Dictionary: Trust
Showing 2901 to 2925 of 3500 results

Understanding Series
Elizabeth Achtemeier
... focus is on Israel and the relation of that chosen people to their God. But the Scriptures answer universal questions by dealing in particulars—by dealing with one people or, in the case of the NT, with one Man. And the revelation given through the particular becomes assurance and pledge for the universal. Such is the case with this pivotal passage in Hosea. Here is revealed to us the nature of the Lord of the universe. 11:1–4 Verse 1 tells us that God adopted Israel as his son in the exodus from Egypt ...

Understanding Series
Elizabeth Achtemeier
... indicates that God is speaking through the prophet. The formula is found only here in Joel, and it emphasizes that vv. 12–13a are the personal invitation of the Lord. The Call to a Fast of Lamentation (2:15-17): God’s word in 2:12–13a has assured Judah and Jerusalem that it is possible to return to communion with God. Joel now wants his people to act on that word. He therefore first addresses an imperative call to the priests to take the leadership in calling the people to a fast of repentance, 2:15 ...

Understanding Series
Elizabeth Achtemeier
... in 2:19–27 correspond to Israel’s need detailed in 1:2–2:17, it is not Israel’s need or its turning that prompts God’s actions toward it. Verses 2:17–20 have the standard form of a communal lament (v. 17), followed by an oracle of assurance (vv. 19–20), but the two sections are bound together theologically by the “pity” of God. Some commentators have maintained that 2:20 refers once again to the locust horde. In their view, God drives the locusts into the Dead Sea on the east and into the ...

Understanding Series
Elizabeth Achtemeier
... 10:4) for repentant people, shielding them from death on the final day, as the resurrection of our Lord can shield us from eternal death at the day of the Lord. Repeating some of the words of 2:27, Joel 3:17 gives a foretaste, then, of the assurance of Rev. 21:3–4. The communion of the faithful with their covenant Lord will be complete, and God will dwell in their midst, and never again will their lives be threatened by any enemy alien—whether by locusts or armies, unbelievers or idolaters (cf. Isa. 52 ...

Understanding Series
Elizabeth Achtemeier
... , but to experience it as present event. Through past actions in Israel’s history, Yahweh’s character and will have been made known. And by remembering those actions, Israel can “know” God, it can experience God’s presence and be assured of God’s present power and desire to save it. It can know God’s “saving acts” (NIV: righteous acts), God’s ṣidqôt. “Righteous acts” and “saving acts” are actually identical, for God’s “righteousness” which consists in the “salvation ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... is exulting and rejoicing in God my Savior, literally in “the God of my deliverance.” Habakkuk thus picks up another of the “deliverance” family of words (cf. vv. 8 [where NIV has “victorious”] and 13). The fact that (as his vision has assured him) Yahweh as the God who delivers is committed to acting in deliverance, delivering the people, and delivering the anointed king means that Habakkuk can exult and rejoice now. One does not wait for the event of deliverance to take place before beginning ...

Zephaniah 2:4-7, Zephaniah 2:8-11, Zephaniah 2:12, Zephaniah 2:13-15
Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... who were supposed to be “my people” and “my nation.” They will plunder Moab and Ammon; but what is there to plunder? They will “inherit” these peoples’ land, enter into secure and permanent possession of it (the verb nakhal denotes acquiring such assured possession rather than indicating specifically that one acquires it when someone within the family dies); but what is the use of it? To judge from what follows (v. 10), however, the significance of this is that it all serves to underline ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... and makes decisions concerning them; Yahweh, the president of the court, then sends a prophet to announce and implement its decisions. Somehow the people recognize that he is who he claims to be. This will not merely be a matter of responding to his self-assurance or conviction; in other contexts, at least, mere conviction does not get a prophet heard. It is at least as likely that they respond to the self-authenticating logic of his words. For all we know, over the previous 15 years Yahweh had sent other ...

