Dictionary: Trust
Showing 3851 to 3875 of 4364 results

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... 16:1–3 recounts Samson’s involvement with a prostitute in Gaza, which provides another demonstration of his extraordinary strength. But more important, sandwiched between the narrative involving the Philistine woman he almost marries and the one about Delilah, whom he supposedly loves (16:4), this brief story is likely included to clarify Samson’s root problem. Lest one think that Samson is simply unlucky in love, the presence of this episode suggests that the “love” he seemingly seeks may be no ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... between her, Orpah, and Ruth. Her speech concludes with a benediction asking the Lord to grant them reciprocating kindness (1:8). This speech represents Naomi’s first attempt to persuade her daughters-in-law. After the benediction Naomi kisses them, and off they are supposed to go. Naomi’s resolve, however, is met with resistance at a deep level, something witnessed by the women’s tears and words (1:9). They argue, “We will go back with you to your people” (1:10). The statement reveals that their ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... the items just described, the Chronicler describes the creation of the outer courtyard structures, which will hold the bronze altar and the Sea, in 4:9–10. Two courtyards are created, one inner courtyard for the priests and another, larger, outer courtyard supposedly for nonpriests (see 1 Kings 7:12). The account concludes with lists of the furnishings and utensils created for the temple in 4:11–22. The lists are divided into two parts, tracing first the accomplishments of the Tyrian artisan Huram-Abi ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... not simply been overtaken by temptation. As an Arab is ready to ambush, so Israel has deliberately planned to be promiscuous. Language of harlotry has a double meaning: physical unfaithfulness in marriage and spiritual disloyalty to God (sacred prostitution was part of Baal worship). Israel’s immature appeals to a supposedly indulgent father only add to the ugly picture of her evil.

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... marriage and family. The dream is shattered, yet it continues. Hypothetically, we must understand, God envisions a change, as though he hears voices calling to him from out of Israel’s perversion. A dialogue between God and Israel follows. In imagination, so one must suppose, Israel does an about-face. The people who said they wanted nothing but to go after alien gods (Jer. 2:25) now declare the Lord Yahweh to be their God. A liturgy of a model repentance follows. They admit they were wrong and that ...

Jeremiah 21:1-14, Jeremiah 22:1-30
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... the poor. Knowing (i.e., experiencing) God consists of such caregiving (cf. Jer. 9:23). People will not hold Jehoiakim, who wants so much to be a “somebody,” in regard, nor will they express loss at his death or care for his supposed accomplishments, his “splendor.” The oracle with the catchword “Lebanon” (22:20, 23) is directed in the feminine to Jerusalem. The accusation is that of disobedience. Shepherds are civil rulers; “allies” refers to Egypt, Assyria, Moab, and the like, who will be ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... . Yet just the opposite has taken place. She who has God’s laws is acting at a lower moral level than those who do not have God’s laws (5:7). What an indictment! The unbelievers have become a moral conscience for what is supposed to be the community of believers. Because the people have committed unprecedented evil, God is going to unleash unprecedented judgment. Since Israel has not executed his judgments, God will execute his judgment. The famine will be so extensive and intense that society will be ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... to the Assyrians (23:5) and to the Egyptians (23:8). The lovers are described as finely clad warriors. As in Ezekiel 16:37–39, the lovers turn out to be anything but lovers. Their lust now sated, they turn against and ravage the woman. What was supposed to be a tryst turns into a tragedy. Oholibah tops her sister by one, for she has even a third lover—Chaldeans (23:14). What happened to her older sister fails to deter her from her own promiscuity. History as a great teacher is ignored. She even ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... of Israel) for allowing foreigners to guard the holy things. We cannot be sure of what Ezekiel/God speaks here. In the future, these laity will be replaced by Levites. They will slaughter the people’s sacrifices, something that the laity themselves are supposed to do (Leviticus 1–4). It may be that, in transferring the responsibility for ritual sacrifice to the Levites, God is in effect punishing the people by barring them from the inner gates, where the sacrifice takes place. Although the Levites are ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... morality, many of the Israelites totally ignore God’s laws (8:12; cf. 4:6). In fact, God’s laws about sacrificing (Leviticus 1–5) seem very strange to them. When the people do not follow the ritual instructions in Leviticus, the sacrifices that are supposed to be a sweet-smelling savor that pleases God (Lev. 1:9, 13, 17) become repugnant. Consequently, God will punish these people for their sins and take away their political independence, for these people have strayed so far away from God that they do ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... name” (2:7); they pollute and desecrate his reputation, and they defile his moral standards. Because of these acts other people will not see God’s holiness reflected in his people. Sixth, wealthy people who have taken a garment as a pledge from a debtor are supposed to return it in the evening (Exod. 22:25–27; Deut. 24:12–13), but these heartless people refuse to return the garment so that the poor person can keep warm for the night. Instead, they take the stolen cloak to the temple with them, an ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... of bloodshed, the city has become “defiled,” suggesting ritual uncleanness (Ezra 2:62; Neh. 7:64; Mal. 1:7, 12). At her very core, Jerusalem is 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 ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... explain God’s choice. His love for Jacob was an act of love, election, and sovereignty (Rom. 9:1–29). The people may have given Malachi a cynical look as he proclaimed God’s love for them a second time. The Edomites, descendants of Esau, were supposed to have been wiped out, and their territory should have been given to Israel (Amos 9:11–12; Obadiah 8–10, 18–19, 21). Yet they still existed as a nation, and their territory now adjoined Judah! God’s judgment on Esau, however, is progressive ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... ), (2) to Jesus’s earthly authority (2:10, 28), and most frequently (3) to Jesus’s sufferings (nine times in Mark). Each use of the title refers to a divine attribute (or the fulfillment of one). “Son of Man,” therefore, does not refer to Jesus’s humanity, as might be supposed, but rather to his humiliation, authority, and exaltation in fulfillment of God’s ordained way.

