Dictionary: Trust
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Sermon
David J. Kalas
... . The point of fric­tion between the apostles and the Sanhedrin was fundamentally a theological one. That is to say, the Jewish leaders opposed and endeavored to silence what Peter and John believed, taught, and preached. But observe that this dispute is not a cordial disagree­ment among equals. No, these largely unschooled laymen were appearing before the religious leaders of the land. The members of this ruling council included the professional clergy, biblical schol­ars, and theologians-in-residence ...

1 Kings 19:1-4 (5-7) 8-15a
Sermon
Stephen P. McCutchan
... God was not in the fire. Then came a sheer, deafening, overwhelming silence, and in the silence, God gave Elijah his next assignment. God was not through with Elijah yet. It is not in the winds of doctrine that we find our God. It is not in the earthquakes of dispute that we find our God. It is not in the hot fire of debate that we find our God. Churches and individuals, as they probe the depths of their souls, find in the silence, when all the egos are put aside and we are really listening, that God is not ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... That is the general theme and tone of John 21. After what appears to be a definitive conclusion to John’s gospel rendition in 20:20-21, now a whole new “ending” appears. While the Johannine authorship of this final chapter is hotly disputed, its authenticity to John’s gospel is not. There are no existing manuscripts that lack these verses. Clearly they were a part the Johannine community’s oral and written tradition from its beginning. What John 21 offers is not just another post-resurrection ...

John 21:1-14
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... That is the general theme and tone of John 21. After what appears to be a definitive conclusion to John’s gospel rendition in 20:20-21, now a whole new “ending” appears. While the Johannine authorship of this final chapter is hotly disputed, its authenticity to John’s gospel is not. There are no existing manuscripts that lack these verses. Clearly they were a part the Johannine community’s oral and written tradition from its beginning. What John 21 offers is not just another post-resurrection ...

Galatians 3:15-25
Sermon
King Duncan
... individual into the organization pattern. Advertising extols the virtues of conformity . . . This same sort of logic should have convinced Columbus that the world was flat and the Wright brothers that man could never fly. Thank God that some [people] of all ages have dared to dispute the majority opinion when it was in error.” Do you get what he is saying? There is tremendous pressure in our society for us to conform, for each of us to be like everyone else. Now I am not arguing for us to become crackpots ...

1 Corinthians 1:1-9
Sermon
Timothy J. Smith
... they were experiencing some differences of opinion Paul was reminding them that they needed to continue working together to accomplish God’s desire and purpose. They needed to pause to see the bigger picture of what God was calling them to do and cease their petty disputes. We today are part of the body of Christ. We too are called by Jesus, to be the church. The church is the extension of the ministry that Jesus began. We became the hands and feet of Jesus going places and doing ministry that Jesus would ...

1 Corinthians 1:10-17
Sermon
Timothy J. Smith
... was placed behind the pulpit. The huge chair featured massive curved arms with dark mahogany legs, each carved like the claw of a lion. As the years passed, the church as well as the community changed, and that couch became the subject of a bitter dispute. Members of the Clyde family wanted to keep the couch where it was, while newer members thought the couch did not belong in the sanctuary. This debate sparked tension between the established members and the newer families who had moved to the country to ...

2 Timothy 1:1-2:13
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... ” words, is by definition of no value to the future of a faithful life. Instead of listening to worthless words Paul urges Timothy to present himself as a “worker,” as one who has kept to the gospel Paul has preached and so has “no reason to be ashamed.” Instead of disputations and debates, Timothy is urged to cling exclusively to “the word of truth.” Obeying the gospel both as “good news” and as potentially short-term “bad news” is the message Paul leaves for his faithful followers.

2 Timothy 1:1-2:13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... ” words, is by definition of no value to the future of a faithful life. Instead of listening to worthless words Paul urges Timothy to present himself as a “worker,” as one who has kept to the gospel Paul has preached and so has “no reason to be ashamed.” Instead of disputations and debates, Timothy is urged to cling exclusively to “the word of truth.” Obeying the gospel both as “good news” and as potentially short-term “bad news” is the message Paul leaves for his faithful followers.

Sermon
David O. Bales
... they show up at Pilate’s Jerusalem headquarters, the prisoner is charged with a capital crime. Christians at least once a year recall Pilate’s going outside to deal with the accusers and then back inside to question Jesus — back and forth in a dispute that seems senseless to him. He starts with scorn upon his face and it doesn’t take long to become absolute contempt. His teeth clench more tightly; and, perhaps more than once as he shuttles between these people for whom he cares nothing, he mumbles ...

Sermon
David O. Bales
... old, he’d grown spiritually old. He didn’t catch Jesus’ play on the word that meant both “from above” and “again.” With the continued Roman occupation, his hope for a free Israel had waned. Serving on the Sanhedrin and hearing endless disputes over possessions and power, he lost his broad love for people. As his fortune grew, his compassion for the unfortunate died. Then Tamar died. Married since she was fifteen and he was seventeen, he always said, “We grew up together.” Now, the ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... a Sabbath day afternoon. All they can see is dirt and disobedience. They cannot see that all the healed blind man can see is a whole new world. Jesus lived and ministered and healed among mud-slingers. Among those who doubted and disputed his abilities and his capabilities. So must we, his disciples, live and minister and heal among the mud-slingers. In the “Harry Potter” genre of children’s books some of the “pureblood” wizard families proclaim their superiority over those who unexpectedly are ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... trials. Both were sentenced to death. But both reacted very differently. Some say Socrates died a “better” death than Jesus. Socrates, condemned to drink a big slug of poison hemlock, kept his cool and drained the cup. While dying he had intellectual disputes with his captors. He kept the entire proceedings under his control. Ultimately he drank the poison and died. To the very end Socrates was always in control. Calm, serene, poised. Talk about a neat, antiseptic death. Jesus, on the other hand, was ...

