Dictionary: Trust
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Luke 6:37-42
Sermon
Charles H. Bayer
... choose not to use the cross at all, we will find other symbols, some flag, some institution, some doctrine, which we believe proves how right we are and how wrong the rest of the world. Just about the time I am convinced of the absolute rightness of my position, my beliefs or my actions, I am hit by the realization that nobody else sees the total wisdom of my point of view. Just when I think I have all the answers I end up at the foot of the cross, spear in hand ready to cast lots for some seamless robe ...

Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... world that is forbidden to question or challenge the great taboo. To challenge this taboo is to question the most basic assumption and belief of our world. And that is forbidden -- taboo. And what is that great taboo? What is the unspeakable power that holds us ... afraid to talk about it. We are not afraid to recognize it for what it is, i.e., a reflection of our values and beliefs, of our religion. And because we believe that we live in the kingdom of God, in this new world of unlimited abundance, because we ...

Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... future is far from certain. Our talk about heaven is essential to the church's ability to talk of a future filled with hope. Without the hope of heaven can there be any hope for the future? How can we celebrate All Saints' Sunday without a belief in heaven? Perhaps one of your children has perplexed you with this question. Perhaps you have asked yourself this question, unable to find a satisfactory answer. "Is there really a heaven? And if so, where is it?" Your grade schooler is having her first science ...

Sermon
Thomas G. Rogers
... 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 of Joel, we need to read it for what it is. It is itself a complex mixture. It includes ...

Sermon
Thomas G. Rogers
... announced to the people that now there was to be something more involved in the ceremony. The "something more" was a creed that the people were to memorize and repeat in the priest's hearing when the first fruits were offered. This creed, this statement of belief, consisted of a brief history of what God had done for them. What is happening in our text is that the writer of Deuteronomy is taking a perfectly fine ceremony of thanksgiving, and is saying to the people: "There's more!" The message to the people ...

Matthew 6:19-24, Matthew 6:16-18, Matthew 6:5-15, Matthew 6:1-4
Sermon
Charles M. Mills
... 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, the famed Scottish preacher of a generation ago, said in his sermon, "Under Sealed Orders," "... Faith is belief plus what you do with that belief." We can't grow in faith if our motives are as dirty as our old gardener's gloves we put to use in the spring.2 Lent, which begins on Ash Wednesday, is a season of hope. Lent is furthermore a time to grow ...

Romans 8:1-17
Sermon
Sandra Hefter Herrma
... side or the other. In some of the religions of Paul's day, this was taken very seriously, because there was the common belief that whichever side had more "soldiers" in the day of judgment would win. Thus, every moral choice had implications, not just for me ... of evil. If we believe that we have merely failed, then we will blame ourselves or others, but, in the false belief that we can change ourselves, we will continue failing and feeling wretched, failing and beating ourselves, failing and wondering why we ...

Jeremiah 18:1--19:15
Sermon
Richard L. Sheffield
... you in my hand" says the Lord (Jeremiah 18:5-6). Jeremiah perceived in the potter's work the primary place of God in the affairs of people. That whatever we're doing, what God is doing is what will be "on earth as in heaven" in good time. That belief is very Presbyterian. It is, perhaps, one reason that Presbyterians have historically been so willing to risk so much for the life of this world. We believe that this world and our lives are in God's hands. And that he handles us with care. On the cover of our ...

Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... inquire of his host what the nature of the church was that supported the college. He asked about the beliefs of the college community. He became intrigued by what he was told. He asked for some literature about the college and its denomination. The host gave ... him a book about the history and beliefs of the college's supporting denomination. The next morning the ambassador was very excited. He had found the book so interesting that ...

Sermon
Robert G. McCreight
... overcomes them. That's what faith is about. Now the psalmists and the people of the Bible were people of faith. And people of faith tend not to be clustered at either end of the spectrum where the belief is that the world is highly deterministic and highly coincidental. People of faith lean to the belief in a managed universe, watched over by some type of personal force that cares about what happens. People who hold a biblical faith know that Divine Character as God. It was God who brought the world into ...

Sermon
Marc Kolden
... rest in God. We find our rest in God when we come to Jesus. We find everything there is to know of God in Jesus. Not in Christianity. Not in the church. Not in some denomination. Not in the Bible, even. Not in doctrines or beliefs. Not in the ten commandments. In Jesus. "Come to me," he says. Of course, it is likely that we have found Jesus through Christianity, through the church, in the Bible. But insofar as all of these things -- Christianity, church, denomination, Bible, doctrines, commandments -- have ...

Sermon
Elaine M. Ward
... children these days?"1 Faith is trust in God, the willingness to believe until we can know. Faith acts and creates its own truth. If a train was about to be robbed and you believed that the rest of the passengers would back you up, out of that belief you could prevent the robbery. There are times when a fact cannot happen unless faith in the fact helps create the fact. If truth is dependent on our action, then faith based on possibility is indispensable. I read of a dream a man had about his friend after ...

Matthew 10:1-42
Drama
Robert F. Crowley
... women be second? REGGIE: All right, how about this: "Whosoever therefore shall declare faith in me before women and men." ILKA: I like that. BILL: The word we're using now -- "faith" -- what exactly does that mean? REGGIE: Faith is belief, trusting, putting your trust in Jesus. BILL: Yes, I understand. But, "belief," "trust." It's a thing you think. It's in your mind, isn't it? REGGIE: Yes, it is. When we trust Jesus ... BILL: Well, if it's a thing you think, how come we do it publicly? WENDY: Good point ...

