Dictionary: Trust
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Sermon
King Duncan
... remarkable parable. So many of Jesus’ parables come from real life situations. They are designed to make us think. Notice, first of all, that the third servant who took his master’s gold and buried it in the ground did so because he was afraid. That’s a common experience fear. I wonder how many of us fail to be the people God has called us to be because we are afraid. Some of us are afraid of what other people will think of us. That often happens to us when we’re young. We may do things we know we ...

Romans 8:1-17
Sermon
King Duncan
... ’s saying that some of us are letting our circumstances and not our faith dictate how we feel about life. We are letting our fears and our doubts enslave us. God’s purpose is that we may not give in to our circumstances but they we might overcome them ... circumstances, not under them. Don’t let life break you down. You are God’s own child. You have not been given a spirit of fear but a spirit of sonship . . . or of daughtership, if I may coin a word. Take the chains off of your brain and your heart. ...

John 3:1-21
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... stop clinging to certainty and predictability. Jesus is telling Nicodemus to “Let it go,” to take the risk of faith, to be vulnerable and open and surrender to the Spirit. There is one thing that can be said about living a life that lets go of control, fear, and certainty: Are you predictable? Are you living a predictable life? If you’re born of the Spirit, Jesus said, “you can’t tell from whence you came or where you’re going.” In other words, you won’t be able to tell what you’re going ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... early death. Stress kills.” He goes on to say, “I’ve never known a [person] to die from hard work but I have known a lot who have died from worry.” And that’s true, and we all know it. Christ wants to set us free from all of our fears, whatever they may be. He does it in this passage that reminds us that we have a loving Father who is always with us, always mindful of our needs, always willing to grant us His peace, His joy. His eye is on the sparrow. God has such an intimate knowledge ...

Hebrews 12:1-13, Hebrews 12:14-29
Understanding Series
Donald A. Hagner
... this shaking involves the purging of created things (lit., “as of things made”) so that (or “in order that”) only what cannot be shaken may remain. But what can be shaken will be, and this is what makes the prospect of eschatological judgment such a fearful thing (cf. v. 29). 12:28–29 The readers, however, have good reason to be thankful, for they are the recipients of an unshakable kingdom. Kingdom here refers to what may be described as the fruit of the new covenant. Thus, like the reality of ...

Hebrews 12:14-29, Hebrews 12:1-13
Understanding Series
Donald A. Hagner
... this shaking involves the purging of created things (lit., “as of things made”) so that (or “in order that”) only what cannot be shaken may remain. But what can be shaken will be, and this is what makes the prospect of eschatological judgment such a fearful thing (cf. v. 29). 12:28–29 The readers, however, have good reason to be thankful, for they are the recipients of an unshakable kingdom. Kingdom here refers to what may be described as the fruit of the new covenant. Thus, like the reality of ...

Understanding Series
James K. Bruckner
... them ruthlessly” expresses the corruption of the goodness of work (Gen. 2:15). It is likely that this indicates an intensification to a full and crushing slavery. The Hebrew word for “ruthlessly” means “with violent hate.” 1:15–22 The midwives’ courage and fear of the Lord contrast with a powerful, yet paranoid, pharaoh. Although the chapter begins with the patriarchal list, the hope of the Israelites was in the daily life of the Hebrew home and childbirth. Here we see the beginning of the key ...

Understanding Series
Pamela J. Scalise
... will no longer stand as evidence against the justice of God. The ones who will escape on that day will be the people who fear the Lord, because God will spare them (3:17). The God-fearers who had made a public witness to their faith (3:16) are ... is for the Godfearers of 3:16 and for every subsequent believer. God addresses them together as you who revere my name, that is, “you who fear the Lord.” They will have no cause to be afraid in “the day” (4:1) when the Lord acts (cf. Isa. 33:5–6). That day ...