Understanding Series
Pamela J. Scalise
... not refer just to the past conquests of Israel (by Assyria and its allies in 721 and 701 B.C.) and Judah (by Babylon and its allies in 597 and 587 B.C.). The rest of the book of Zechariah warns of future danger from armies and foreign rulers but assures that God will have the victory in the end (9:1–8; 12:1–9; 14). God’s agents will cut off the horns of every power that will scatter Yahweh’s people, no matter how many there will be or how long it will take. The number four represents ...

Understanding Series
Pamela J. Scalise
... Gedaliah’s assassination. There is more than chronological precision at stake in this comment, however. The reference to 70 years transforms the question about religious ceremonies into a question about the fulfillment or nonfulfillment of prophecy. Two prophecies in Jeremiah assure God’s people that Babylonian rule would be temporary, lasting only 70 years (Jer. 25:11; 29:10). These prophecies had focused the expectations of the people on the end of a precisely defined period of judgment. A plea from ...

Understanding Series
Pamela J. Scalise
... are also held captive by the hope God has given to them. This hope enables them to resist the temptations to succumb to idolatry and to assimilate to the way of life of their captors. Promises to the exiles in Jeremiah 29:1 and 31:17 assure them that their descendants will return to the land. Zechariah repeats this promise. To be held fast by the God-given hope of redemption and homecoming is a captivity which no one would wish to escape—except by having that hope fulfilled. The Lord announces fulfillment ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... many good people who love Christ, who serve Christ, who serve their communities, who seek to be good neighbors, who seek to reach out to help those unable to help themselves, and yet they find their lives are very hard. Does anybody care? Yes, Somebody does care. Let me assure you that, if you are seeking to be a follower of Christ, then God is aware of your situation. You may not sense His presence now, but one day you will experience the love of the Father in a way that only the redeemed of the Lord can ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... else put it this way: By the yard, life is hard; By the inch, it’s a cinch. All too often we allow ourselves to be overwhelmed by our problems, and we lose our perspective. We think to ourselves that it is the end of the world. But I can assure you that it is not. Tomorrow the sun is going to rise again. Somewhere birds will be singing and flowers will be blooming. You will still have food to eat and clothes to wear, and you will be able continue with your life. I know that some of you will ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... this widow. Do you think God ignores the need of people in other lands and other faiths? Jesus knew better than that. Listen to these words from Luke 4 in which Jesus discusses this incident in Elijah’s life and one in the life of Elisha, Elijah’s successor: “I assure you that there were many widows in Israel in Elijah’s time, when the sky was shut for three and a half years and there was a severe famine throughout the land. Yet Elijah was not sent to any of them, but to a widow in Zarephath in the ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... , let us really love them, and show it by our actions.” People loving people. That is what our faith is all about. Where there is hunger, bringing food. Where there is loneliness, bringing love. Where there is doubt and despair, bringing hope and assurance. Where there is conflict, bringing reconciliation. Why else do we exist? Of course people loving people happens because people first were loved by God. This Roman centurion was a good man with many good traits. But notice that even he felt unworthy in ...

Understanding Series
J. Ramsey Michaels
... Jesus’ death, but (potentially at least) the death of those called to follow him. It is the prospect of actual death that gives special poignancy to the recurring refrain I will raise him up at the last day (vv. 39, 40, 44, 54), and to the concluding assurances that those who eat will live forever (vv. 51, 58). Part two of the discourse ends where it began, with the ancestors in the desert who died and stayed dead even though they received the manna (v. 58; cf. v. 49). Jesus promises something far greater ...

John 11:17-37, John 11:38-44
Understanding Series
J. Ramsey Michaels
... comes down to a miracle of answered prayer (cf. 6:11; 9:31), whether the prayer is expressed verbally or not. In the case of Lazarus, the prayer is explicit. Jesus will ask that Lazarus be made alive, and God will grant it (cf. vv. 41–44). When Jesus assures Martha that your brother will rise again (v. 23), he is in one breath expressing the common hope he shares with the Pharisees (e.g., Acts 23:6–8; 24:15; cf. John 5:28–29) and announcing what he will do that very day. Martha comprehends the former ...

