Dictionary: Hope
Showing 3376 to 3400 of 4955 results

1 Corinthians 13:1-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... as they may appear, are themselves only further indications of our living in the "between times" of God's eschatological fulfillment. Verses 9 and 10 make it clear that the loss of tongues and prophesy and knowledge are not to be mourned. Indeed, we in fact lose nothing, for as the "partial" recedes, it will be replaced by the "complete" and whole. Should we wail when someone takes away our broken fragment of pie-crust and replaces it with an entire pie? The elegant mystical language Paul uses in verses 11 ...

2 Corinthians 5:16-21
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... reconciling work and God's is very close and clear. The second half of verse 20 demonstrates Paul putting his God-given commission into action. In the cantankerous, contentious CorinthianChurch, there seemed ample evidence to Paul that reconciliation was not a fact. Even as he himself is the cause of some of the unreconciled attitudes, Paul pleads with the Corinthians to listen to his message of reconciliation. Paul concludes his appeal by posing one of the greatest paradoxes of the faith. Rudolf Bultmann ...

Luke 10:25-37
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... prisoners, give them wine and anoint them, and then - placing the most feeble upon asses - lead them all back to their waiting families in Jericho. So much for the spoils of war. Jesus' own version, of course, is filled with poignant details. There is the fact that the first two travelers who pass by the wounded man are members of the professionally religious - a priest and a Levite. The behavior of these two men, who of all people we might expect to show compassion for their fellow human - is shocking to ...

Luke 13:22-30
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... still underway, with Jesus going "through one town and village after another, teaching as he made his way to Jerusalem." In fact, this pericope begins the second stage of this travelogue section, extending from 13:22-17:10. Scholars have recognized that ... of Jesus' presence, but just recognizing this identity is not enough to allow those clamoring at the narrow door safe entry. In fact, the master of the house now rejects them even more completely. The ones seeking entry are now not just unknown. They are ...

Hebrews 13:1-8
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... grasping-gasping-greed, as the expression of Christian trust. This advice is not an out-of-context statement. The risks this author has been asking this community to take in befriending Christian strangers or reaching out to imprisoned brothers and sisters may, in fact, call for endangering their financial security. But since wealth is not an end itself, one is not being asked to risk anything of ultimate value. As verse 6 sings, Christian dependence is to be on Christ, not on material things. Verse 7 might ...

Mark 1:14-20
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... kingdom of God "has come near" (v.15). While these two "hinge" verses may at first appear to form a straightforward gate into the next phase of Jesus' ministry, in many ways they reflect the paradox that Jesus' own human/divine identity embodied. (The fact that the "time" [kairos] is both "fulfilled," and yet not proclaimed as "here and now" but rather as "come near," highlights the tension that accompanies the arrival of God's "kingdom.") It is both "now" and "not yet." The content and the consequences of ...

Deuteronomy 18:9-13, 14-22
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... had to worry about hearing a word from God. No group of people had experienced such direct messages from the divine, such hands-on guidance from God. The Israelites are not accustomed to needing methods for discernment and discovery of a delivered word. In fact, this text notes that the people are on record with Moses' begging that Yahweh will no longer address them directly, either in voice or in holy apparition (v.16). They think they have had far too much exposure to divine directives. Since the people ...

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... news, confused by the previously opened tomb and the missing body, it is not surprising for the reader to hear that these women "went out and fled from the tomb, for terror [tromos] and amazement [ekstasis] had seized them." But what can we make of the fact that in direct contradiction to the angel's instructions, these women "said nothing to anyone." In one sense, it is appropriate to halt abruptly the gospel story here. If the women did not go to tell the disciples about the empty tomb and did not urge ...

Acts 8:26-40
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... returning from such an experience that the Ethiopian eunuch encounters Philip. Yet another mark of this man's uncommon identity is revealed in verse 28. This eunuch is an educated man, capable of reading God's Word for himself. Philip now uses this fact and the Isaiah tradition to evangelize for Christ. The balance between the established Scripture and tradition of Judaism and the new message of the gospel is delicately maintained in today's lesson from Acts. In response to the eunuch's expressed desire to ...

John 15:9-17
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... mirror the relationship between Jesus and the Father. In both cases, obedience begets continuing love. This phrase is not unique to this text. It is also proclaimed in 14:15, 21, 23-24. The all-encompassing power of this love is suggested by the fact that there is no distinction made here between a singular "command" and plural "commands." Both are understood to refer to the same over-arching, all-defining command the command to love. Although the command to love is unambiguous, verse 11 fails to clearly ...

Mark 2:23-3:6
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... grain it is easy to see that scholars would wonder whether the disciples don't represent first-century Christians who had lately been "observed" by the Jewish authorities as not strictly following the traditional codes of the Jewish Sabbath Christians, who, in fact, had begun to worship on another day altogether. The church community cushions the potentially combative nature of verse 27 by adding the further explanatory sentence found in verse 28. By specifying the "Son of Man" as the one with lordship over ...

Mark 3:20-35
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... in the midst of another unit, which is subsequently sliced in half, has kept scholars guessing. In fact, scholars from varied disciplines often find Markan sandwiches useful for satisfying their own particular appetites. What all ... the inside out, it is possible to see the scribes' verbal attack on Jesus for blasphemy as an attempt to reclaim honor. The fact that Jesus a commoner outside the boundaries of the scribal tradition or Pharisaic authority had publicly amazed people with his mastery of Scripture, ...

Mark 4:26-34
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... the image of the Lord's warriors (3:11), who are sent out to "harvest" the wicked. In Jesus' parable, there is no expressly punitive response tied to this harvest, but there is a call to definitive action on the part of the farmer. Despite the fact that the farmer (i.e., Jesus' disciple) may remain ignorant of the divine work that accomplishes harvest time, action is obviously called for, and that call is obeyed. Bringing in the harvest itself is the parable's second focus which is measured by the farmer's ...

