Dictionary: Trust
Showing 326 to 350 of 5000 results

Sermon
David G. Rogne
... passage in the Bible indicating that Jesus would return only when every person in the world had heard the gospel. They recruited people to recite to every person they met John 3:16: "God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life." You can still occasionally see a person seated behind the goalposts at a football game holding up a placard saying "John 3:16." Maybe it does some good. Some people may be able to say they have found ...

Sermon
Erskine White
... tried to say in this sermon about the meaning of Christian life. There was once a preacher who visited a certain man to urge him to come to church. They were standing and talking in front of a fireplace when the man said, "I do have faith and I do believe in God, but I don't think I need the church." Without saying a word, the preacher reached into the fireplace with a poker iron and pushed one ember off to the side. The two of them stood there for several minutes and watched the ember in silence. It burned ...

John 1:43-51
Sermon
William Luoma
... of occasions enough to convince them beyond a doubt that it was he. Reader 1: I believe that he is the Son of God, and that his death paid the price of reconciliation, and that his resurrection has opened the door of eternal life to all who believe in him. Reader 2: I believe that Jesus Christ lives now and is my Lord forever, and that the overwhelming love of God is clearly seen once again, on Good Friday, 20__. Closing Prayer We ask that today's closing prayer consist of silent petitions, which God can ...

Acts 17:1-9, Psalm 33:1-22, Acts 17:10-15, 1 Peter 2:4-12, John 14:1-4, John 14:5-14
Sermon Aid
... empty tomb after he died, but there would be no offer of "grave for sale;" instead, he directed the attention of his disciples - and all believers - to his gift to his own - the reality of everlasting life in God's kingdom. There is a place for all believers in the everlasting kingdom of God. 1. Death is always a departure from this world. It was no different with Jesus when he was nailed to the cross; he had to - and did - leave the world and his loved ones behind when he died. Jesus left the world twice ...

Sermon
... . This is not an exception but, sorry to say, the condition of many ministers. In a recent study of 1,580 Protestant pastors in California, it was revealed that thirty-one percent do not believe faith in Jesus is necessary for salvation, thirty-three percent do not believe in God, thirty-nine percent do not accept the diety of Jesus, and eighty-three percent reject the second coming of Christ. In the light of these facts, do you wonder why the Devil is well and having a bonanza in our world? If you want to ...

Sermon
Ron Lavin
... of the house of slavery; you shall have no other gods before me" (Exodus 20:2). Idolatry, worshiping, and following some god who is not God, is the sin described in this command from God. The question we face is not "Do you believe in God?" The question we face is, "Which god do you believe in — the one, true God, or some false god of your own making?" In other words, we have no choice about whether or not we will worship God. The only choice we have is the one between the God who created heaven and earth ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... ever really thought about John 3:16? Took time to work through it? "For God so loved the world." Wait a minute - that means God loves me! It not only means God loves me, but it means God loves everyone else, regardless of who they are. Regardless of whether they believe in Him or not, regardless of whether they accept Him or not. That means I am to love other people just like that. "That He gave His only begotten Son." Loves gives. If God loved me so much that He gave His Son for me, then if I really love ...

Sermon
David O. Bales
... t wait to put the world back together. Think for a few minutes about Jesus’ resurrection as God’s hurrying to put the world back together. Things had gone so terribly wrong. God hadn’t wanted Jesus to die. God wanted people to repent and believe in Jesus. If not, when Jesus preached, his telling people to repent and believe was some kind of pretense, a going through the motions because it wouldn’t make any difference if or how many people repented and believed. However one might reason about God’s ...

Mark 11:27-33
Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... even in Sheol God is there! Therefore, there is hope! But the Sadducees simply could not believe it. The Sadducees did not believe in a resurrection of any kind. That’s why they were sad, you see! (I find it fascinating to realize that millions of ... downright awful! The question is: will we obey Him? I have a rabbi friend who says that God doesn’t even care whether or not we believe in Him, just so we obey Him. I might not go quite that far, but it is an interesting idea. Jesus did say that He was not so ...

Sermon
George Bass
... approached their death, said, "I am so very happy" - or, "I am satisfied." A Glimpse of God and He Is Gone Philip, James, Thomas, and the others who were close to Jesus Christ probably never forgot that experience when he had said to them, "Let not your hearts be troubled; believe in God, believe also in me. In my Father’s house are many rooms; if it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? And when I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you ...

John 17:11b-19
Sermon
King Duncan
... quickly. Go in peace. Arise and go!” (6) St. Paul set the standard for us over 1900 years ago when he wrote that our job “whether at home or absent, is to be pleasing to God.” (II Corinthians 5:9). That is the test of service in our lives as believers in Him. Would it be pleasing to Christ? We are united by what we believe. We are united by our love for one another and for the Christ we serve. Finally we are united by our love for those whom we are trying to save--the world for which Christ died ...

Sermon
John Jamison
... the middle of our doubts and questions and we look around at everything happening around us that creates such pain and inequality as we see in the world, when we live in that world and we can still look at this God and his Son and say, “I choose to believe in you,” that is the blessing. The wonderful thing about choice is that when we make it, it is because it is based on what we believe inside, in our hearts and minds. It is a true act that reflects who we are and not something we do because we have ...

