Dictionary: Trust
Showing 276 to 300 of 4985 results

Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... our Lord,” he says, “What I want to do is to strain my desires as through a sieve, the sieve being what God sees as best or wise or possible.” Is it possible there are things which God cannot do? Perhaps a story will help us to answer that question. In a book I read many years ago titled A Touch of God, author Virginia Patterson told of a four-year-old girl named Cindy who wanted very much to go to school. Her older sister went to school. Her mother taught school. And her father was the principal of ...

John 6:51-58, Revelation 7:9-17
Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... throne as "a sea of glass." Like the lake surface on a perfect summer morning, in God's presence, there is not a ripple of care, pain, doubt, worry, or sin. In short, we shall live in the Lord's presence undisturbed forever. Who Gets In? A final question, the most important question of all, is: "Who is allowed into heaven?" Have you ever read "The Fisherman's Prayer"? It goes like this: I pray that I may live to fish Until my dying day. And when it comes to my last cast, I then most humbly pray, When in the ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... she walked the same streets, she went into the same place he was. He said, "The difference -- I ran away, but Mother Teresa crossed the line. She stayed, and healing took place." It always does, doesn't it? -- When we give compassion a chance. Go back to my question, "How Christian are we?" We can give a pretty good answer to that, and an honest answer, if we will look at the degree to which in each of our lives we add flavor to our kindness. And we give compassion a chance. This is what Paul is talking ...

Romans 10:5-15
Sermon
Jeff Wedge
... who are still pure, clean, and ready to live as God's people and worship God as they should. Paul certainly knew of this background, especially considering the context in which he used this quote from Isaiah. He uses it as the answer to a series of rhetorical questions about the way in which people will hear about God and the good news of Christ. For Paul this reference to the words of Isaiah is both an answer and a call to those who hear his words. Even though this helps us understand the way the statement ...

Exodus 17:1-7, Matthew 21:23-27, Matthew 21:28-32, Philippians 2:1-11, Psalm 78:1-72
Sermon Aid
Marion L. Soards, Thomas B. Dozeman, Kendall McCabe
... of the faultfinding of . . ." is too negative, and it has been changed in the NRSV to read, "because the Israelites quarreled and tested the LORD." The issue in this story is not the faith of Israel. Rather it is the reliability of God. Thus the story ends with central question, "Is the LORD among us or not?" The answer, of course, in the light of the story is yes. Thus Exodus 17:1-7, like the manna story of Exodus 16, is a testing story. Yet the dynamic of testing in the two stories is different. In Exodus ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... himself in a way that we can understand and know Him?" In other words, "Does God know me, and can I know God?" This series is entitled "The God You Can Know." This sermon is entitled "My God is Real." For I want to deal today with the basic question of the reality of God. One day in a grade-school art class, a little boy was drawing a picture, and the curious teacher came by and said, "Johnny, what are you drawing?" Johnny looked up from his half-finished master piece and said, "I'm drawing a picture ...

Sermon
David T. Ball
... .” This is getting confusing. What I do want to latch onto in all of this, and I can’t say whether this is what prompted Jesus’ wordy reply, is the keen interest that the Greeks had in seeing Jesus. It doesn’t say that they had an important question to ask him; just, “Sir, we wish to see Jesus.” Can you relate to that? I sure can. I remember as a child, when I was learning about Jesus and the Christian faith, thinking that the disciples must have had a much easier time knowing what Jesus was ...

Sermon
Mike Ripski
... prophets hang tell us about God’s righteousness? They tell us that righteousness is our submission to God’s will. God’s will is that we love God with all we are and love each other as ourselves. It sounds so simple. But like Jayber Crow’s questions that must be lived, the love Jesus expresses must be lived too. Love is not so much an answer. It’s a relationship. V. Jesus’ Baptism and Ours So how does Jesus’ coming to John for baptism fulfill all righteousness? God’s love for us is expressed ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... out chance and it puts in God. That is why the evolutionist hate the theory of design so much. Let me make this super personal to you. Only when you understand how you got here, will you ever understand why you are here. Only God can answer the basic questions of human existence. Questions like: Where did I come from? I came from the heart and mind of an omnipotent, omniscient God that has a plan for my life. Who am I? I am the highest of all of God's creation, put here by a God that desires to have a ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... skeptic, had me so confused that when I walked out of his office, I wasn't even sure there was a God. Quite frankly, if I had walked into his office, the way I walked out, I might have walked out the way I walked in. He asked me questions I had never thought about before. What I thought was a faith as hard as steel, melted like a bucket of snow would in Miami Beach, before his well rehearsed intellectual arguments. Have you ever lived in the dark shadow of doubt? Does one minute it seem perfectly natural ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... $15 million Can you imagine actually speaking to, and being heard by one billion people at the same time?1 Let me ask you a question. If you could speak to all 6 billion people in this world at one time, and you could only say one thing, and it could ... from our sins." That is a true answer, but it's only a partially true answer. May I give you a more thorough answer to that question? Listen to this: "For to this end Christ died and rose and lived again, that He might be Lord of both the dead and the living ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... even the likes of you and me. Here’s the point of Jesus’ teaching. Jesus doesn’t want us to take our salvation all for granted. Neither does he want us trying to decide who will be in and who will be out. He wanted the man who asked this question to understand that none of us deserves to get through the door. Nevertheless, some day we will enter into his presence and all will be well with our souls. How do I know that? Because Christ himself is the door. In John 10:9, the Lord says, “I am the ...

