Dictionary: Trust
Showing 351 to 375 of 3399 results

Sermon
King Duncan
... faith is. I am so made that worry and anxiety are sand in the machinery of life. Faith is oil. I live better by faith and confidence than by fear and doubt and anxiety. In anxiety and worry my being is gasping for breath. These are not my native air . . . We do ... tomorrow . . .” And that’s true of us all. If we know within our hearts that our Redeemer lives, we can walk with confidence regardless of our situation. Some of you will remember Elizabeth Kubler?Ross who was the closest thing we’ve had to an ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... the faith we profess. For we do not have a high priest who is unable to empathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are--yet he did not sin. Let us then approach God’s throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need” (14-16). To me that is incredible good news. When we bring our requests to God, Christ is right along side us, interceding in our behalf. Pastor Melvin Newland tells a powerful ...

1 John 1:5--2:14, 1 John 2:15-17
Understanding Series
Thomas F. Johnson
... 21). The last part of v. 5 looks forward, as the NIV punctuates it, to v. 6. This is how we know we are in him. The “how” is defined in the verse which follows. But we should take note that once again the subject is assurance (a confidence in short supply in the Johannine community because of the threat and boasts of the secessionists). How can we know that we are truly in a right relationship with God? This is what the phrase “to be in him” connotes. It means “fellowship … with the Father and ...

Genesis 24:1-67
Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... should he take Isaac back to the country from which Abraham had come? Abraham strongly rejected that suggestion; he knew God’s promises (12:1–3) were to be fulfilled in Canaan, and thus he would not allow the possible repatriation of his own son. Affirming his confidence in Yahweh, the God of heaven, who had brought him out of his father’s household and had sworn to give this land to his own seed, Abraham assured his servant that God would send his angel before him so that he would indeed find a wife ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... , and perversity (v. 11a). The four words suggest that people have fallen short of God’s glory and God’s expectations, they are flawed and nasty, they are antisocial and in the wrong, they have deliberately chosen the wrong way. The problem was expressed in their confidence in themselves (v. 11b). It was such self-confidence that triggered the coming of Yahweh’s Day for Judah in 2:10–22. A further parallel with the earlier prophecy is that here, too, what is wrong with human exaltedness and ...

Luke 18:9-14, Luke 18:1-8
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... the vindication of God’s people. In context, the “faith” that is referred to must be the persistence in prayer that the parable has inculcated, and the challenge is to maintain it until vindication comes. 18:9  To some who were confident of their own righteousness. This is another clear interpretive “steer” given by Luke. The preceding parable was told to disciples, but this is apparently for a wider audience. The description fits the “righteous” who stand over against repentant sinners in 5 ...

Luke 23:44-49, Luke 23:26-43
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... and the tearing of the temple curtain. Jesus’s suffering is not minimized, but his recorded words focus not on his own agony of abandonment (as in Matt. 27:46; Mark 15:34) but rather on compassion for others (the women and the believing criminal) and confidence in his Father (23:46). The tradition of his prayer for the soldiers in 23:34, even if not an original part of Luke, comes from the same mold. Repeated echoes of Psalm 22 (dividing clothes and casting lots [Ps. 22:18], mocking [22:6–7], the ...

Teach the Text
Robert B. Chisholm Jr.
... David to embody the Deuteronomic ideal of kingship (Deut. 17:14–20). He was to promote righteousness and to fear the Lord, and in so doing to be an instrument of divine blessing for his people (vv. 3–4). At the same time, David could be confident in his covenantal relationship with the Lord, knowing that the divine promises had been formalized and secured (v. 5a). Thus David could expect to experience divine protection and blessing (v. 5b) and to see the demise of evil rebels (vv. 6–7). So, in short ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... Job, we too find ourselves asking why bad things happen in a world in which the good God is in control. The book of Job sets the scene in chapter 1 by narrating how in the face of severe adversity Job lives up to the Lord’s confidence in his character. Job’s good character is evidenced by his righteous patterns of life. Both the narrator (1:1) and Yahweh (1:8) describe Job in glowing terms. Even though Job’s wealth is impressive, that is not the focus. Rather, his résumé highlights his character ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... Job of sin, they fail to fortify Job with faithful kindness when he is struggling physically and spiritually. 6:21 you see something dreadful and are afraid. Both Job and the three friends believe in the validity of the retribution principle. Job’s confidence in his integrity causes him to begin to question if the retribution principle truly holds for all cases. By speaking of his friends’ fear, Job may be suggesting that they are afraid to rethink what they previously believed and taught. They find ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... ” in the next line. 8:14–15  what they rely on is a spider’s web. Bildad compares the trust of the godless in their possessions to the fragile web of a spider. By using this image, Bildad states that human resources are incapable of providing reliable confidence. He likely uses this language to allude to Job’s loss of his vast possessions, with the implication that Job placed his trust in what he owned rather than in God. 8:16–19  They are like a well-watered plant. In verses 16–19 Bildad ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... the one who so carefully crafted him (10:8–11), would bring him out of the womb only to experience such shameful suffering. With these bitter words Job expresses his deep frustration with how God has treated him. He wants to keep holding on to God, but his confidence in God has been severely shaken. As in 3:11–16, Job wishes that he had been stillborn rather than born only to endure adversity. 10:20  Turn away from me so I can have a moment’s joy. Job feels that the intimidating presence of God has ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... intervention by God. What Bildad presents as though it were an unchangeable law is a far cry from what the prologue indicates about Yahweh’s active governance of his world. For godly people in pain, the providential care of the Lord is the ground for confident hope even when all seems hopeless. God’s continual superintendence of the world is a far cry from Bildad’s position that relegates God to the corners of life, when in fact he works all things according to his plan, although that plan is often ...

