Dictionary: Trust
Showing 301 to 325 of 3263 results

John 18:28-40
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... Jesus engages more personally with Pilate. Jesus’ response is to ask Pilate if the question he poses is his own. That is, does Pilate have any real interest in Jesus’ true identity? Or is it simply a restatement of the Sanhedrin’s legal charges? Pilate does have his own agenda. But it is not to explore the genuine nature of Jesus’ identity. Rather, it is to understand the impetus behind the Sanhedrin’s murderous intentions. Jesus is obviously part of some internecine conflict now being played out ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... was frustrated by Jesus. It was also clear to him that Jesus posed no threat to the empire. He said himself that his kingdom was not of this world. Pilate went out again to the religious authorities and said, “I find no basis for a charge against him.” Pilate tried to reason with them. Then he tried to bribe them. He remembered that the Jews had a tradition that they would release one prisoner at Passover. He offered to release a notorious political prisoner named Barabbas! Still they would not be ...

Sermon
Tony Everett
... him” (Acts 2:39). Now is God’s saving game plan coming into focus? It begins with what God has done, is doing, and promises to continue doing. It begins with God’s saving claim of us and God’s loving frame around us. Because God is in charge, therefore, we can change. Because in Jesus God has turned the world’s view of reality upside down, therefore, we are not trapped and entombed by old ways of thinking and feeling. Because God has turned toward us first, therefore it is possible now for us to ...

Sermon
Tony Everett
... spin out of control in an instant. (Remember Daryl and the sidewalk?) Sometimes it seems like it takes all of our efforts and energy simply to avoid a total collapse into chaos. Here in this community, the risen Christ, the Son of Man, reminds us that he is in charge. We are not and will never be. Here in this community, the Spirit of God who created the universe out of chaos, gives us a vision of the one who brings order in the midst of confusion, courage in the midst of cowardice, and calm in the midst of ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... abundant life. Our “appetites” often drive us to do whatever we can to make more money, to be more successful. But sometimes our “appetites” are not that identifiable. Do you have an appetite to “always be right?” Do you have an appetite to always be in charge? Do you have an appetite to always organize, but never obey, to always be a host, but never be a guest? When Paul met up with Jesus on the Damascus Road, he did not just lose his pecking-order place in the ladder-climbing hierarchy of the ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... from the dead, because if He did, not only can we not stop them, we had better join them!” Nevertheless, they take his advice and decide to let the apostles go. Good news! Uh…bad News. “And when they had called in the apostles, they beat them and charged them not to speak in the name of Jesus, and let them go.” (Acts 5:40, ESV) Don’t be misled by that gently sounding word “beat.” The word literally means “to be flogged.” If you saw “The Passion of The Christ” you saw what flogging was ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... are in God’s hands. We must take it seriously. We want to be prepared for the day of his coming. What can we learn from the words of our Lord for this day? Christ paints a picture for us. A man is going away. He puts his servants in charge, each with an assigned task. He tells the one at the door to keep watch. Then Christ turns to his disciples and says, “Therefore keep watch because you do not know when the owner of the house will come back . . .” Now notice his words, “whether in the evening, or ...

Sermon
David J. Kalas
... passage, verses 24-32 are represented in the same contexts in Matthew 24 and Luke 21. Verses 33-37, however, are not found in the corresponding portions of Matthew and Luke. If Mark’s brief reference to a man going on a journey and leaving servants in charge is an abbreviated form of the parable of the talents, as some have argued, then we find it elsewhere in Matthew (ch. 25) and Luke (ch. 19). In both Matthew and Mark, therefore, this entire teaching is found in the midst of the Holy Week narrative. In ...

