Dictionary: Trust
Showing 3076 to 3100 of 5000 results

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... invites us to an upside-down way of living, an inside-out way of thinking. Are you brave enough to be a Crazy Dog? Jesus spent most of his ministry promoting "Crazy Dog" thinking - urging his disciples to join with him in the Crazy Dog pursuit of faithfulness and fulfillment. The Kingdom of God, Jesus insisted, would be filled with Crazy Dogs - people who believe the first are last, the greatest are the least, the strong are the weak, and the meek win it all. What is a Crazy Dog? The Crow Indians used to ...

Colossians 1:11-20
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... look unto the rock whence ye were hewn and to the hole of the pit whence ye are digged (KJV)." Whenever members of the Foot family saw the phrase "Pit and Rock," it was shorthand for them to remember that they were members of the household of faith, they were disciples of Jesus Christ, and that in whatever crisis they found themselves they were not alone - for all the resources of God in Christ were at their disposal. (This story is told in Eric G. Frost, Down-to-Earth Religion [London: Epworth Press, 1961 ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... ." Instead, some people have become kind of holistic junkies trying every new remedy, exploring every suggested avenue, in their hope that the key to personal wholeness will be found in that next cure-all therapy. The "hole" in "holistic" medicine is that it puts its faith in our own ability to balance our life our body, our spirit, our mind. While it is imperative that we do take responsibility for and control of our lifestyle, we cannot manipulate and maneuver our life force. We have only to look at our ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... need for action, doubts must be squelched. When you are up to your neck in water, you do not doubt whether you really learned how to swim. You cannot doubt; you just have to do it. Martha was clearly a woman of action who was willing to strap her faith to her feet. Sitting still and musing on the truth was evidently not Martha's cup of tea. In the other gospel story about Martha and Mary (Luke 10:38-42), Martha bustles about, busy at her hostessing duties while Mary sits quietly at Jesus' feet listening to ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... the whips, after the lions, after the iron chair, was at last thrown into a basket and presented to a bull. For a time, the animal tossed her, but she had now lost any sense of what was happening, thanks to her hope, her steadfast faith and her close communion with Christ (as quoted by Christopher Kelly in Times Literary Supplement, 22 December 1995, 22). The emperor Claudius was so hooked on violence that he ordered his soldiers to turn the faces of the mauled, mutilated, dying Christians in his direction ...

John 20:1-18
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... the empty cave. Mary's grief blinds her to the miracle she is witnessing. Even the sight of the "two angels" leaves her cold. She only responds mechanically and witlessly to their presence and words. She is the one entombed, buried in her grief, her lost faith, her self-absorbed sadness. In this state she turns to leave, only to be confronted by Jesus himself. Still, Mary does not recognize him. After all, she is looking for a corpse, not for a living being. Mary is finally called away from the ragged edge ...

Mark 9:38-50
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... community's focus on successfully enduring, not counting the duration of the days. Even as a farmer might have to tighten his belt as rations go short while the crop is in the field, these Christians must strengthen their hearts and firm up their faith - thus enabling them to endure. Like most of his contemporaries James did not expect that these believers would have to wait much longer for the expected Parousia. While he recognizes the tendency for tempers to flare as expectancy rises and pressure on the ...

Ephesians 1:11-23
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... are counseled to have confidence in this calling because it is based on God's divine power and might (or what the NRSV calls "counsel and will"). So great is this inheritance, so overwhelming the divine power making it possible, that the response of the faithful is to do nothing less than "live for the praise" of Christ's glory. As well as responding with unending praise, those Ephesians who had heard and seen the "truth," that is, the good news of salvation through Christ, took definitive action: They were ...

1 Peter 1:17-23
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... sake. 1 Peter's reference to "ancestors" plays two ways in the text to its first-century readers. Asia Minor, Gentile Christians may see this as an allusion both to their personal lineage and to their "adopted" kinship with the Hebrews through their faith relationship. Many of those 1 Peter was addressing had probably been brought to the cities in this region as slaves. Like the early Hebrews, many of them, over the years, had experienced "ransom" from their existence as slaves. But even so, they remained ...

Matthew 25:1-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... a situation in which both belief and actions are crucial to a fulfilled outcome. "Watchfulness" is mandatory. No one knows when the "bridegroom," Jesus Christ, will return. But as the "wise" and "foolish" virgins demonstrate, it is not enough simply to wait in faith that he will come. The "oil" of which the "wise" bring extra quantities and of which the "foolish" women run out has Midrashic roots as a symbol of "good works" or "obedience" (see Karl Paul Donfried, "The Allegory of the Ten Virgins (Matthew ...

2 Thessalonians 2:1-5, 13-17
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... placed is clear - for "traditions" must be passed down from one generation to the next with great care in order to ensure their continued strength. The tradition itself, however, is wholly capable of infusing these new Christians with all the strength their faith will ever need. The tradition Paul speaks of here is nothing less than the life, death, resurrection and ascension into glory of Jesus Christ. It is the power of this tradition that lends assurance to Paul's concluding prayer for the Thessalonians ...

John 20:1-18
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... the empty cave. Mary's grief blinds her to the miracle she is witnessing. Even the sight of the "two angels" leaves her cold. She only responds mechanically and witlessly to their presence and words. She is the one entombed, buried in her grief, her lost faith, her self-absorbed sadness. In this state she turns to leave, only to be confronted by Jesus himself. Still, Mary does not recognize him. After all, she is looking for a corpse, not for a living being. Mary is finally called away from the ragged edge ...