Teach the Text
C. Hassell Bullock
... lips the words of Psalm 22:1! Calvin further comments on the fact that the address to God comes before the question, suggesting that the psalmist “has given the first place to faith.”[14] This is confirmed by the content of the psalm. Our writer takes confidence from the fact that the ancestors of the faith trusted in the Lord, and they too, as did the psalmist (22:2, 5—two different but synonymous verbs for “cry/cried”), cried out of their deep faith (“trust[ed]” occurs three times in 22:4 ...

Teach the Text
C. Hassell Bullock
... below), either alone or in company with others. Goldingay proposes that it has an instructional purpose, to teach people to pray.[1] Generically, Psalm 25 is generally typed as an individual lament, while Craigie insists that the language is more descriptive of a psalm of confidence (psalm of trust).[2] Its connections with wisdom poetry have also been noted, especially the use of the terms “way(s)” (25:4, 8, 9, 10, and 12; the noun is turned into a verb, “guide,” in 25:5 and 9), “fear” (25:12 ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... ’s participation in this Christmas drama. One by one the children took their places. The shepherds fidgeted in one corner of the stage. Mary and Joseph stood solemnly behind the manger. In the back three young wise men waited impatiently. Meanwhile, Jana sat quietly and confidently. Then the teacher began: “A long time ago, Mary and Joseph had a baby and they named Him Jesus. And when Jesus was born, a bright star appeared over the stable.” This was Jana’s cue. She got up from her chair, picked up a ...

Acts 16:16-34
Sermon
Charley Reeb
... . The hymns of faith and praise that they sang penetrated the walls of their cell. Even other prisoners heard the healing notes that were exploding with the power of the gospel. No cold, hard, rock-like prison could squelch the joyful notes of two men who were confident that they were in the hands of Almighty God. Their songs of faith burst forth in glory, and the foundation of the prison shook. As Christians, we are like the violets that have the power to crack the rocks of opposition. We have the power to ...

Sermon
Charley Reeb
... Well, you have come to the right place today. I am going to share with you how you can find the strength in Christ you need to do all things. I am going to share with you how you can tap into the power of Christ and have the same confidence as Paul. It is not that I have some secret knowledge or understanding. Some people think we pastors do. They will say, “Pray for me. I know you have a good connection to God.” Well, everyone has that connection! We believe in the priesthood of all believers. That is ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... to believers that they too share Christ’s Abba-relationship with the Father. The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are God’s children (v. 16). And if believers are on a “first name” basis with God, if they participate in the trust and confidence which Christ shared with the Father, they also receive the same benefits as heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ (v. 17). Heirs of what? Of glory! Sin deprived humanity of God’s glory (1:23). Once glory was marred in humanity, it was marred ...

Understanding Series
Marion L. Soards
... the explicit denial of the validity of certain Corinthians who claim allegiance to either Paul, Apollos, or Cephas in 3:22. Paul’s criticism is aimed at the formation of factions, but his real critique here is of the tendency in Corinth to engage in boasting. The confidence of the Christian is to be in God alone, in God’s work in the cross of Christ, not in the mere human agents of God or in any form of human wisdom that focuses on something other than Christ crucified. 3:21b–22 Paul gives the ...

Revelation 4:1-11
Understanding Series
Robert W. Wall
... and his disciples. Yet, he also intends to create a concrete “sense” of the fundamental importance of this theological conviction to the worshiping community as it responds to the Lord God Almighty in the actual circumstances of its life with some measure of confidence that God has things under control. John is summoned into heaven, the setting of his visions. It is a place entered only by angelic invitation and through the door of a prophetic trance (I was in the Spirit). John’s vision constitutes a ...

Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... he has knowledge of the very mind of God in these matters. That is pretty ironic, since Job claims to be utterly at a loss to understand what God is doing in his case. Job does not claim to know what is, but he always confidently declares what he knows cannot be! The friends are unwilling to follow the logic of Job’s observation and experience to its ultimate conclusion—the usual methodology of traditional wisdom—because it would shake the very foundation of their belief. Instead Eliphaz is seeking to ...

Psalm 62:1-12
Understanding Series
Craig C. Broyles
... in these regular temple liturgies, the worshipers using the psalms, and this one in particular, should expect such typical hostilities from those who oppose the people of God. 62:1–4 We should probably read the opening verse not as a statement of confidence (so the NIV) but, as translated in verse 5, as advice or an exhortation to one’s self: “Toward God is rest, O my soul; from him is my salvation” (lit.). The liturgist instructs himself, and so by example encourages the worshiping participants ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... he is at work in all things. Similarly, Paul enjoins believers to give thanks “in all circumstances,” not for them (1 Thess. 5:18). 8:29–30 These verses, reminiscent of 5:3–4, rise in a crescendo of inspiration, filling readers with confidence in the promise of hope. Each statement forms a link in a chain—foreknew, predestined, called, justified, glorified—which secures believers to their future glory in Christ. Salvation does not just “happen.” It is the result of God’s eternal will! God ...

Understanding Series
Mary J. Evans
... role as military leader was provided by the Ammonites, a tribal group who lived on the eastern side of the Jordan and who were involved in skirmishes with Israel over many years, particularly in the eastern section. These Ammonites were so confident of their ability to defeat the citizens of Jabesh Gilead that they placed unacceptable and cruel conditions even on a negotiated surrender. The first thought was surrender; even with the terrible cost involved surrender remained an option. The response of the ...

Showing results