Dictionary: Trust
Showing 326 to 350 of 3263 results

Understanding Series
Tremper Longman III
... being a judge to assuming a prophetic role, Samuel told the people “far be it from me that I should sin against the LORD by failing to pray for you” (1 Sam. 12:23). It is because the prophets had access to the divine council chambers that they were charged with interceding for the people. Jeremiah prays for the people (18:18–20), but God tells him not to do it (see also 11:14; 14:11–12). We will see that Jeremiah’s intercession for grace transforms into a prayer for their punishment. 7:17–20 The ...

Jeremiah 18:1--19:15, Jeremiah 20:1-6
Understanding Series
Tremper Longman III
... fall. But Jeremiah has done more than speak God’s words of warning and issued the call to repentance to them. He has also come before God and prayed on their behalf. In so doing, Jeremiah has fulfilled the intercessory role of the prophet. The prophet was charged with appealing to God on behalf of the people as well as presenting God’s judgment to them. We can see this with Abraham (Gen. 20:7), Moses (Exod. 33:12–23), Samuel (1 Sam. 12:3), and others. Since they have responded to Jeremiah’s good ...

Jeremiah 52:1-30, Jeremiah 52:31-34
Understanding Series
Tremper Longman III
... Jehoiachin). They had put a legitimate Davidic descendant on the throne (Zedekiah), whom they thought was pro-Babylonian. Nonetheless, this city kept rebelling, so finally Nebuchadnezzar decided to destroy the city once and for all. He put one of his leading officials in charge of its demolition. Nebuzaradan set fire to the temple, for the Israelites the most horrifying aspect of this razing of the city (vv. 17–23 will continue this theme). But he also burned the royal palace as well as the houses of its ...

One Volume
Tremper Longman III
... to rescue him from the harsh treatment of the enemy and requests that God respond to him. Verses 58–60 are a development of verse 57. He asks that God take up his case. This legal language is found in the prophets to describe God as a prosecuting attorney, charging his people with breaking the covenantal law and thus making them subject to the curses of the covenant (i.e., Jer. 2:9; Mic. 6:1–2). But here the poet wants God to take the side of his people who are represented by “the man of affliction ...

Hosea 11:12--12:14
Understanding Series
Elizabeth Achtemeier
... an exhortation to Hosea’s compatriots, as the NIV has rendered it. Nevertheless, Hosea intends the instructions to the forebear Jacob to be instructions given also to Ephraim, which they should have followed, but which they have not followed. 12:7–8 The second charge in the court indictment is therefore stated, 12:7–8b. Ephraim has been like a Canaanite merchant who has defrauded his customers and become rich, as the deceitful forebear Jacob was rich. This is one of the few places in Hosea’s book ...

Understanding Series
Thomas F. Johnson
... against them (BAGD, p. 862). The Elder adds “with evil words.” What the author objects to is not attacks on his character (which “gossip” implies) but the unjustified charges that Diotrephes is raising. These charges are not only against the writer personally but against us, those who bear the tradition of the Johannine community. Presumably, they include the claim that the Elder is not to be regarded as the authoritative leader and teacher. Diotrephes is not satisfied with that. His fourth affront ...

Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... not report everything. They had to tell him enough to account for Simeon’s absence and the requirement of taking Benjamin with them whenever they returned to buy more grain. They emphasized how harshly the overseer in Egypt had spoken to them and his outrageous charge that they were spies. The overseer had demanded that they bring their youngest brother as evidence that they were not spies. In the meantime, he had let them return with food for their families as long as they left one of them behind in an ...

Isaiah 63:7--64:12
Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... experienced is Yahweh’s declining to be sovereign in their life and declining to treat them as a personal possession (contrast Deut. 28:10). The charge is similar to that in 40:27. And this has been so from of old. We do not know how long a time separates ... talk to someone or to try to embrace someone who has turned the other way. It is Yahweh who has caused the shriveling (v. 7b). The charge is the same as the one in 63:17: we are what we are because of what you have made us. Your turning away came first ...

