Dictionary: Hope
Showing 326 to 350 of 452 results

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... firm E. F. Hutton, one of the most respected financial firms in the United States, was so highly esteemed that its famous advertisements featured the line, “When E. F. Hutton talks, people listen.” The confidence this firm inspired (or at least aspired to) parallels how Job was esteemed by people in his community. Biography: Henri Nouwen. The well-known Catholic priest and writer Henri Nouwen (1932–96) left his brilliant teaching career at Harvard in order to minister to mentally handicapped men at ...

Teach the Text
C. Hassell Bullock
... liars and deceivers, could qualify as the backdrop. Absalom’s rebellion, however, the likely background of Psalms 3–5, could also qualify, based on this rebel son’s use of deceptive words to steal the hearts of the people of Israel for his insurgent aspirations (2 Sam. 15:1–6). Nevertheless, we cannot be as confident about the historical setting as we can about the fate of truth (12:2) and the bloated self-assurance of truth’s clients, however unjustified. Judging from Psalm 14 and other texts ...

Teach the Text
C. Hassell Bullock
... is life itself,[17] and it climaxes in the presence of God. “Your presence” is literally, “your face.” In the Old Testament seeing God’s face was so awesome that it carried the penalty of death (Exod. 33:20). Yet that continued to be the spiritual aspiration of the great worthies of faith, to see God’s face and live. Historically speaking, this is a reference to worship in the temple (Ps. 11:7), and in the history of redemption it is symbolic of the ultimate state when believers will see God’s ...

Teach the Text
C. Hassell Bullock
... 18 and 19 may be a response by a later, perhaps postexilic, community.14Yet, while it may seem like an alien thought in the psalm, the suppliant is so emotionally related to Zion that a restoration of his relationship to Yahweh will leave his aspirations only partially fulfilled. His inner cleansing and restoration to the joy of God’s salvation require the restoration of Zion. Not only does the psalmist’s fulfillment require the welfare of Zion, but God’s own full delight in the offerings made in Zion ...

2 Thessalonians 3:6-13
Sermon
King Duncan
... we not strive to give our best? There is an old Hebrew saying that God is more delighted in adverbs than nouns. That is, it matters not so much what is done as how it is done. Not how much, as much as, how well. As someone has noted, aspiring to excellence in service to God is deeply rooted in our faith heritage. God did not create the heavens and the earth and say, “It’s good enough.” Rather, we read, “God saw everything that he had made, and indeed, it was very good” (Genesis 1:31). Throughout ...

Isaiah 11:1-10, Matthew 3:1-12, Romans 15:4-13
Sermon
King Duncan
... of the prophets, however, was not only one of personal salvation but also the salvation of Israel, and through Israel, the salvation of the world. What good is it if we save the individual but leave him in a world that tramples upon his dignity and crushes his aspirations? We need to affirm that when the Messiah--the Christ--came into the world he brought with him the seed of a new kingdom--a kingdom that is still alive and still at work whenever the name of Jesus is on the lips of believers. It is a ...

Judges 9:1-57
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... in general or only speaks to the particular situation concerning Abimelek and the Shechemites. Those who support the former interpretation point out that, since the fable suggests that honorable and productive people have no desire to become king, but only the unworthy aspire to it, kingship must therefore be an inherently bad idea. While such a reading is possible, it is more likely that by casting Abimelek as the thornbush and the Shechemites as trees looking for a king, Jotham is making the point that ...

Isaiah 13:1--14:23
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... than the ancient people who built a city to make a name for themselves (Gen. 11:1–9). Likewise, Babylon’s goal was to reach into heaven and to take the place of the Most High. But it too will be cast down. The greater the aspirations, the worse the fall. Isaiah uses this dramatic interlude to build up suspense. Will the spirits of the netherworld welcome the king of Babylon? The spirits first gaze with amazement at the beggarly and weak king, covered with maggots. They respond with unbelief, mocking the ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... of the world powers seems to be unassailable, God will shake and overthrow them and establish his own kingdom. (See, e.g., Zech. 12:1–5; 14:1–9.) Zerubbabel was in the royal line, but he never reigned as king; nor were there any aspirations on Haggai’s part to make him king. The context is clearly eschatological, and Haggai uses Zerubbabel, the current representative of David’s royal line, to point to the Messiah. The reference to Zerubbabel as “my servant” and as the one whom God has chosen ...