Sermon
David J. Kalas
... angels in heaven and Jesus himself (Mark 13:32). Finally, the underlying Greek word here for generation (geneya) is used numerous times by Jesus (ex­clusively in the synoptics). Examining that broader context of Jesus’ use of the word, it’s hard to dispute the plain meaning of the text: Namely, Jesus seems to be saying that the aforementioned signs will all oc­cur within the lifetimes of his contemporaries. On the other hand, a careful look at Jesus’ use of the term also reveals an entirely negative ...

2 Samuel 7:1-11, 16, Luke 1:26-38, Romans 16:25-27
Sermon
David J. Kalas
... to build for God a struc­ture, God intended to establish for David a dynasty. God also intended to establish a reputation for David: “I will make for you a great name, like the name of the great ones of the earth.” It’s hard to dispute that that promise and purpose of God has been fulfilled. In later Old Testament prophecy, David’s name, reign, and throne became the emblem for Israel’s past and future glory, a symbol for God’s messianic age. That in itself is remarkable, since Solomon’s ...

Eulogy
Alfred Lord Tennyson
... of thee. I seem to meet their least desire, To clap their cheeks, to call them mine. I see their unborn faces shine Beside the never-lighted fire. I see myself an honor’d guest, Thy partner in the flowery walk Of letters, genial table-talk, Or deep dispute, and graceful jest; While now thy prosperous labor fills The lips of men with honest praise, And sun by sun the happy days Descend below the golden hills With promise of a morn as fair; And all the train of bounteous hours Conduct by paths of growing ...

Mark 9:38-41
Sermon
King Duncan
... strife? Some of you may know the story behind the Christ of the Andes. In 1899 the people of Argentina and Chile were poised for war. Then an Argentine bishop appealed for peace between the two countries. A Chilean bishop took up his cause, and the dispute was submitted to King Edward VII, whose decision settled the quarrel. The unused guns from both countries were then melted down to be used in a colossal statue of Christ, erected on a mountain range between the two countries. That is our legacy as Christ ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... a test. They wanted him to give a self-incriminating response that would arouse opposition against him. Maybe, they thought, he would contradict the commands of Moses in Deuteronomy. Perhaps they expected Jesus to take sides among the rabbinic schools in this dispute, thereby splitting the ranks of his followers. Or maybe in his response, he would offend Herod Antipas as John the Baptist did and be arrested and executed, since he was under Herod’s jurisdiction. Jesus, however, did none of the above. He ...

Understanding Series
Louis C. Jonker
... 29:36), when the Chronicler says: Hezekiah and all the people rejoiced at what God had brought about (kun) for his people, because it was done so quickly. Additional Notes 29:3–36 The historicity and extent of Hezekiah’s cultic reforms are disputed among modern scholars. Whatever the case, I strongly assert that the Chronicler’s (and, for that matter, the Deuteronomist’s) writing was not primarily meant to reflect the historical circumstances of the monarchy about which he writes, but rather his own ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... the Lord is applied by the New Testament to “the Day of Christ,” i.e., to the day of his return. 1:4 While he was eating with them: The word thus translated (synalizein) is an unusual one, found in the New Testament only here and once (disputed) in the Old Testament (LXX Ps. 140:5). It is derived either from a word meaning “to meet” (GNB) or from a word meaning “salt,” and from that, “to eat together.” The latter is to be preferred, on the grounds that the author is recapitulating the events ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... which city was meant. Sebaste was “the principal city” of the area, but was predominantly Gentile (cf. Caesarea, 10:1) and neither the religious nor the ethnic center of the Samaritans. Sychar is a possibility (cf. John 4:5ff.), and Gitta (location disputed, but the traditional birthplace of Simon Magus) has been suggested. Philip’s ministry is briefly described. First, it centered on the proclamation of Jesus as the Christ (v. 5). One wonders whether this was made in terms of the Prophet-like-Moses ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... , certainly not a precedent by which to establish a rule, much less an incentive to actively seek other Gentiles to bring into the church. And Luke himself understood this. His history shows that he was well aware that the question of Gentile eligibility remained a disputed one for many more years to come (see disc. on 15:1, 5 and 21:20ff.). Nevertheless, by the time of the Jerusalem council, the case of Cornelius (if we can accept Luke’s own account) was recognized as a precedent by the church leaders ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... at this time, in which Barnabas as well as Peter vacillated on the question of eating with Gentile believers. The matter seems to have been quickly settled (but see Dunn, Unity, p. 254), but the memory of it may have remained to exacerbate this present dispute. So it was that two missionary expeditions instead of one set out from Antioch (cf. Ps. 76:10). The work of visitation was divided between them, with Barnabas going to Cyprus and taking Mark with him. His concern in this incident was probably for Mark ...

Acts 18:1-17
Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... now. His final words, I will not be a judge of such things (v. 15), are “the precise answer,” says Sherwin-White, “of a Roman magistrate refusing to exercise his arbitrium iudicantis within a matter extra ordinem” (p. 102). To Gallio it was a purely Jewish dispute about words and names (is this a reference to Jesus’ name of “Messiah”?) and their own law, and they could settle the matter among themselves (v. 15; cf. 23:29; 25:19). With all his Roman disdain of the Jews, he had his lictors drive ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... to Paul’s activities elsewhere, but was designed to raise the ire of Felix, who prided himself on keeping order. Tertullus’ ploy was the familiar one of accusing Christians of treason in the hope of involving Rome in what was essentially a religious dispute (cf. 17:7; 18:12ff.; 19:37ff.). Meanwhile, all “questions about their law” (23:29) were kept out of sight. The Greek syntax shows a close connection between the first and second charge, as though Paul’s alleged treason was carried out in ...

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