Dictionary: Trust
Showing 3276 to 3300 of 4364 results

Acts 2:14, 22-32
Sermon
Schuyler Rhodes
... those who were present on the scene. Whether it's an accident, an encounter with a celebrity, or just someone who attended that church council gathering that you missed last week, we believe the one who was there. Even our legal system gives high credence to an "eyewitness." I suppose it makes sense, but it is kind of strange in a way. I remember meeting someone who actually knew one of the Beatles back in the late 1960s. Now, being a big fan, I've read lots of books about the Beatles. I've watched all the ...

Sermon
David J. Kalas
... person is "right on his heels." Jacob arrived, literally, right on Esau's heels. That second baby boy came out holding onto the heel of his slightly older brother, and so Isaac and Rebecca named him "Jacob," meaning "heel grabber." They named him for himself. I suppose it is hard to trace the cause-and-effect relationship between what parents perceive their child to be and what that child is. To what extent does a child earn the reputation he has within his family? And to what extent does the reputation he ...

Sermon
David J. Kalas
... not innately sinister. But when our fears carelessly personify the threat that they feel, they turn into sloppy and odious prejudices. Then begins a vicious cycle: Our prejudices expand our fears, and our fears fuel our prejudices. It serves us right then, I suppose, that our hatreds so often turn around and haunt us. The Egyptians forced their former guests into bondage, but only to find that "the more they were oppressed, the more they multiplied and spread." So what began as fear turned to prejudice; and ...

Exodus 12:1-14
Sermon
David J. Kalas
... instructions from God. There was a certain menu that they were to prepare: lamb, bread, and bitter herbs. There was a specified way of preparing it, as well: the lamb was to be roasted, and the bread unleavened. And, too, there was a certain way that they were supposed to eat this prescribed meal: "This is how you shall eat it: your loins girded, your sandals on your feet, and your staff in your hand; and you shall eat it hurriedly." See the picture in your mind's eye of elegant dining. You arrive at a fine ...

Sermon
David J. Kalas
It is an incongruous scene: a multitude in the desert. The desert is supposed to be desolate, barren, devoid of life. There may be the occasional sturdy breed of plant, animal, or insect that can survive the inhospitable environment, but little else. Rivers and lakes may teem with fish; the forests are full of birds and wildlife; the fields and prairies are home to ...

Sermon
John N. Brittain
... is to be happy and to feel good about oneself." "God does not need to be particularly involved in one's life except when God is needed to resolve a problem." "Good people go to heaven when they die." (4) Isaac Watts, the great hymn writer, is supposed to have commented upon reading Jonathan Edward's famous sermon, "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God," with the words, "Could use a bit more of ye gospelle," in other words it could have used a little more emphasis on God's mercy. My reaction to "Moralistic ...

Sermon
John N. Brittain
... or as my mother used to tell us "Patience is a virtue." But we need to remember that — as with so many other attributes — everything that passes as patience is not necessarily Christian patience. Margaret Thatcher, the "Iron Lady" of late twentieth-century British politics, is supposed to have said that she was a very patient lady, "As long as I get my own way in the end." You may have heard the story of the soft-spoken trucker who was having a meal at a roadside diner when three belligerent bikers came ...

1 Corinthians 3:10-11, 16-23
Sermon
John N. Brittain
... II football program and soon had been dismissed from both the team and the school. He was either unwilling or unable to read and understand the playbooks that were necessary at this next level. He turned out to not be as good as he and others supposed. What goes for a single athlete sometimes goes for the whole team. Finney went on: "Christians will have their faith renewed. While they are in their backslidden state they are blind to the state of sinners. Their hearts are hard as marble. The truths of the ...

1 Corinthians 4:1-5
Sermon
John N. Brittain
As the current century dawned, Time magazine placed Einstein on the front cover as the Person of the Century. By happenstance, Mohandas Gandhi was on the back cover as part of an advertisement for a computer company. I suppose that says something about our values. What is it that we really think is most important in life? In church we talk about the need for Christians to be "different," a chosen people, a royal priesthood. What does that mean? How do Christians need to be different? Over the years, ...

2 Corinthians 5:11 – 6:13
Sermon
David O. Bales
... various media, is like a constant Mardi Gras. In the US, anymore, Mardi Gras, except for the calendar, has nothing to do with Lent. If someone on the night before Lent wants truly to celebrate something about Jesus, it wouldn't be Mardi Gras. Lent isn't supposed to be a "funny ha-ha" time. Nothing will glorify God if we're morbid; but our faith isn't a religious Disneyland, either. Time must come — call it Lent, or a retreat, or a reassessment — when we become serious about our faith. Time must come, so ...

Romans 4:1-5, 13-17
Sermon
David O. Bales
... built on promise and trust. Twice in my ministry, I've had men phone me, anonymously, and say something like, "I've heard you know a lot about the Bible." After a couple responses, their request has come down to, "Would you tell my wife she's supposed to obey me?" Such conversations put me instantly into the serious mode. I stifle my reaction toward humor, even though I could think of a dozen hilarious things to say about such a predicament. Both of these men were in serious trouble in their marriages. The ...

Sermon
David O. Bales
... . People who live in one time zone close to another have to calculate which time to leave in one zone to arrive on time next door — living on the fence between two clocks. In spring and fall add Daylight Saving Time changes to the mix and calculate how anyone's supposed to get to worship on time! G. A. Studdert Kennedy wrote a poem back when the word "man" clearly meant human. I recall its name as something like "Sinner and Saint." I'm a man, and a man's a mixture,I'm a man, and a man's a ...

