Dictionary: Trust
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Hebrews 13:1-8, 15-16
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... the author cites Deuteronomy 31:6, 8, Joshua 1:5 and Psalm 118:6 as examples of the peace and confidence available to those who rely on God's grace instead of their bank accounts. Those who trust wholly in God can cheerfully offer this challenge: "What can [anyone] do to me?" (v.6). In verse 7 another imperative to "Remember" is urged this time a remembrance of past leaders in the faith. The almost certainly Jewish-Christian audience for this letter suggests that these former "leaders" may have been the ...

Luke 16:1-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
This text contains on the face of it one of the most difficult and embarrassing sayings in Scripture, offering an exegetical conundrum which challenges even the ablest of interpreters: "Make friends for yourselves by means of dishonest wealth so that when it is gone, they may welcome you into the eternal homes" (v. 9). The fourth-century Roman emperor Julian the Apostate and others cited this text in an attempt to discredit Christianity as ...

2 Thessalonians 1:1-4, 11-12
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... that colored the first letter already dispatched to that community by Paul, Silvanus and Timothy. Some scholars note a more restrained or refined spirit guiding the apostle's pen at this writing, however. Although the few problematic behaviors and challenges that are troubling the Thessalonians are not part of today's discussion, obviously Paul has them in mind as he begins yet another letter of encouragement to this church community. One subtle, yet substantial difference distinguishes this salutation from ...

Luke 23:33-43
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... , Jesus addresses the vertical dimension of human existence - his relationship with God (Luke [Nashville: Abingdon, 1996], 340-341). Note the three distinct groups of mockers: the public rabble including the leaders, the Roman soldiers and one of the criminals. Each party challenges Jesus to do for himself what he has maintained all along he could do for them. The provocateurs had no faith that Jesus could indeed save himself; their comments are gratuitous barbs tossed at Jesus in the form of mockery (v ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... lives. It should be a powerful force in making choices both large and small. It should be a powerful force in reminding us who we are and to Whom we belong. It is said that when Martin Luther was despairing, and seemed to be overwhelmed with the challenges he faced, he would write with his finger in Latin in the dust on a table, “Baptizatus sum,” or “I have been baptized.” Does this make sense to you? This is a radical understanding of what it means to be baptized. And that’s the point. Baptism ...

John 1:(1-9) 10-18
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... of God" (v. 12). Reducing the grand panorama of the prologue's theology and anthropology to a single focus on authentic life is, of course, an artificially simplistic condensation of the text. Nevertheless this life-affirming message functioned to give the challenged and troubled Johannine community a positive image and identity in the midst of a precarious existence. The prologue provided these early Christians with a joyous hymn that in itself infused the community with the light of a Logos-life.

John 1:29-42
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
This week's Gospel text covers two distinct pericopes which work together to close out John's introduction of Jesus and to lead the mission of the Messiah onto center stage. Considerable evidence suggests that one of the challenges confronting the Johannine community came from overly zealous venerations of John the Baptist. These steadfast followers failed to shift their allegiance from the proclaimer, John the Baptist, to the proclaimed one, Jesus the Christ. They continued to celebrate the pre-eminent ...

1 Corinthians 1:10-18
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... minds. Protecting and pastoring his flock remained Paul's passion even when he had moved on to develop new congregations. Paul doesn't beat around the bush. In 1 Corinthians 1:10-17 he immediately confronts his community with its most consuming challenge - to overcome dissension and division in order to present a united front of faithfulness to the world. Notice that Paul refuses to "take sides" with any of the divisions (schismata) or bickerings blistering the Corinthians. Instead he asks that "all of you ...

Acts 2:42-47
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... The believers are so on fire with their faith and fellowship that they joyfully burn all those labels marked "mine." Indeed, this first example of faith and fellowship gives a special depth of meaning to the term koinonia that will challenge all later generations of Christian communities. Martyria: One of the primary ways these new believers continue to practice community-mindedness is at table - breaking bread together. Since humanity's earliest tribal days, eating together has functioned as far more than ...

Acts 17:22-31
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... shrine. But while Paul admits that God can be seen through the evidences in creation and natural order, Paul quickly asserts that God can be truly known only through special revelation. For Paul's Stoic and Epicurean listeners, this represents a direct challenge. While both these ideologies might admit that the natural world reflects divine intention, they both deny the active presence of the divine within this world. In verses 29-31 Paul makes his argument for the purposeful and redemptive presence of God ...

Matthew 16:13-20
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... to see the investiture of the "keys" to Peter as being on behalf of the church, not based on his own position as "rock." Indeed, Peter as the rock is to be the foundation, the base, the unyielding, unchanging ground for a vital, moving, ever-challenged community to be known as the church. The gates of Hades cannot prevail against this church. The image suggests a community on the move, marching forward to defeat the powers of death and darkness that Hades represents. Thus, it would seem logical that it is ...

Romans 12:9-21
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... . Paul begins with a strong, succinct definition of an authentic Christian attitude. Literally verse 9 translates as "the love, unhypocritic" - Paul's injunction that we love genuinely with all sincerity. Such a simple command. Yet it is a demand that challenges all members of a koinonia community every moment of every day. Indeed among Paul's long litany, this first line remains the most difficult to consistently recreate. Where genuine love thrives, Paul suggests, these other attitudes will spring up and ...

Exodus 17:1-7
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... years in the wilderness under Moses' leadership and Yahweh's covenantal care.) In the third complaint the Israelites bring to Moses, the subject is once again water. No doubt, finding good drinking water for this large number of people was a continuing quest, a daily challenge. But 17:1 makes it clear that the direction and duration of the Hebrew's journey was being established by none other than the Lord. Yet when no water is found at the campsite of Rephidim, the people once again demand that Moses do ...