John 16:5-16, John 16:17-33
Understanding Series
J. Ramsey Michaels
... role with the Father as that of a heavenly intercessor. Even though there is NT testimony elsewhere that the risen Jesus “always lives to intercede” for believers (Heb. 7:25), Jesus’ interest here is not in his own future high priestly role but in assuring his troubled disciples that the Father himself loves you (v. 27). Because of what Jesus has done, they will be able to approach God directly in prayer, and their loving Father will hear and answer them. But now, for one last time before he departs ...

Understanding Series
F. F. Bruce
... kneel in honor of Jesus’ name confess at the same time that Jesus Christ is Lord. He who took “the very nature of a servant” has been elevated by God to be Lord of all, and every tongue will confess him as such. Salvation, says Paul, is assured to those who “confess with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead” (Rom. 10:9); “no one,” he says again, “can say, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ except by the Holy Spirit” (1 Cor. 12:3). “Jesus (Christ ...

1 John 2:28--3:10
Understanding Series
Thomas F. Johnson
... sign of authentic membership in the family of God. The eschatological hope (the only occurrence of the term in the Gospel and letters of John), grounded in him, i.e., in Christ/God, which he has just outlined, does not only offer his readers comfort and assurance about their future (needed because of the threat of the schismatic false teachers); it also has a present, practical application. Anyone who looks forward to a vision of Christ/God, the result of which will be to become like him, does not delay the ...

Understanding Series
Thomas F. Johnson
... next. Throughout 4:1–6 the Elder is concerned to help his readers correctly discern truth from error (4:6b) and true prophetic speaking (4:2) from false (4:1a, 3). This effort is part of the writer’s larger project to strengthen the Johannine Christians and to assure them of their right standing with God (4:4, 6) in the face of the continuing attacks on his community by the secessionists (2:19; 4:3; 2 John 7–11). 4:1 For the fourth time in 1 John, the Elder addresses his readers as Dear friends (agap ...

Genesis 6:1-8:22
Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... fear extinction. 8:22 From now on the movement of the seasons would be dependable, despite the crises humans face. The seasons—seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter—along with day and night, mark the flow of time. This assures humans that life on earth continues uninterrupted, while at the same time letting them know that as individuals they are getting older. Additional Notes The relationship of this account to the Babylonian flood accounts, the literary character of this account, and ...

Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... Again there is no detail about the manner of Yahweh’s appearance. At pivotal times Yahweh guided Abram by speaking to him in a special way. Usually several years elapsed between these encounters. On this occasion Yahweh came to affirm Abram with a special assurance in recognition of the gracious way he had treated Lot. By letting Lot choose the most fertile area of that region, Abram had avoided covetousness; he did not grasp after the land of promise at the risk of alienating his nephew. Yahweh commanded ...

Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... . Next the messenger blessed her with the promise that she would bear a son. Given the large number of pregnancies that did not come to full term and the number of deaths at childbirth in ancient times, this promise of bearing a healthy boy was an assuring word to Hagar. The messenger then spoke about the character of the child. Hagar was to name the child Ishmael, meaning “God has heard,” for indeed Yahweh had heard of her misery. Ishmael’s character would be comparable to that of a wild donkey or an ...

Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... Adam (1:28), which God reaffirmed to Noah (8:17; 9:1, 7; Wenham, Genesis 16–50, pp. 21–22). The connection between these blessings indicates that God empowered Abraham to fulfill the divine purpose begun in creating Adam and delivering Noah. God assured Abraham that this covenant was an everlasting covenant, continuing in force between himself and Abraham’s descendants (seed) for the generations to come. God promised to be Abraham’s God and the God of his descendants (seed). In order that this seed ...