John 8:1-11
Sermon
James Merritt
... act of adultery. Now in the Law Moses commanded us to stone such women. So what do you say?’” (John 8:2-5, ESV) There is no question as to this woman’s guilt. There is no alibi, no excuse, no explanation, and no mitigating circumstances. She is guilty as charged. Later on investigation shows that she was set up so that Jesus could be set up. A simple question needs to be asked, “Where was the man?” She was caught in the act with a man and the man also has to be punished, but he is nowhere to be ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... self-determination. Nevertheless, for the reason mentioned earlier (see on vv. 34–35), the council followed Gamaliel’s advice (v. 38f.). 5:40 The apostles were recalled and sentenced to be whipped. The charge of blasphemy (if indeed that had been the charge) was apparently dropped, leaving only the lesser charge of disobedience. It was within the competence of the Sanhedrin, and also of the lower synagogal courts, both to sentence and to carry out punishment without deference to the Roman authorities in ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... had now dawned with Jesus” (Hengel, Jesus, p. 23). Not that Jesus in Stephen’s teaching stood apart from Moses. On the contrary, he was, for Stephen, the Prophet-like-Moses (see disc. on 7:35ff., also 3:22). Hence his estimate of him as the law-giver. Notice the charge in verse 14. Stephen did not teach that Christ “is the end of the law” (Rom. 10:4), only that he had changed the law (lit. “the customs,” both the written law and the oral traditions; see disc. on 4:2f.; cf. 15:1; 21:21; 26:3; 28 ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... and may be identified with “the place called Gabbatha”—the stone pavement where Jesus was tried. The barracks, therefore, to which Paul was taken may also have been the scene of Jesus’ scourging. As on that occasion, so now a centurion was in charge of the detail assigned to “interrogate” Paul. Roman practice in scourging varied with the status of the victim. Under some circumstances, a Roman citizen might be beaten with a rod, but in the case of slaves and non-Romans a whip of knotted ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... a criminal, matter, and as such held no interest for the Romans. 23:30 Lysias was probably glad to be rid of Paul, and in any case the governor was the proper authority to deal with the matter. He had told the Jews that if they wished to lay charges they should do so before the governor. The usual “farewell” at the end of a letter is omitted here by the best manuscripts. 23:31–32 Antipatris had been rebuilt by Herod the Great and named in honor of his father, Antipater. It was not a fortress, but it ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... v. 18), but he was anxious to start out on good terms with the Jews, so he proposed to Paul, in response to the Jews’ earlier request (v. 3), that he should go to Jerusalem for another hearing. This proposal was tantamount to acquitting Paul of any charge under Roman law. It had reference only to his alleged offenses against the law of Moses and the temple, which would be heard by the Sanhedrin. The phrase before me cannot mean that Festus would be the judge; otherwise, where was the favor to the Jews (in ...

2 Corinthians 5:1-10
Understanding Series
James M. Scott
... transformed as a consequence of his heavenly ascents. His opponents could at least expect that his face would be charged with glory as Moses’ face was (cf. 3:7, 13). Instead, however, Paul’s appearance is quite unimpressive (cf. ... :14, 17; 4:6; 12:2–4), and that fact is very much at issue in the present section of his defense. He is open to the charge of being a fraud, since there are no visible signs of his having encountered the merkabah. Paul’s conclusion to the issue in this section is tantamount ...

2 Corinthians 5:11--6:2
Understanding Series
James M. Scott
... of his stature, for I have rejected him with contempt. For God sees not as a man looks: Man looks at the face, but God looks at the heart” (cf. Ps.-Philo 59:2; b. Sanh. 106b; Gal. 2:6). As we have discussed, Paul is open to the charge of being a fraud, because his glorious claims (cf. 4:6) cannot be verified by any physical change in his body like the one that Moses experienced in his face (cf. 3:7–18; p. 102). Indeed, the process of heavenly ascent itself could have been expected to transform ...

Understanding Series
James M. Scott
... accusation brought against him by the Corinthians. Whereas in verses 14–15 Paul has tried to reassure the Corinthians of his love despite the fact that he refuses to accept support from them, in verses 16–18, he must now defend himself against the charge of exploiting the Corinthians by means of his coworkers. In effect, Paul is being accused of a confidence game, in which he himself poses as the selfless apostle (I have not been a burden to you), while his accomplices carry out the actual exploitation ...