Philippians 3:4b-14
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... in both verse 12 and verse 14, intentionally presents an image that is physical and strenuous. In both verses it is very likely Paul has in mind the metaphor of a foot race. The present-tense form of this verb also indicates a repeated action a constant challenge. The "prize" Paul seeks is literally "the upward calling of God in Christ Jesus" (v.14, RSV). This upward calling is no less than a new life, an eternal life, made possible by God's work through Christ. It is the goal of a lifetime of faithfulness ...

Matthew 22:15-22
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
This week's gospel text presents one of the five head-on collisions Jesus had with the religious authorities. The first was in Matthew 21:23, where the chief priests and elders challenged Jesus' authority to teach and heal. There are also confrontations over the rising of the dead (22:23-33), the most important commandment (22:34-40), and the identity of the Messiah (22:41-46). But Matthew 22:15-22 isn't about anything as peripheral as the possibility of ...

1 Corinthians 8:1-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... is evidence to suggest that Paul's words were either forgotten, ignored or misunderstood for several centuries of church life? Paul's argument is far more able and demanding than he is usually given credit for. Indeed, it may have been simply too challenging for the church in the first few centuries of life or even today. Paul begins by quoting back to the "strong" Corinthians (to whose letter Paul is obviously responding) several of their own assertions. Paul concurs that it is true "all of us possess ...

Mark 1:29-39
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... and teachings. This focus is evident in Mark from the very first miracle story onward. At the synagogue in Capernaum (1:21ff.), Jesus' teaching astounds all those present for unlike the simple scribal tradition of retelling, Jesus probes the Scriptures, challenges his listeners and speaks as one with unquestionable authority. The authority theme continues when the unclean spirit reveals itself to Jesus while proclaiming to know Jesus' true identity. Whether it is to rid the man and the synagogue of this ...

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... brief, transitory moment in their faith journey, Peter, James and John, as well as Jesus, are all blessed with these moments of glory. When they descend, Jesus will encounter the hard way of the cross and his companions will be challenged to practice faithful discipleship. Jesus' transfiguration apparently affects his whole body transforming even his clothing. (Recall that Moses' mountaintop experience in Exodus 34:30 left its marks only on his face.) While Luke's version of the Transfiguration reveals that ...

Luke 24:36b-48
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... ? While some scholars have argued that their reaction proves they didn't really believe in Jesus' resurrection, particularities of this appearance story seem to point us in another direction. The disciples are characterized as frightened, but not necessarily disbelieving. The challenge confronting their belief seems to be more the nature of the risen Jesus. Luke records that they feared they were being visited by a ghost some sort of disembodied spiritual being. Jesus' words and actions in verses 39-43 all ...

Ephesians 6:10-20
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... verses read today mark the conclusion of this exhortative material, but in typical Ephesians' style the writer first crashes to a great crescendo of powerful images before closing. Interlocking pictures are stacked one upon another, increasing the drama of challenges confronting the believer. The author opens this section with a revealing "finally" denoting the beginning of this ending. There is a slight, but significant linguistic subtlety at the beginning of this text that must be clarified in order to ...

Mark 10:17-31
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... camel passing through the eye of a needle. Commentators who have tried to soften the impossibility of such a feat by surmising about some actual small, narrow gate through the city walls of Jerusalem, do a disservice both to Jesus' creative imagery and his challenging theology. Jesus' point is made succinctly in verse 27 it is impossible for men and women to save themselves, whatever their financial state. Only through God is there a possibility for salvation (see Genesis 18:14, Job 42:2, Zechariah 8:6 for ...

Mark 12:38-44
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... are constant. Today's gospel text demonstrates why all those who held traditional positions of religious power found Jesus' presence and preachings so disturbing. In the text immediately preceding this week's reading, Jesus questions the scribe's theology. He challenges their image of a powerful royal Davidic Messiah with his own observation that the expected Messiah will be a much different kind of "Lord" than a traditional royal personage. In verse 38, Jesus now moves from the scribes' erroneous theology ...

Mark 1:21-28
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... ” by Jesus’ teaching, recognizing it as qualitatively different, it takes a loud-mouthed “unclean spirit” to recognize his true nature. An “unclean spirit” is an ungodly, polluted spirit, an evil force that worked against God. The spirit directly addresses Jesus, challenging him with a traditional defensive phrase (literally “what is there between us and you?”) that denies any connection between the speaker and the one being addressed (see 1 Kings 17:18; 2 Kings 3:13; Judges 11:12, Mark 5 ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... for my soul.” That is why it had to be. Jesus could not ask his disciples to make a sacrifice he was not willing to make himself. There was no other way to reveal the awfulness of man’s sin and the awesomeness of God’s love. Of course, the challenge to each of us is to respond in faith to that love, to cast off the sin that so easily besets us, and to give our lives to him as he gave his life for us. 1. 1000 Windows: A Speaker’s Sourcebook of Illustrations, Standard Publishing Company, 1984. 2 ...

Sermon
Mike Ripski
... the religious establishment, Nicodemus, and his coming to Jesus at night to check him out. Jesus ends up checking Nicodemus out, for “Jesus himself knew what was in everyone.” So in Chapter 3 of John’s testimony to God’s good news focuses on Jesus’ challenge of a leader of the religious establishment, who can’t understand why Jesus says he needs to be reborn in order to enjoy that life where everyone lives as God intends. Now in Chapter 4, Jesus has another encounter and conversation. It’s the ...