sap dripping from the leaves. When it rains, drops that have made contact with the tree fall on the unsuspecting shade-lover. The result is severe rashes and blistering of the skin. (2) Christopher Columbus encountered this tree and called it the Tree of Death. You don’t want to have anything to do with the “tree of death.” There are poisonous personalities in every group, including the church. These people not only don’t bear fruit. They actually do ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... within but by looking up to the One who is the source of life. The path to inner peace is not simply a matter of getting in touch with our feelings but getting in touch with our Heavenly Father. The answer is not meditation but an encounter with the Master of the universe. True happiness is not a matter of “good vibrations” but soul searching prayer. It comes by knowing that the emptiness you feel within can be filled by Someone who loved you before you were ever born. William Frey, a retired Episcopal ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... not go away empty handed. He still has all of his kingdoms and he now knows something about the nature of God. He understands God’s restraint. Conclusion Another important matter is that we cannot see this temptation in the Wilderness as the only time Jesus encountered evil. Clearly, he faced it over and over. Take, for example, when Jesus turned His face to Jerusalem. It was Simon Peter who tried to talk him out of it by saying, in essence, “You don’t have to do this.” Additionally, there was the ...

Sermon
Ron Lavin
... . That is called a miraculous reversal. The woman who wanted to get well, got more than she could ever have hoped for. More than her body was healed. Getting well meant that she was given a power of life she had never experienced before this encounter. Suddenly, as we often see in the gospel of Mark, another interruption, a disrupting movement in the woman's story, comes bursting in. As Jesus was talking to the unnamed woman and healing her bleeding problem, some people came from Jairus' house with shocking ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... are often among the unhappiest of people. If you want an example of this, turn to the first two chapters of Ecclesiastes. In these chapters Solomon, a man celebrated for his wisdom, tells of his search to find happiness. The first words we encounter when we open his book are these: “Meaningless! Meaningless!” says the Teacher. “Utterly meaningless! Everything is meaningless.” You may remember that a couple of weeks ago we quoted theologian Paul Tillich who said that the great fear of our time is ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... sacred to us. That’s good. Let’s not use them to look down on others whose traditions are not our traditions. Instead let’s focus on the God who is at the center of our traditions. Let’s seek to imitate the God whom we have encountered in Jesus Christ, whose nature and whose name is love. 1. Ed McManus, The Jokesmith. 2. This is retelling from memory (so some of the details may be wrong) from a true story told to the congregation at Matthew Weil’s Bar Mitzvah, Temple Shalom, Levittown PA, December ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... to take his rightful place, his father dies and he becomes the new king. In somewhat the same way Christ came into our world and experienced what it is to be human. The result was that his overarching attitude to almost everyone he encountered was compassion. Remember how he wept over Jerusalem. Remember how Matthew explains his ministry of healing and casting out demons. He writes, “When [Jesus] saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... : “You don’t smile very much when you drive, do you Mommy?” (6) We all understand. Life is stressful. We need children or grandchildren to remind us what unrestrained joy is all about. Children also teach us about unrestrained love. Most of us have encountered that love at some time in our lives and it brought us indescribable joy. Children know how to express love in the most beautiful ways. And their love moves beyond the boundaries we adults put on our love. For example, they don’t reserve their ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... excellent work at the plant, John Karmegan had just been named that company’s best employee in all of India. (2) That is healing that only love can perform. That is unconditional love . . . love from the heart of God. It is really beautiful when we encounter such love. Many years ago Dr. Albert Schweitzer told a beautiful parable. It was about a flock of wild geese that had settled to rest on a pond. A gardener at a nearby estate captured one of the geese and cruelly clipped some of its feathers ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... I love my wife and family and was scared I’d have to change, to be somebody else, and destroy my family, if the vision was real.” (3) That’s a powerful thought, wouldn’t you agree? If Jesus is real and if we should encounter him, what are the implications of that experience? I guess under such circumstances we would discover who really is the King of our life? Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. faced that question. Preaching in front of the Ebenezer Baptist congregation in Atlanta, a congregation that he ...

John 1:(1-9) 10-18
Sermon
Susan R. Andrews
... . I crawl out of bed in the darkness. I creep around the house in the darkness. I light a candle in the darkness. And I find more security than at any other point in the day. It is in that early morning darkness that I most intimately encounter God — a breath beyond the silence, a glimmer beyond the shadow, a presence hovering just beyond reach. It is a presence that promises to push me, to play with me, to protect me in the possibilities that stretch before me. And when the light slowly comes, creeping ...

Sermon
Susan R. Andrews
... . When the congregation decided to have a showing of art created by church members, Matsui brought in two huge oil canvases — one of a dark, bleeding Jesus, and one of a bright, loving Jesus. Matsui, like Sam, like the centurion, and like some of us, encountered a living Christ, and he willingly and joyfully submitted to the lordship of Jesus in his life. My call to ministry emerged in the midst of the second wave of feminism, and I, like many young women in my generation, was eager to confront sexism ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... source Livingstone traveled 11,000 miles on foot through uncharted jungles. He suffered unbelievable dangers and hardships along the way. He was attacked by savage beasts and nearly killed. But his dedication won the heart of many of the native villagers he encountered. One other thing endeared him to the Africans. Livingstone was enraged by the cruelty of the slave trade being perpetuated in Africa at that time and became determined to crush what he called, “the open sore of the world.” Livingstone was ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... pyramids to build a wall ten feet high and one foot thick around the entire realm of France. (2) We have the monuments, but who remembers anything about those who constructed them? The Christian faith is not a monument but a movement. It is a dynamic encounter with the living Christ. Peter could not have been more wrong in his desire to build three shelters. He doesn’t have time to retract his hasty suggestion, though, because as he is saying this a cloud appeared and covered them, and they were afraid as ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... hungry, starving for words of hope and truth. Some of them are there to watch him and to criticize him, like the Pharisees. Many of them are sick and have come to him for healing. But all of them, whether they realize it or not, are desperate for an encounter with him. All of them need to be touched by this man Jesus, the man who spoke with such truth and power and authority and joy and love about the kingdom of God. So picture yourself reaching the base of the mountain. That’s where Jesus would do his ...

Luke 22:39-46, 2 Corinthians 5:17-21
Sermon
King Duncan
... the persecution of Christians by Nero was at its height, Simon Peter was urged by other Christians to flee from Rome. Since discretion is usually the better part of valor, Simon Peter complied with their wishes. But as he was fleeing the city he encountered a mysterious figure! As the person drew nearer, he recognized Jesus, and said to him in Latin, “Quo vadis, Domine?” (“Where are you going, Lord?”). Back came the answer: “I am going to Rome to be crucified again, because my servant Peter is ...

Sermon
R. Robert Cueni
... on how to deal with it. The setting was after the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus and seven of the apostles were fishing on the Sea of Galilee. Think about that for a moment. That was the job they had before they met Jesus. They had already encountered the risen Christ. Jesus had already charged them saying, “As the Father has sent me, so I send you.” The Christ had already breathed on them the power of the Holy Spirit. He had already empowered them to forgive the sins of others (John 20:21-22 ...