Mark 9:38-50
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... community's focus on successfully enduring, not counting the duration of the days. Even as a farmer might have to tighten his belt as rations go short while the crop is in the field, these Christians must strengthen their hearts and firm up their faith - thus enabling them to endure. Like most of his contemporaries James did not expect that these believers would have to wait much longer for the expected Parousia. While he recognizes the tendency for tempers to flare as expectancy rises and pressure on the ...

Ephesians 1:11-23
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... are counseled to have confidence in this calling because it is based on God's divine power and might (or what the NRSV calls "counsel and will"). So great is this inheritance, so overwhelming the divine power making it possible, that the response of the faithful is to do nothing less than "live for the praise" of Christ's glory. As well as responding with unending praise, those Ephesians who had heard and seen the "truth," that is, the good news of salvation through Christ, took definitive action: They were ...

1 Corinthians 12:1-11
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... always be directed toward the "common good." The diversity of genuine spiritual gifts works toward unity and harmony. Just as the true Spirit could never declare "Jesus is anathema," neither could a true Spirit of God work to disintegrate the bonds of faith that hold together a Christ-body community. With the purpose of spiritual gifts clearly established as the building up of the "common good," Paul now launches into a fearless list of diversities that the Spirit may well express in the Corinthian midst ...

Acts 9:1-6 (7-20)
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... our blindfold, we can still see the glorious radiance of Jesus, standing in our midst. God's love, pure and clear, shines before each of us. The first step is to remove our blindfold and cry out to that glory, "Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!" Then, with faith and humility, we must ask God for the most precious of all gifts, the ability to see our risen Savior. Let me open my eyes to the glorious light and love and power of Christ. We don't talk about it much, but after being struck blind, how scared ...

Colossians 1:15-28
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... Paul first focuses on the central place of suffering in his own life. Since Paul alludes to his own experiences for specific reasons, Paul wanted the Colossians to understand experiences of suffering not as signs of weakness or as testaments against a faithful proclaimer of the gospel, but rather as a model of Christian behavior for the church. It may be that Epaphras, whom Paul upholds and defends throughout this epistle, may have himself suffered attacks or losses that were being used as evidence against ...

1 Timothy 1:12-17
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... reservoir, sufficient for any sinner. Verse 15 offers the first of five "sure" sayings in the pastoral epistles (see 1 Timothy 3:1; 4:9; 2 Timothy 2:11a; Titus 3:8a). The term translated "sure" is pistos. More familiar to us as "faithful" or "trustworthy" (as translated in verse 12 to describe Paul), these "sure" sayings are used as verbal flags, marking a solemn emphasis on important sayings, especially those about salvation. (What topic could be more important?) The "sure" saying here has been described ...

John 11:1-45
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... ' tomb, Jesus joins Mary (and the Jews with her) in weeping over the tragedy of his death. At the sight of Jesus' tears, the crowd wonders at "how he loved him" (v.36). Some scholars have found in these tears Jesus' despair over a ubiquitous lack of faith. But there are no words of judgment or explanation - only tears. It seems to us that Jesus weeps over the power of death itself - the way it savages and cuts short human life, the way death devastates those left behind to mourn and lament. The bystanders ...

Matthew 15:(10-20) 21-28
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... accommodate a far more inclusive group of diners. But note that it is not the woman's cleverness Jesus praises or deems as the reason he will now give her the healing she desires. With his declaration, "Great is your faith," Jesus defines the new qualification for admission to the table - faithfulness. Jesus had attempted to keep the power of his presence restricted to the Israelites alone. He had even invoked the same language in verse 24 as he had when sending out his disciples in Matthew 10:5-6. But the ...

John 20:19-31
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... , there appears to be little doubt that Thomas did NOT take Jesus up on his invitation to finger his wounds. Instead, Jesus' words shove Thomas off his pedestal of doubt, and Thomas proclaims to Jesus with the most unqualified confession of faith possible: "My Lord and my God!" (v.28). Not surprisingly, Thomas' confession encapsulates the gospel writer's own theology. John presents Jesus as God-incarnate, that is, God-among-us. But especially in these post-resurrection passages, John is also concerned ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... rebels. He expected to spend the day in the small house that served as a POW dorm. The Chechen rebels surprised him when they took him out of his brick room to a glade. They invited him to convert to Islam. The young Russian soldier refused to forsake his faith. They ordered him to remove the silver crucifix that hung around his neck. He made it as a small boy and had proudly worn it ever since. He shook his head in defiance. His captors became enraged. The citizens of Moscow now recite a poem in his memory ...

Sermon
Mike Ripski
... him. Our trust is that over time we will become like him. His influence, his Spirit, will change our spirit, our mind, our heart. With the result that we’ll come to enjoy that blessed assurance that comes as we move from being “Little Faith-ers to being “Big Faith-ers.” It is such blessed assurance that allows us to pray Jesus’ prayer, “Not my will, but thine be done.” It is such blessed assurance that allows us to say with the Apostle Paul, “In any and all circumstances I have learned the ...

Psalm 111:1-10
Sermon
Mike Ripski
... live in the fear that we’ll settle for less than what God wants for us, we hear the Psalmist assert, that is the beginning of wisdom. The story is told of a king in Africa, who had a close friend with whom he grew up. The friend had a faith that no matter whatever happened to him, he could say, “This is good!” One day the king and his friend went hunting. The friend loaded the king’s rifles, so the king should shoot the game being hunted. One time the friend must have loaded the rifle wrongly, so ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... of the Covenant, and one of His names is Emmanuel, which means God with us. We worship the new Ark of the Covenant. God has given us His power and presence in His Son.” (4) We treasure the scriptures, both Old Testament and New. But the center of our faith is Jesus. He is the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. He is the new Ark of the Covenant. If you come to a passage in scripture you do not understand, think about Jesus. Does the passage reflect the love and compassion of Christ? If not, then ...