1 Timothy 3:1-16
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... undisturbed life. It is no coincidence that there is a large overlap between the virtues Paul requires of overseers and the virtues secular sources praise in community leaders. Paul urges those who should be leaders to rise to the task: the one who aspires to be “an overseer” (or “bishop,” KJV, RSV, NRSV) “desires a noble task” (3:1). At the same time, Paul urges the church to reevaluate the criteria by which they have been selecting their leaders. The qualification list opens and closes with ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... the wealthy can invest: Paul turns finally to those from whom the most serious issues at Ephesus have emerged: “those who are rich in this present world” (6:17). The women usurpers are rich (2:9–15). Prosperous household heads need to learn what is worthy of aspiring to and how to do so (3:1–10). Those with means must learn not to hoard for themselves but to care for family members (5:1–9) and for the church’s poor (5:9–16). Wealth presents both dangers and opportunities. Paul leads with the ...

2 Timothy 3:10--4:8
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... to lament and rejoice and live in accordance with his wisdom. Finally, there is “training in righteousness”: an all-encompassing term for education and spiritual formation in Paul’s world. With this last phrase, Paul indicates that the world’s highest aspirations for wisdom are more than met in the account of redemption in Christ anticipated and embedded in Israel’s Scriptures. 4:1–5 · Third appeal, part two: . . . and preach the gospel: In an ultimate effort to strengthen his timid protég ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... moments of irony lies in Paul’s literary wink: “This testimony is true” (1:13). Cretan Christians minister in a culture that confesses that when it comes to honoring the divine, promoting justice, and governing the self, there is a gap between aspiration and realization. The Cretan prophet’s saying provides the keynote for Paul’s message to Crete’s Christians. This becomes clear when we get to Titus 2:11–12: “The grace of God . . . has appeared. . . . It teaches us . . . to live self ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... it is the (implied) Father who is the subject of the main verb of the whole sentence: “he saved” (3:5). Moreover, it is the (implied) Father who pours out the Holy Spirit. Finally, these verses sweep Paul’s use of Hellenistic aspirations (to sobriety, justice, and piety) and Hebrew narrative (exodus and covenant community) into his familiar theology of baptismal washing, justification “not because of righteous things we had done,” and inward “rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit.” 3:8–11 ...

Matthew 13:1-9, 18-23
Sermon
Tom Garrison
... . By this time in his ministry, Jesus had come home to the fact that about three out of four of the things he would like to see happen would not materialize because of factors beyond his control. Here is the humble recognition that the reach of human aspiration does exceed our ability to grasp or achieve. Three out of four of the seeds that left the sower's hand in hope did not come to flower. It is interesting to note Jesus' numbers at this point. They parallel rather accurately what is true in the ...

Matthew 25:31-46
Sermon
David G. Rogne
... . He saw himself as the world saw him — "The Dynamite King," the great industrialist who made a fortune as a merchant of death and destruction. This, as far as the public was concerned, was the entire purpose of his life. None of his other aspirations — to break down the barriers that separated people and ideas — were recognized or given serious consideration. As he read his obituary with horror, Nobel resolved to make clear to the world the true meaning and purpose of his life. And through the final ...

Understanding Series
Larry W. Hurtado
... the crime for which he was to be executed. At his execution, this notice was placed on his cross, intended as a deterrent for others who might consider the same crime. The notice placed on Jesus’ cross both expressed contempt for Jewish aspirations of freedom from Rome and gave the charge for which Jesus was condemned: political subversion against Roman rule. 15:27 Two robbers: These criminals may very well have been others deemed subversives by the governor, for the term “robber” or “bandit” is ...