Sermon
Lee Griess
... salon owner said, "Send him right over. I'll work him in." Exhausted from a night of no sleep, Jim settled into the chair and began to reflect on the events that had happened, desperate to have them make sense. How could this have happened? The questions kept coming; the pain was still there. Just then Jim remembered the words of the hospital chaplain, "Sometimes we just don't know what part we have in God's plans. Perhaps Joshua's part was already done." The hairdresser expressed her sympathy and Jim found ...

Matthew 22:15-22
Sermon
Chris Ewing
... of Rome, the law of the imperial government, the law of this part of the world, of course it's legal to pay taxes to the emperor — it's illegal not to! And just in case Jesus was hoping to fudge a bit on the answer, there are among his questioners members of the Herodian party, supporters of the puppet king, toadies to the Roman government, here listening to his answer. If Jesus so much as hints that the taxes paid to Rome are out of order, the full force of the law will be down upon him. However, he can ...

Sermon
Stan Purdum
... to trust him. We, however, can miss great riches and blessing by refusing to cooperate with his purposes. Cowper puts this positively: Ye fearful saints, fresh courage take; The clouds you so much dread Are big with mercy, and shall break With blessings on your head. We may have questions for God, but he has one for us, too. It is "Will you trust me?" As we've said, we don't always know what God's purposes are, but we have a clear enough view from the Bible and the teachings of Jesus to understand some of ...

Sermon
Robert J. Elder
... How can well-meaning people sometimes give themselves over to evil, even if it is evil on a small scale? I think it is because we forget to follow the one who casts out demons with an authority like no other. We start asking lesser questions, like, "What should I do about this?" instead of the question Mark would keep before us: "Who is this one who teaches with authority?" What is the authority of Jesus? I think Paul had it in mind and put it so well: "Though he was in the form of God, [he] did not regard ...

Matthew 22:15-22
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... been borrowed or used. Anyone holding and using the roman coinage was participating in the community governed by Roman authority. Accordingly they should then “give back” to Rome what Rome had given to them to use. But Jesus further elaborates his answer for his questioners. He adds that they should also give back “to God the things that are God’s.” The emperor’s image upon the denarius is what makes that coin the emperor’s. Using that same logic it would seem that whatever bears God’s image ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... the end he will stand on the earth. And after my skin has been destroyed, yet in my flesh I will see God; I myself will see him . . .” (Job 19:23-27) According to the Sadducees, there was no such thing as life beyond the grave. So the question they posed to Jesus is quite surprising. “Teacher,” they said, “Moses wrote for us that if a man’s brother dies and leaves a wife but no children, the man must marry the widow and raise up offspring for his brother. Now there were seven brothers. The first ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... young.” I am not saying that is not a good and a noble thing, but my problem is you are not really accountable to your kids; you are accountable to God. If there are certain things you think you shouldn’t do from a character standpoint or you think are questionable it shouldn’t be because of your kids, it ought to be because of your love for God. If you think about it, God in some ways is just like a parent. There are two things that any parent wants from their children. In fact, it is the only two ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... v. 10)—Peter, no less than Paul, endorsed the charge laid by Stephen (7:53; cf 13:39; Gal. 6:13; see also Matt. 11:28ff.). He warned that any attempt to revert to a religion of law was to try to test God (v. 10), for it called into question his power to cleanse the hearts of the uncircumcised by his Spirit. With this speech Peter bowed out of the history of Acts. 15:12 The meeting was hushed as Barnabas and Paul spoke (the order of the names perhaps reflects the way in which the Jerusalem people saw them ...

1 Thessalonians 4:13--5:11
Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... comfort than that writer could. 5:1 This verse begins in much the same way as 4:9, where we have already observed that, contrary to Paul’s use in 1 Corinthians, the formula, now about, … is probably not a signal that he is answering the Thessalonian’s questions. As in 4:9, he specifically states that he does not need to write to them on the subject concerned and does so only to reinforce what they already know. In this instance, the subject was the times and dates of the Lord’s return. We cannot be ...

Teach the Text
Preben Vang
... Verses 1 and 2 function as a reminder that gives the basis for what he is about to argue in the following verses. 9:4–7 Paul’s list of rights uses the case in point as the springboard for a larger discussion of the principle involved. The rhetorical questions in verses 4–5 can be answered only in the affirmative by those toward whom his argument is directed. Surely he has the right to participate in dinner parties and various meals (cf. 6:12).2 9:5  the right to take a believing wife along with us ...

Job 42:7-17, Job 42:1-6
Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... cannot be thwarted by any force (cf. Dan. 4:35). Yahweh sovereignly directs history to his own ends, which may well be inscrutable to humans (Prov. 16:9; 20:24; 21:1). 42:3–4 Surely I spoke of things I did not understand. Job restates Yahweh’s question to him in 38:2, but now he answers by admitting that in the past he spoke beyond what he truly understood. Job does not confess that he has sinned, as the friends have insisted that he must (cf. Zophar’s words in 11:13–15). Instead, he acknowledges ...

Sermon
Charley Reeb
... when they are challenged. My prayer is that what follows will satisfy your requests. Everything Begins With God People have been wondering about God’s existence since there has been a human being on earth who could reflect on the meaning of life. The question of the reality of God goes to the core of human existence. For most people, what they 2believe about God determines what they believe about their lives and how they should live. In other words, their belief in God determines their behavior. Of course ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... operative in them. It would be an odd potter who made vessels simply to destroy them. We ought to be clearer on one point than are many of the commentators. This passage might be interpreted to mean that if God is almighty, no finite creature dare question his judgments. But that is to transpose an ethics of “might makes right” onto God. Egoistic ethics are involved in either case, resulting in tyranny on earth and fate in heaven. Right is not right because God does it; rather, God does it because it is ...

Showing results