Matthew 9:35-38, Matthew 10:1-42
Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... in eastern Ecuador. Before leaving on their mission, the five missionaries (Pete Fleming, Ed McCully, Nate Saint, Roger Youderian, and Jim Elliot) sang the hymn “We Rest on Thee.” The lyric of this great hymn, by Edith Cherry, exhibits the courage that we can have when we fear the Lord alone. The first stanza reads, We rest on Thee, our Shield and our Defender! We go not forth alone against the foe; Strong in Thy strength, safe in Thy keeping tender, We rest on Thee, and in Thy Name we go. Strong in Thy ...

Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... you doubt? Jesus refers to Peter as one with “little faith,” the same description that Jesus uses for the twelve disciples across the narrative (6:30; 8:26; 16:8; 17:20). At other points “little faith” is defined by the presence of worry (6:30), fear (8:26), and lack of understanding (16:8); in this passage it is further explicated by Peter’s “doubt” (distazo, also rendered as “waver”). This word is used in the New Testament only in Matthew and only two times (14:31; 28:17). In both cases ...

Teach the Text
Grant R. Osborne
... the two for literary reasons.2The alarm of the women points to the presence of the supernatural, as elsewhere in Mark (1:27; 2:12; 7:37), here the divine presence in the resurrection scene. 16:6  You are looking for Jesus, the Nazarene. The angel calms their fear and then rebukes them. All the disciples had failed to understand when Jesus said that he would rise on the third day (8:31; 9:31; 10:34). So the “seeking” women are set in contrast with the reality of the resurrection, for they are seeking a ...

Teach the Text
C. Hassell Bullock
... Like Psalm 14, which laments the godless disposition of David’s world, this lamentation comes close to that but stops short of saying that people deny God’s existence, with perhaps only a hair’s breadth between “there is no God” (14:1) and “there is no fear of God before their eyes” (36:1). Indeed, the disposition of the wicked as expressed in 36:1b is a good summary of the kind of evil represented by the subjects of Psalm 35, who have no regard for the innocent, the social equivalent of their ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... cares for the person who is suffering persecution; God has not forgotten, and no suffering can touch a person without first passing through God’s hands. (4) Verses 8–9 bring out what is implicit in verse 5. What should people fear when being persecuted? They should fear denying Christ, for such denial will mean that such a person is “disowned” by God. The person who confesses Christ publicly, however, will be rewarded. (5) Verse 10 is a qualification of verses 8–9. What really constitutes a denial ...

Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... in his quest. The possibility is found in the fact that it is unlikely a godless man would dare to come before God. This is bleak hope in light of the terrifying nature of divine power Job explored in chapter 12, and even more so in light of his fearful words in 9:20 “Even if I were innocent, my mouth would condemn me; if I were blameless, it would pronounce me guilty.” 13:17–18 Again Job calls the friends (with an imperative in the plural) to listen, to pay attention to his speech. They are to ...

Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... as food for a vulture. The image of darkness returns in this probable reference to the coming of death. Two synonyms begin verse 24: Distress and anguish. These also terrify the wicked and overwhelm him. Anticipation is as bad as the reality, as these two causes of fear are poised for attack. The cause for the terror that besets the wicked is his own relation to God (this is clearly intended as a warning to Job!). The accusation is two-fold and plays out over verses 25 and 26. The wicked person shakes his ...

2 Corinthians 13:1-10, 2 Corinthians 13:11-14
Understanding Series
James M. Scott
... third visit (when I come, cf. 12:14). While the fundamental purpose of Paul’s apostolic ministry is “building up” (v. 19), there can be another side to it. If, when he comes to Corinth, the Corinthians are not as he would like them to be, Paul fears he will be forced to deal with them severely (you may not find me as you want me to be). Whereas previously Paul had been quite “timid” when dealing with the Corinthians (cf. 10:1), this time he will act more decisively, if necessary. He does not ...