Understanding Series
L. Ann Jervis
... that at Jerusalem particular Christians (the false believers) were allowed in for the purpose of spying on the freedom that they had in Christ Jesus. Of course, the “false brothers” charged that Paul was hypocritical and false. Paul defends himself against such charges throughout the letter: he is the one who clings to the truth of the gospel; he is the one who acts with the courage of his convictions and sticks to his principles. In defending himself Paul caricatures his opponents as false. Paul ...

Galatians 3:15-25, Galatians 3:1-14
Understanding Series
L. Ann Jervis
... he raised in verse 19. The law’s purpose was custodial for the period before Christ. The law’s function was both negative and positive, for while it confined (v. 23), it did so with a view to liberation. The law’s role was to be in charge so that we might be justified by faith. The Greek word translated by “in charge” (paidagōgos) means pedagogue, tutor, or guardian. In the ancient Greco-Roman world a pedagogue was a standard member of a well-to-do household. Pedagogues were the guardians in ...

Understanding Series
Gordon D. Fee
... to Macedonia, so now I urge you in writing, stay in Ephesus.” Whether Paul has recently been in Ephesus is a moot point. Guthrie, probably because of how Paul expresses himself in 3:14, suggests that he may have “left Timothy en route for Ephesus, and charged him to abide there” (p. 57). More recently, J. D. Quinn, who does not think Paul wrote the letters, has offered the very attractive alternative that the author intended them to be read in the order Titus, 1 Timothy, 2 Timothy; so that Paul moved ...

Understanding Series
Gordon D. Fee
... or exclusivist mentality among their followers. The whole paragraph attacks that narrowness. 2:1 Although this sentence clearly begins something new, the then (better, “therefore”) also ties it to what has gone before. But what? Most likely it goes all the way back to the charge in 1:3, but now by way of verses 18–20. What Paul says, then, is: “Even as I urged you, stay there in Ephesus to stop the false teachers. I now urge, therefore, first of all, that …” The first of all suggests not so ...

Understanding Series
Norman Hillyer
... a place by name, as in Luke 10:39 (“a sister called Mary”) or Luke 7:11 (“a town called Nain”). 2. It means to call someone to take up a task or responsibility. Paul is “called to be an apostle” (Rom. 1:1). Certain servants are “called” to take charge in their master’s absence (Luke 19:13). 3. It is used to summon someone to a law court to give an account of his actions (Acts 4:18; 24:2). 4. It is the regular word for calling friends to a meal, inviting them to a pleasant social occasion ...

Understanding Series
Louis C. Jonker
... report of the oracle turns into an exhortation to the people (so now in 28:8) in which they are encouraged, Be careful to follow all the commands of the LORD your God. The two Hebrew verbs here (shamar, “keep,” and darash, “seek”) are programmatic. This charge comes in the sight of all Israel and of the assembly of the LORD, and in the hearing of our God. The “commands” should be sought that the people may possess this good land and pass it on as an inheritance to your descendants forever. The ...

Understanding Series
Leslie C. Allen
... The precise meaning of the Akkadian loan phrase beʿel-teʿem used here and translated commanding officer is uncertain. F. Rosenthal, A Grammar of Biblical Aramaic (Porta Linguarum Orientalium 5; 6th ed.; Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 1995), p. 62, renders generally “official in charge.” The letter itself does not begin until v. 11b. It has two introductions in vv. 8–10. One expects the letter to begin after as follows, but v. 9 strangely begins again with “then” (NRSV, omitted in the NIV) and a ...

Understanding Series
Elizabeth Huwiler
... describe the first as a wish-fulfillment dream, the second as a nightmare. This passage (5:2–7) overlaps in other ways with 2:8–14. In both the woman hears her lover coming and in both he issues a request to her. Verses 2–7 are charged with sexual innuendo. The man’s request is Open to me—not specifically “open the door.” The woman complains that she has already washed her feet. In the Bible feet are occasionally a euphemism for genitals. The man thrust his hand into the opening (latch in the ...

Showing results