John 20:19-23, John 20:24-31
Bulletin Aid
Wayne H. Keller
... some of your own doubts. Jesus welcomed doubts; he did not get angry with Thomas because of his doubts. And he also expressed appreciation for those who do not have life all figured out and still believe. Make them aware that belief is more than saying, "I believe in God." Belief is trusting God even when we do not know all of the answers. Response "Were You There?" Thomas was not when Jesus first revealed himself to the disciples after his death. Neither were we. This makes our faith no less important ...

Bulletin Aid
Wayne H. Keller
... for doing so? Or, have you allowed God's Spirit to penetrate you, your darkness that may look so suave and acceptable on the outside? Make certain that the people know that belief is far more than mouthing the words, "I believe in God." Jesus says that "even the demons believe, and shudder." When did we last "shudder" over our belief? How do we expose our darkness to God's light, and to those whom we have offended? WE RESPOND IN FAITHFUL OBEDIENCE Stewardship Challenge How do we keep our pocketbook in the ...

Sermon
Frank Luchsinger
... east and west, with industry developing based largely on slavery. The citizenry of Corinth consisted of Romans, Greeks, Orientals, and Jews from Egypt, Asia Minor, and Syria. Each of these groups imported its own customs and religious beliefs. In this conglomeration of beliefs and customs, speaking in tongues, ecstasy, and prophesy received attention and value. It was almost impossible to avoid eating meat which had been sacrificed to gods at funeral banquets or public festivals. And while writing to ...

Bulletin Aid
Dennis Koch
... others had received without requesting it. Also, despite the fact that John conveys here Jesus' blessing upon those who believe without seeing, yet he himself claims that he has related all these "signs" in order to inspire belief. Thus the author apparently is not extolling blind belief, as is sometimes suggested. Liturgical Color White Suggested Hymns Come, You Faithful! Raise The Strain That Easter Day With Joy Was Bright Look, The Sight Is Glorious The Head That Once Was Crowned Easter 2 The disciples ...

Sermon
Mark Radecke
... of telling the story suggests a complementarity between Christianity and the world religions. The Magi, without any apparent recourse to the Hebrew scriptures but relying only on the traditions of antiquity and the tenets of their own religion, follow a star in the belief that it will lead them to the birthplace of an important ruler. They follow that star all the way from their homeland -- possibly Persia, modern-day Iran -- to Jerusalem. That is, their native faith and instinct bring them a long way in ...

Sermon
Thomas Long
... as easily on the ninth fairway as it does on the communion rail. More intensely, such attitudes view the church as worse than a mere indifferent shell; they see the church as the enemy of authentic faith. Religious institutions, some say, actually squelch genuine belief. Faith is full of grace, but the church is too often saturated with law. Faith dances; the church tends to wag its finger. Faith is freedom; the church is bound up with rules and regulations. Faith is the inner child; the church plays the ...

Mt 2:1-12 · Eph 3:1-12 · Is 60:1-6, 9 · Ps 72
Sermon Aid
Russell F. Anderson
... at astrology with disdain, because it removes the necessity of a personal God and free will. This account raises some interesting points. Does the Lord accept the worship of those who are not members of the Jewish/Christian faith? Does God guide people who follow erroneous belief systems? If not, why do we have this story in Matthew's gospel? Perhaps this is leading us to a great truth: God is much larger than any religion or theological system. Could it also point to the fact that God is sovereign and uses ...

2 Peter 1:12-21, Daniel 7:1-14, Exodus 24:1-18, Matthew 17:1-13
Sermon Aid
Russell F. Anderson
... special angel sections and five of the ten top religious books, according to Publisher's Weekly, have been about angels. Billy Graham's 1975 book, Angels: God's Secret Agents was a best-seller at 2.6 million copies. Yet, how deeply felt is this belief in angels? Do the figures point to a resurgence of interest in the things of the spirit or a mere wistfulness for the realm of the transcendent, without firm conviction? A number of theologians believe that the latter is the case: that this popularity of ...

Sermon
Jerry Eckert
... rabbi. He said God was the Lord, the giver of the Law, the enforcer when there were violations of the Law. God was not to be doubted. We rabbis were not to doubt, lest we lead others to doubt. But I do doubt. I saw my dad struggle with his beliefs and how they did not quite fit with his life experiences." "Like what, Sammy?" Jacob asked. "Like the time my mother accidentally spilled milk on our meat. We didn't have much, so Mom washed it off and cooked the meat for supper. My father nearly had a fit. He ...

Sermon
Harold Warlick
... such, those who possessed the knowledge of this Divine Warrior need not concern themselves with the fleshly obligations of a shepherd in an evil world. What emerged from this battle with Gnostics, perhaps hardy forerunners of today's New Age proponents, was a clear Christian belief that no amount of knowledge was the Way of the Christ that was not also evident in a person's own way of tenderly caring for the other brothers and sisters on the planet. The hardy antagonist of heretics, the author of First John ...

Sermon
E. Carver McGriff
... for yet some time, it was as though all would now be well. I knew I had been given a special gift from God. There are those, even among my clergy colleagues, who have difficulty with this report. For me, though, it has shaped my faith and empowered my belief in the truth of Isaiah's promise. Nothing like it has ever reoccurred. It was, for me, a one time gift. But it was priceless. This is Easter, then. Its joy is not based on warm spring Sundays, on new outfits and dinner with loved ones after church ...

Children's Sermon
B. Kathleen Fannin
... children and point out that the reason people get persecuted is usually because they have ideas which disagree with majority opinion. "That, in fact, is what happened to the early Christians who were persecuted in terrible ways because of their belief in Jesus -- and their expression of that belief. "Jesus told his followers, 'Blessed are you when people persecute you and say all manner of evil things against you for my sake.'1 He said this to them because he knew how people were going to treat them." "Not ...

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