Ezekiel 21:1-32, Ezekiel 22:1-31
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... from the land (vv. 12–15, 20–23). The priests, then, are particularly responsible for the faithlessness that led Jerusalem to destruction. Next, Ezekiel declares, Her officials within her are like wolves tearing their prey (v. 27; compare v. 25). Specifically, the Lord charges the officials with bloodshed (see vv. 1–16 and 18:10). Zephaniah 3:3 proclaims that it is the judges who are “evening wolves, who leave nothing for the morning.” In each context, however, the point is clear: those God ...

Teach the Text
R.T. France
... similar reflections on life, death, and resurrection. Illustrating the Text Jesus’s power is only unleashed by his grace and received by faith. Nature: Lightning is an amazing natural phenomenon that almost everyone has seen or experienced. The static charges that build up in air masses store unimaginable potential energy that hovers over our heads every day. Only under the right conditions, however, can that energy be released and transmitted to objects below. The object that is struck by lightning ...

Teach the Text
R.T. France
... in their capacity for success? God expects and rewards faithful service, even though not all will be able to reach the same level. 19:17, 19  take charge of ten cities . . . take charge of five cities. The reward for faithful service is increased responsibility! The successful slaves now receive administrative charge of substantial districts of the newly established kingdom. Compared to this political responsibility, the previous commercial enterprise was indeed a “very small matter.” But the levels ...

Luke 22:66--23:25, Luke 22:63-65, Luke 22:54-62
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... and Cultural Background There has been much debate over the process followed in Jesus’s Jewish trial, and over its legal status. Luke’s brief account does not allow the sort of detailed comparison that has led many interpreters of Matthew and Mark to charge the Jewish leaders with flouting the rabbinic rules for a capital trial. But in any case, these rules were not formulated in the Mishnah until after Jesus’s time and may not represent the practice in the early first century. It is also questionable ...

1 Corinthians 16:5-18, 1 Corinthians 16:1-4
Teach the Text
Preben Vang
... 3] 16:3  I will give letters of introduction to the men you approve. Already in 4:19 Paul has mentioned his plans to return to Corinth, a visit they seem to be expecting before they receive this letter. To make sure no one could charge him with misappropriation of the collected funds, he asks the Corinthians to approve messengers from their midst to bring the money to Jerusalem. Also, this allows for a face-to-face meeting between the communities to strengthen their unity in Christ. The “letters” Paul ...

Leviticus 4:1--5:13
Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... or lamb. Interpretive Insights 5:1–6 Three cases illustrate the kind of situation that might require a sin offering. 5:1 If anyone sins because they do not speak up when they hear a public charge to testify. The first case is a sin of omission or ignorance where a person fails to respond to a public charge to testify. An announcement was made in public that anyone who has witnessed a particular crime or who has evidence relevant to a specific case in court is to appear and give testimony about that ...

Job 4:1-5:27
Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... of Job as guilty, Eliphaz paints with too broad a brush, and thus he implicates all humans as hopeless before God. Once again, Eliphaz does not comprehend or appreciate God’s commendation of Job in the prologue, since he is unaware of it. 4:18 he charges his angels with error. Eliphaz enlarges the scope of his argument to include even the angels, God’s messengers (see, e.g., Gen. 18; Zech. 1–2). Since God scrutinizes all of his creatures and finds even the exalted angels guilty (cf. 2 Pet. 2:4 ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... Their treatment of him, Job says, reveals what they truly are like. They are so heartless that they would even gamble for orphans, treating helpless humans as mere commodities to be sold as payment for debts (see, e.g., 2 Kings 4:1; see the sidebar). This charge indicates how tense the situation has become already. Later, in 22:5–9, Eliphaz will use even harsher language as he accuses Job of mistreating powerless people. 6:28 But now be so kind as to look at me. Job feels that they are talking about him ...