Luke 10:1-10, 16-24
Sermon
Robert C. Cochran
... of the crucified Son or the Holy Ghost. But we are Christians, and you can’t spell Christian without Christ, and you can’t know God without knowing the Spirit that Christ sent to be with us until he returns! We must find a way to put aside our fear and move from that which dies upon touch to mori-vivi (“I died, I lived”). It takes the mimosa about thirty minutes to return to its original open state from an encounter with heat or touch. We could probably learn to shake off a bad evangelism encounter ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... shout for joy. The glory of Lebanon will be given to it, the splendor of Carmel and Sharon; they will see the glory of the Lord, the splendor of our God. “Strengthen the feeble hands, steady the knees that give way; say to those with fearful hearts, ‘Be strong, do not fear; your God will come, he will come with vengeance; with divine retribution he will come to save you.’ “Then will the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf unstopped. Then will the lame leap like a deer, and the mute ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... to set straight. Let no one among you practice charms ….(Deuteronomy 18:10) Jewish folk, like others in the ancient world, feared demons and other evil forces, and psalms were often recited as protection against them. Psalms 91 and 3 were known as the ... of God and the power and promise of God’s Story in the lives of God’s people that prevails over all doubt and fear. Jesus’ wilderness time would prepare him for everything he would have to do. It would give him the strength, endurance, power of God to ...

Judges 6:1-40, John 20:24-31
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... will be with you to the end of the age,” says Jesus. Each of us has a time in our lives when we are filled with fear, ridden with doubt. Perhaps it’s a time when a loved one has died. Perhaps a time when everything in our lives seems to go wrong, and ... Didymus does indeed have a double----the rest of humanity. Jesus loves all of us. He doesn’t chastise us for our doubt and fear, but reassures us with his presence and promises. Jesus will lift us up when we are down, and help us find balms in Gilead ...

Luke 19:11-27, Matthew 25:1-13, Matthew 25:14-30
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... know it, you are in survival mode, unable to think about anything, except who might be in your house and what he or she might be doing there. Are you in danger? Is there a threat? Your body is tense and on guard, waiting, watching, unable to act, paralyzed with fear. The church behaves that way too. One of the governing metaphors in scripture is Paul’s image of the church as a body. One person, a hand; the other a foot: and Jesus, at the head. Everyone needs to do their part in order for the body to move ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... she desires, to dance at his banquet, Herodias has the girl demand the head of John the Baptist be brought to her on a platter. Unable to refuse or lose face in front of his entire kingdom of officers, Herod gives in. Yet, Herod is so plagued by guilt and fear after the execution of John that when Jesus begins his ministry in John’s footsteps, Herod is sure that he is the ghost of John incarnated to haunt him. We know of course that what haunts Herod is the plague of his own guilt. Sin is like a pit that ...

Matthew 2:1-12
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... Magi from the evil of Herod. But the one truly afraid was the King. For in his heart, he knew that nothing could overpower the force of God. Like the Good Shepherd, Jesus is battling the forces of darkness all around you. And you do not need to hide or fear. You don’t even need to seek him as the Magi did of old. For Jesus will find you! This Epiphany morning, I hope you will find your comfort in the power of the Almighty God, the victory of the Messiah, and the continued vigilance of the Holy Spirit in ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... other that rises above all disagreements, differences, politics, and even illness. Love that rises above fear. For fear is nearly always the source of division between people. Fear drives quests for power and prestige, status and competition. Fear drives avoidance and bias of people who are different from those we are used to being with. Fear drivespeople to treat others with disdain. Fear of loss, fear of change, fear of others through envy, jealousy, or ego are almost always responsible for our inability ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... people out. And we lock God out. This morning, I invite you all to open up your minds to allow Jesus to restore your faith. Relax your mind, close your eyes, and let your fears and worries go. Allow the Holy Spirit of Christ to enter into your mind and heart and to unlock the grief and pain that binds you, to release the hurt and fear that paralyzes you, to restore your faith in yourself, in God, and in others. For Jesus is King of resurrections. He is risen. And he can raise you too, not just in your death ...

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