Understanding Series
Craig A. Evans
... Rome (A.D. 66–70) may very possibly be in mind. Many Jews followed a would-be messiah named Simon bar Giora (as well as other leaders). Through his leadership it was hoped that Rome would be defeated and the kingdom of God inaugurated. These hopes and aspirations proved to be unfounded, and the city of Jerusalem, along with its temple, was destroyed. 17:26 in the days of Noah: In the period between the Testaments, Noah was viewed as a righteous man who live among godless people (see 1 Pet. 3:20; 2 Pet ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... , “I will also make you a light for the Gentiles, that you may bring my salvation to the ends of the earth” (v. 6). Paul’s life was a commentary on this verse. He considered himself the apostle to the Gentiles (Acts 22:21; Gal. 2:9), and he aspired to preach to Jews and Gentiles, not only in Rome but to “the limits of the West,” as Clement of Rome would later say (1 Clem. 5:7). Paul also refers to himself as an apostle. The Greek noun apostolos, from which the English word “apostle” is derived ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... problem of imaginary gods. “How many there are even today who worship him not as if he were God but as if he were as they themselves imagine him for themselves!” (Lectures on Romans, p. 25). In a withering criticism of religious aspirations Feuerbach asserted that “god” is simply a projection of the human imagination. This is supremely illustrated by Milton’s Satan, who, seeing the Son of God at the Father’s right hand, suffered a “sense of injur’d merit,” and “thought himself impaired ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... flesh.” “Flesh” (Gk. sarx), of course, is a key Pauline concept. Sinful nature suggests something evil, whereas “flesh” in Paul’s understanding (when it does not simply mean “physical”) pertains to all aspects of life—including individual aspirations, culture, politics, economics, and even religion (2:28)—that resist or stand apart from God’s redemption. Although “flesh” suggests the material side of human nature in contrast to the spiritual, reminiscent of the body/soul dichotomy ...

Romans 8:18-27
Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... ē, suggests perseverance and endurance, especially in the face of toil and suffering (cf. 5:3–5). Patience renounces the ego and its claims and submits to God’s will, way, and timing. Like patience, hope is purified through submission. Only where one has forsaken personal aspirations and agendas can one stake one’s hopes on the promises of God. Hope belongs to the One who holds the future, not in the things which occupy the present. 8:26–27 Paul now returns to the advocacy of the Spirit, a subject ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... the claims of an idolatrous regime. Martin Luther mistakenly overlooked this corollary when he made the idea of two kingdoms—one sacred, one secular—into a theological doctrine. Some 30 years after Paul wrote Romans, when the Emperor Domitian (A.D. 81–96) aspired to usurp the place of God, the author of the Revelation saw that both the purpose and limits of government had been exceeded and that the state had become “a great prostitute” (Rev. 14:8, 17–18). Obedience to God in such circumstances ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... . A classic example of this was his ministry in Ephesus, from which converts moved up the Lycus valley to plant churches in Laodicea, Hierapolis, and Colossae (Acts 19:8–10; Col. 1:7; 4:12–16). A nineteenth- and twentieth-century missionary aspiration which hopes for every soul to hear the gospel in our generation will misunderstand Paul here. In comparison to the global dimensions of modern missions Paul’s vision must have seemed rather provincial. The expectation of the imminent return of Christ ...

1 Corinthians 10:23--11:1
Understanding Series
Marion L. Soards
... designations, although his delineation and juxtaposition of categories are intriguing. 10:33 Paul completes this verse with a telling purpose clause, so that they may be saved (Gk. hina sōthōsin), which clearly states Paul’s understanding of God’s own ultimate aspiration and end; the passive verb assumes that God is the author and agent of salvation. 11:1 In saying “Imitators of me become,” Paul uses the Gk. word mimētēs, a term from the representative and performatory arts. In a negative usage ...

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