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... and Moses, who epitomize the Old Testament prophets and law, appear in audience with Jesus, signifying that the law and prophets lead to and are fulfilled in Jesus. Peter’s desire to erect three “shelters” (9:5) is not as foolish as is often supposed, for the Greek word skēnē,“tabernacle,” recalls the tabernacle in the wilderness erected to the glory of God (Exod. 40:34–36; Tobit 13:11). The cloud that envelops the disciples, momentarily revealing the glory of Jesus as God incarnate (9:7 ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... the prohibitions of murder, adultery, theft, false testimony, and dishonoring parents, Jesus adds a commandment, not found in the Decalogue, against defrauding the poor—perhaps because wealth is often gained at the expense of the poor (10:19). It is often supposed that the rich man cannot have been sincere in claiming to have kept all the commandments. We should remember, however, that the Ten Commandments speak of acts that could—and were meant to—be kept (even if one intended otherwise). We should ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... to repent” may be an ironic poke at the Pharisees; Jesus is not saying that some do not need repentance, only that some do not know they need repentance (cf. the lost son in 15:11–32). Parables do not represent stories from real life. Hence, the reader is not supposed to worry about whether the ninety-nine other sheep were abandoned in the wilderness (15:4). Such a question reveals that we have forgotten Jesus is telling a parable!

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... perplexed about Jesus’s statement. If rich people cannot be saved (for they were highly respected), then who could be saved (18:26)? Jesus replies that humanly it is impossible for anyone to be saved, showing that his picture in verse 25 is supposed to convey an impossibility. Salvation is possible only with God. In verses 28–30 Jesus does not criticize Peter for asking about future rewards; instead, he promises that they will be significant for those who have left everything to follow him. The leaving ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... notes that various people with infirmities waited at the pool hoping to benefit from healing power associated with the site. This has led some scholars to see in the archaeological remains evidence for a healing sanctuary near the pool. Jesus, however, ignores the pool’s supposed powers and with a word heals the lame man (5:8–9). But as with so many other healing stories in the Synoptics (cf. Mark 3:1–6), it is the Sabbath, and this arouses objections among the Jewish leaders. (Note that the NIV omits ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... the house of uncircumcised men and ate with them” (11:3) does not exactly repeat the earlier account of Peter’s vision and his interaction with Cornelius, but it does point to the central issue of contention. Peter already realized that a Jew is not supposed to associate with a Gentile (10:28), but through a vision of unclean animals God forced Peter to realize that Gentiles are now considered “clean” in the eyes of God (10:15), and Peter is therefore urged to have table fellowship with the Gentiles ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... Christ,” “No, I am,” etc.), or Paul’s own retort to all (“You follow so and so, but I follow Christ”). With a series of rhetorical questions issuing out of passion and conviction, Paul responds to these misplaced allegiances. Do the Corinthians really suppose that the presence of Christ is somehow divided among them? Do they really mean to suggest that their allegiance is due to someone other than the one who has been crucified for them? Have they really forgotten that they were all baptized in ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... the same. It is good for them to remain unmarried, but advisable for those to marry who might otherwise be consumed with passion. Another set of questions concerns separation and divorce. This set relates to the preceding questions: if, as is supposed, celibacy was considered preferable to marriage, this could give sufficient grounds for separation or divorce. Paul, however, relies here on a “command” of the Lord. The pursuit of celibacy is an insufficient reason for a wife to separate from her husband ...

Galatians 2:11-21
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... Peter’s attempt to “force Gentiles to follow Jewish customs” in 2:14.) Paul’s statement has the ring of irony. We might do well to paraphrase Paul’s point: “If you, one of the sacred, live secularly, and not sacredly, how do you suppose the secular will become sacred?” Other terms might be inserted, but the idea is clear: Jews took great advantage of their heritage, yet they still had not understood that the new covenant did not allow for any human advantage. Paul had not confronted Peter ...

Galatians 3:26--4:7
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... human distinctions of status or even gender). The three couplets in verse 28 may reflect an ordering by Paul devised to contradict existing prayers found in Jewish and Gentile circles that gave thanks to God for an individual’s superiority over supposed inferiors (Betz, 184n26). In any case, Paul’s elaboration on the oneness found in Christ leaves no room for those in Galatia (or for modern readers) to allow for any prejudicial treatment of fellow believers in light of ethnic, economic, or gender ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... to satisfy the selfish demands of body and soul. Consequently, the Jews are by nature under the wrath of God, just like the rest of humanity, namely, the Gentiles. This is no insignificant remark! First, it clearly precludes any human beings from supposing that they are exempt from judgment. From a Jewish point of view, the entire human race is either Jewish or Gentile, and both groups are by nature condemned. Second, this statement of a redeemed Jew to Gentiles embodies the humility characteristic of ...