Job 42:7-17, Job 42:1-6
Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... intercedes for his friends. After all their harsh words to him, this could be a bit painful for Job to do, but nevertheless he overcomes their evil with good (cf. Rom. 12:21). In this, Job is not motivated by self-interest, as the adversary has wrongly charged in 1:9–11. 42:11 everyone who had known him before came and ate with him in his house. Yahweh has restored the vertical relationship between Job and him, and he has healed as well the horizontal relationships between Job and other people who were ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... position as commander in chief. Joab knows how deeply obligated David is to him. As in the case of Shimei, David in his dying days finally asks Solomon to punish Joab for his treachery (1 Kings 2:5–6). After the death of Amasa, Joab takes charge of the army, placing his brother Abishai in the familiar role of second in command. Meanwhile, Sheba shows respect for David’s army by retreating to Abel Beth Maakah, a city north of the Sea of Galilee (20:14–22). After gathering additional troops, he takes ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... . Consecration and holy lives are requirements for the material as well as the spiritual aspects of God’s work. Responsible stewardship requires careful records as well as consecrated administrators. The money and articles have been carefully weighed and registered. The men in charge of the valuables are responsible to take care of the treasures on the trip, then weigh them out again before the priests, Levites, and family heads in the temple in Jerusalem (8:28–29). That this was done is recorded in 8 ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... a covenant-breaking city. Whatever one may say about her, she is not what she is supposed to be. Jerusalem is, moreover, a foolish city. She digs her own grave because she is unresponsive to the call of wisdom. Zephaniah charges the leaders—the officials, rulers, prophets, and priests—with ruling like gangsters. The political, social, and religious climate of Jerusalem is corrupt. Their ferocious appetite for self-enrichment makes the officials behave like tyrants. They are like “roaring lions” (cf ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... he will come in the future on the clouds of heaven, seated at the right hand of the Mighty One (14:62). The claim to be the messiah was not a crime in Judaism (on the term “messiah,” see the commentary on 8:27–9:1). The charge of “blasphemy” (14:64) was limited to equating oneself to God, which indicates the high priest fully understood Jesus’s claim to be God’s Son. The tearing of the high priest’s clothes (the Greek term indicates an inner garment) was a sign of profound consternation (2 ...

Acts 25:23--26:32
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... to the concerns of the Jews. In this speech, this note also suggests that Paul’s trial is concerned mainly with matters of “Jewish customs and controversies.” In other words, he is not guilty of any of the political crimes with which he has been charged. Paul begins by establishing his faithfulness to Jewish traditions (26:4–8). He has led an impeccable life as a faithful Jew since he was a child (26:4), and he belongs to the sect of Pharisees, the “strictest sect of our religion” (26:5). Then ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... cf. Josephus, Jewish Antiquities 4.207) or to the use of objects taken from pagan shrines (in violation of Deut. 7:25–26). All three transgressions were certainly rare among the Jewish people. But Paul’s accusation is not out of the ordinary when we compare it with charges of the prophets (Isa. 3:14–15; Jer. 7:8–11; Ezek. 22:6–12) and of Jesus (Matt. 23:1–39; Luke 11:39–52) and with Jewish literature of the time (Psalms of Solomon 8:8–14; Philo, On the Confusion of Tongues 163; Testament of ...

2 Corinthians 11:1-15
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... that his refusal to accept support from his converts during his initial mission at Corinth indicated lack of love for the church. Paul, however, adamantly refuses to accept either that he has sinned against the Lord’s will by “preaching the gospel . . . free of charge” (11:7) or that his rejection of Corinthian support demonstrates any lack of love. He reminds them that he acted as he did not because of any lack of knowledge about the propriety of the principle of support (for while he was with them ...

Sermon
Robert Leslie Holmes
... someone who can advocate for the people when he comes into God's presence and then take God's word to the people. The role of the priest is to speak for God. Scripture says of the priest: "Every high priest chosen from among mortals is put in charge of things pertaining to God" (Hebrews 5:1). Third, the priesthood calls for intercession on behalf of the people. The priest takes God's word to the people. Conversely, the priest brings the people's sins before God. He does this so that the people might know ...

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