Mark 12:28-34
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... world rests on three things: the Law, sacrificial worship and expressions of love" (M. Aboth I.2). It was not until later rabbinical literature that these elements in religious life were reordered so that works of love were superior to cultic sacrificial rituals. In fact, this new order of importance may be the prime reason for adding this scribe's surprising observation into this text. At the time Mark's gospel was being completed and read, the temple ruins were fresh. The abrupt loss of the rich tradition ...

John 20:1-18
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... 3, Luke 24:1-3), John's intention here is simply to focus on what one of the women, Mary Magdalene, did that morning. Mary, he writes, summoned him and Peter to the tomb. That there were other women who visited the tomb as well is a fact already in evidence (Matthew names two women; Mark identifies three; the Lukan account names three as well as "other women," 24:10). John is specifically concerned with one of the women and her role on this great resurrection morning. She leaves early, while it was yet dark ...

Acts 9:1-6 (7-20)
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... as one of the earliest and most zealous of those persecuting the church (see Acts 8:1-3). In later autobiographical notes Paul testifies to his extreme sense of righteousness and his wholehearted love of the Torah-Law he sought to both follow and protect. In fact, it is Saul's precise knowledge of both Jewish and Roman law that makes him such an effective persecutor of the first Christians. Although he is consumed with hatred and rage against the preachers and practitioners of "the Way" (v.2), Saul's legal ...

Luke 7:36-8:3
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... she was a prostitute. She is not financially destitute. She brings with her a costly "alabaster jar of ointment." Her behavior suggests she has faced some emotional destitution, however, for at the sight of Jesus she begins to weep bathing his feet, in fact, with her tears. She follows this emotional display by then drying Jesus' feet with her hair, while continuing to apply tears and now the ointment in liberal quantities. By simply touching Jesus, this woman has ritually defiled him whether or not she was ...

Hosea 1:2-10
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... accessibility. Today's text begins with that weird divine word: "Go, take for yourself a wife of whoredom and have children of whoredom, for the land commits great whoredom by forsaking the LORD" (v.2). Hosea did what he was told. That fact alone reveals volumes about Hosea's faith and faithfulness to the God of Israel. What obedience to such a heart-wrenching, heartbreaking divine command must have cost him! Scholars have noted that through this divine dictum Yahweh transformed Hosea from a proscriptive ...

Hebrews 12:18-29
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... received an invitation. Abel's sacrifice offered vindication. Jesus' once-and-for-all sacrifice offers final forgiveness. This festive atmosphere, however, should not obscure the fact that this gathering is about serious business. Hebrews' concluding remarks remind readers that this gathering at Mt.Zion, this party thrown for our salvation, is in fact our last gasp chance to cross the gap. Apparently there were undercurrents of doubt, continuing asides of disbelief, that threatened the strength and joy of ...

Jeremiah 2:4-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... man in the year 627-626 B.C. during the waning years of the Assyrian Empire. The emerging, neo-Babylonian power, in fact, would shortly break away from the Assyrian grasp to become an independent state. The situation in the Mesopotamian area had become what ... faces north, not south. The Zion tradition, so much a part of Isaiah's work, is not represented in Jeremiah. The fact that Jeremiah in his early years was influenced by Hosea lends further credence to the notion that Jeremiah stood, especially in ...

Luke 16:1-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... acted dishonestly. Still, it is God's business to forgive and approve whom he will. We cannot condemn the manager if in fact his master refuses to do so. Rather, Jesus pointedly observes that the "children of this age" are more adept at dealing with ... through the lens of irony. Jesus' comments in verses 8-9 are better understood as an example of irony in which Jesus says in fact the precise opposite of his meaning. He may have said, "You are such a clever fellow, deceiving your master to feather your future ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... anyone greater than John the Baptist . . .” (Mt. 11:11). One reason John had such an impact on people may have been his humility. He was not on an ego trip. He was genuine. He was real. And he wasn’t interested in advancing his own agenda. In fact, Mark tells us that his message wasn’t about himself at all, but about the coming Messiah: “After me,” said John, “will come one more powerful than I, the thongs of whose sandals I am not worthy to stoop down and untie. I baptize you with water, but ...

Sermon
James McCormick
... difference between what is supposed to be and what is. I. That’s the first thing I want to say in today’s sermon. The fact is, a great many people do not experience religion as a lift. Instead, it is an additional load for them to bear. If they were ... enemy. He is the one who lays on us all the rules, the responsibilities, the obligations. We sense that God is not for us – in fact, if we don’t measure up, He will punish us. At the feeling level, that feels like an enemy no matter how much we talk ...

Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... Gospel of Thomas as well. While the parable of the sower focused on the variable growth process of all the seeds, the positive growth of both the wheat and the weeds is assumed in this story. Central to the wheat and weeds parable is the fact that the weeds are intentionally planted by a secretive, scheming neighbor. The weed, possibly a common local variety known as darnel, was a poisonous plant that looked very much like wheat when young. Thus, the malicious neighbor's deed isn't visible until the weeds ...

Philippians 3:4b-14
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... Jesus has made me his own" (as a baptized member of the Body of Christ), he also acknowledges that he has a long way to go before he achieves his goal of fully knowing the power of the resurrected Christ. Reaching this goal is, in fact, the Christian's lifelong journey of faith. Although his knowledge, his experience, is still limited, Paul commits himself to always striving forward. Christ's power is not trapped in some past event in one single historical resurrection but is revealed more and more until ...