Revelation 5:1-14
Sermon
King Duncan
... is closest to being right?" he asks. The students protest that there is no right answer because a person's favorite song is strictly a matter of taste. This pastor, who has a Ph.D. in philosophy from Notre Dame asks, "When you decide what to believe in terms of your faith, is that more like guessing the number of beans, or more like choosing your favorite song?" This pastor says that he always gets the same answer, regardless of the students' age: choosing one's faith is more like choosing a favorite song ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... a chair in the kitchen, pull out a Bible, and give his best sermon on John 3:16. He always used the same Bible verse. It was his favorite. “For God so loved the world,” the verse begins, “that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him will not perish but have eternal life.” Cody believed this promise, and he wanted to make sure other people had an opportunity to believe it as well. Standing in the checkout line at the grocery store with his mom or dad, he would ask the clerk, “Do ...

Sermon
Billy D. Strayhorn
... ] Follow Bethany's example. Be Bold. V. Believe A. That brought us to Friday and Believe. Who are we called to Believe and Believe in? Jesus, of course. We are called to simply Believe and live what Jesus taught. He is the Son of God, who willingly died ... work of God. The thing is, this could have been first or it could be last and actually it is both. You see you have Believe in order to Be Obedient, Be Kind, Be Forgiving and Be Bold. But every time you are Obedient, Kind, Forgiving and Bold, it makes it ...

Sermon
J. Ellsworth Kalas
... new home for our human race -- that he might begin a new family. I shall dare to call it the true Holy Family. The details are given to us in the twelfth and thirteenth verses of this first chapter of John's Gospel. "But to all who received him, who believed in his name, he gave power to become children of God, who were born, not of blood or of the will of the flesh or of the will of man, but of God." A new family is about to come into existence -- a family born of God. We need some background ...

Sermon
Donald Macleod
... , but beliefs are so many and varied that we do not know where to start." Do not think for one moment that these Jews were in any better situation with their ancient Law and its 613 separate regulations. For us the first step must be: to believe Jesus. To believe in Jesus raises a score of questions - who he was, what about his strange power, what he meant by giving himself to men and women as bread to eat, and what would be the situation after he had gone. To believe Jesus, however, is to accept him as a ...

Sermon
Johnny Dean
... tried to convince Jesus to use his God-given powers to satisfy his earthly hunger. Basically the proposition was this: remain true to God and suffer the bitter pangs of hunger, or disobey God, do the Devil’s biding, and satisfy your hunger. Whether we believe in "the Devil" or not, we certainly know by now that one of the greatest areas of vulnerability is our earthly, sensual appetites and desires. With us, just as it was with Jesus, the issue often seems to be clear cut: satisfy ourselves or satisfy God ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... Adam and Eve. It was the ancient Hebrew parent or grandparent's way of answering a child's question, "Where did we come from?" History? Not any more than the account we have been discussing is science. In story form, it is one more way of saying, "I believe in God the Father, Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth." What will that affirmation mean in day to day life? After all, we continue to insist, as we believe, so we behave. The most obvious response is that if this is GOD's creation, we ought not to mess ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... as the Son of God Jesus was given. Now we are not told the Son was born; we're told the Son was given. That's exactly what the greatest verse in the Bible says, "For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life." (John 3:16) God's Christmas gift to the world was a person of deity wrapped up in the package of humanity. This little baby was not only God, He was a gift. I want you to remember this. God has given ...

Understanding Series
Gordon D. Fee
... The mention of his maternal parentage is in keeping with the evidence of Acts 16:1, where we learn that Eunice was a Jewish Christian, whose husband was a Gentile. Paul’s appeal to her faith, therefore, although almost certainly referring to her faith as a believer in Christ, also reflects his view that such faith is the genuine expression of the Jewish heritage, that is, that faith in Christ is the true continuity with the religion of the OT (cf. v. 3). It should also be noted in passing that, the more ...

John 6:24-35
Sermon
Robert Leslie Holmes
... hunger for a large crowd of people. Then it was physical bread. Now it is bread of a different kind for a different kind of hunger. Now it is spiritual bread, or soul bread: "I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty" (v. 35 NRSV). What is more, Jesus identified himself as bread. He did not say, "I have the bread of life" but, "I am the bread of life." It is a metaphor he uses three times in this one discourse of his and each time ...

Teach the Text
C. Marvin Pate
... office of the church. Phoebe also was a patron of Paul and others (16:2b). So she was a woman of the upper class who used her resources to benefit Paul and others. Third, the desired action that Paul and Phoebe intended was that the believers in Rome give her a gracious Christian welcome and provide her with whatever assistance she needed as she (and later Paul upon his arrival in Rome) ministered to the Roman church and prepared for Paul’s future mission to Spain (16:2a). Theological Insights Two truths ...

Understanding Series
J. Ramsey Michaels
... his hearers (vv. 41–44). Jesus’ goal is not human praise but praise that comes from the only God (vv. 41, 44). They, on the other hand, like to accept praise from one another (v. 44). Even those among them who are later said to have believed in Jesus “would not confess their faith for fear they would be put out of the synagogue; for they loved praise from men more than praise from God” (12:42–43). Jesus’ estimate of them parallels and helps to explain his unwillingness to trust himself to those ...

2 Corinthians 3:7-17; 4:1-6
Understanding Series
James M. Scott
... correspondences between the beginning and the end of 2:14–4:6. 4:1–2 In 3:12–18, Paul argues that the reason he is so bold is that, in contrast to Moses’ ministry, his own ministry transforms lives and mediates the glory of God to believers. In 4:1–2 Paul reiterates his point from 3:12–13. Here Paul returns to using the apostolic plural (we), referring to himself. Through God’s mercy (lit., “as we have received mercy”), Paul has the ministry of the new covenant (cf. 3:6ff.). The mercy to ...

Showing results