1 Peter 1:17-23
Sermon
David O. Bales
... want us around. The Holy Spirit within us prompts us to stretch in our thinking, living, and loving for God, despite the pressures upon us in any culture to live as less than Christians. Albert Schweitzer stretched in faith and service. Like him we aren't supposed to reflect the values and behaviors of the society in which we live. We're odd. We're here to reflect God's glory, setting our faith and hope in God. Peter instructs us to center ourselves upon our Lord Jesus. Remember what Jesus did for you ...

1 Corinthians 12:1-11
Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... Pentecost ... again. The church is like the human body. Christ is the head. We are the members and limbs of the body. We are the body parts. The body parts need to be connected to the head to function properly. The Holy Spirit connects us to Christ. I suppose that you might call the Holy Spirit "the neck." As a result, all the members of the body are essential and important if the body is to function properly. I know that we sometimes honor some parts of our body more than others. Some parts of our bodies ...

Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... years ago, the television series, Murder She Wrote, was a similar adaptation of this style. A crime was committed. The suspects were examined. By the end of the story, Inspector Poirot (or similar character) solved the mystery by identifying the culprit. The butler did it! Suppose you came across a murder mystery you had never read before. You bought the book or checked it out of the library, and, when you got it home, you cheated. When nobody was looking, you read the last chapter first. Then you went back ...

Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... can't be good. The deadpan voice of the police officer tells you the horrible news rather matter-of-factly. Your imagination runs wild. You were not there, but you can hear the tires screeching, the metal smashing, the glass breaking, and the sirens whining. It was not supposed to end this way. She had so much of life yet to live. Your boss calls you into his office. Other members of the department are gathered around his desk. No one wants to look you in the eye. Something is wrong. You can feel it in the ...

Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... and pain a woman goes through as she gives birth to a child. The pain seems terrible but is all worthwhile because it is the beginning of new life. Once the baby is born, the pain is forgotten. The pain was worth it because of the life that resulted. I suppose it is not all that unlike the "pain" that a child must go through waiting for Christmas to arrive. It is painful to see the gifts pile up under the tree and not be able to open any. It is painful to tell Santa what you want but then have ...

Sermon
Larry Lange
... 't see anything ahead. There was no reason to believe I was going to survive this drive. I was on my way home from an out-of-town hospital visit, and I had planned to stop at the town hall for a walleye fry benefit for Larry which, I supposed, was like everything else in Larry's life, ruined. The parking lot, when I finally reached it long after there were any walleye left to fry, was completely full. I was soaking wet, shivering, starving. Inside the town hall it was bright as day and as warm and humid ...

1 Thessalonians 1:1-10
Sermon
Mary S. Lautensleger
... . His parents divorced, and he had to move several hundred miles from his friends and familiar surroundings. Anger and alienation were apparent within the extended family. His mother remarried but that marriage also broke up, and again he had to relocate. God was not supposed to let things like this happen to good people. Roger had been raised in the church, but the familiar God he had known as a child became lofty, distant, and unavailable. Roger felt that his prayers were not being heard. Even though his ...

Sermon
Mary S. Lautensleger
... In the New Testament, God is the head shepherd, calling and appointing other people to act as shepherds of God's sheep. Jesus is the good shepherd who "lays down his life for the sheep" (John 10:11). Jesus has demonstrated to us what shepherding is supposed to be, and Paul has followed this example. A shepherd is a servant leader whose job description includes leading others toward God. Servant is a word that can have several meanings. Servant may bring to mind a slave who is forced to labor against her or ...

3296. The Tradition of the Put Down
Luke 14:1, 7-14
Illustration
Mark Trotter
... for the opening night of my new play, one for you and one for a friend, if you have one." Churchill sent them back with this note, "I cannot attend opening night. Send me two tickets for the next night, if there is one." I suppose wherever you go, wherever there are hierarchical institutions, or any institutions for that matter, you will have concern about status, some people in upper echelons of power and others below them. The people below are probably telling these put-downs, stories about the people ...

3297. He Who Exalts Himself Will Be Humbled
Luke 14:1-24
Illustration
Mark Trotter
... . He was disheveled. He was obviously a homeless street person. She was sitting at table with him, listening intently to what he had to say. Now I want you to have in mind Jesus' parable of the banquet and the seats at the table, and where you are supposed to be at that banquet. She is at table with this street person, giving him her full attention. So she didn't notice Coles come in the room. He stood beside the door, waited for her to finish. When she finished the conversation she stood up. That is ...

3298. God Loves Me
Luke 15:1-32
Illustration
Mark Trotter
... story about Maya Angelou. She was an active member of Glide Memorial United Methodist Church in San Francisco before her death. She wrote that when she first came to San Francisco as a young woman she became sophisticated. She said that was what you were supposed to do when you go to San Francisco, you become sophisticated. And for that reason she said she became agnostic. She thought the two went together. She said that it wasn't that she stopped believing in God, just that God no longer frequented the ...

Hebrews 11:1-3, 8-15
Sermon
Billy D. Strayhorn
... ago. Binoculars help you see something up close. They bring that which is distant in close. Therefore, they are a good metaphor for looking into the future. A much better symbol, I think than tarot cards or even a crystal ball. It's a ball, balls are supposed to bounce or be hit, not looked into. Binoculars, you look into. I've always wondered what kind of binoculars Paul Moller had. It was either 1965 or 1966 when I first ran across the name Paul Moller. It was in Popular Mechanics or Popular Science or ...

2 Kings 2:1-2, 6-14
Sermon
Billy D. Strayhorn
... 's blessing. A Double Portion of God's healing power. I. Healing A. You see, I believe in healing. And while this passage doesn't have anything to do with healing, it does tells us to seek a Double Portion of God's blessing in healing. We know we're supposed to bring everything to Christ. Jesus doesn't say "Come to me all who are weary and carry heavy burdens" and then give us a list of those who can't come. Or burdens we can't bring to him. No, Jesus said, "Come to me all. . ." I take that ...