Dictionary: Trust
Showing 401 to 425 of 3543 results

Sermon
Carl Jech
... . Jesus as Savior saves us precisely from believing that it is up to us to save ourselves and the world, from believing that we must be winners in order to have worth. It does seem to be flying in the face of tradition if we reject the language of "winning" or "claiming" the world for Christ, but Jesus cried over Jerusalem precisely because it held its traditions too tightly, because it refused to listen to him as he criticized their usual ways of thinking - their traditional theology. He cried because he ...

Sermon
Carl Hoefler
... , there is no good news. However, the truth is that we do not have to limit ourselves to any one text, and the Book of Acts certainly does not limit its story to one event. The Book of Acts goes on to report that, despite the rejection and despite the counterfeit faith, the church of Jesus Christ grew, flourished, and established a beachhead in Europe that would eventually spread across the world. God is not frustrated by counterfeit faith. He who healed the crippled man in Lystra can also cure the crippled ...

Bulletin Aid
Carl Hoefler
... response Christ asks for is complete loyalty to him. People: We want to be committed to Christ and pray for our loved ones to make the same response. Collect O Lord God, whose gift of peace brings strife and conflict in households where some accept and some reject your Son: Grant us harmony, that as families we may be united by our faith in your Son as our Savior, without whom there can never be peace. In his name we pray. Amen. Prayer of Confession We have fooled ourselves, Father, because our apathy has ...

Sermon
Louis H. Valbracht
... war. They no longer believe the scare warnings of the militarists. Thousands of them refused to take part in our last, stupid, illegal, immoral war in Vietnam that we got into by lies and deceit and unconstitutional acts. They are well on their way to forever rejecting war as an instrument of international relationships. Yes, in the 1950s, everybody was looking at the Arms Race. No one noticed that God was bringing to life a generation which might take a good look at all of this and get rid of both piles of ...

Luke 19:28-44
Sermon
... . One day they shouted, "Hallelujah!" and later the same week they cried, "Crucify!" At the close of Palm Sunday, we find Jesus looking over the city and weeping. "Oh, how I would have gathered you ... but you would not." And Jesus wept. Later the people rejected him when they demanded that Barabbas be released and Jesus be sent to the cross. They wanted a criminal rather than a Christ! Can you imagine how that hurt Jesus' feelings? Then there were the disciples who forsook him and fled when he was arrested ...

Sermon
... happen. Likewise, parents can see what is happening in their child’s life. They know where it’s likely to end up, and they know the child is headed for grief and trouble. God is not sending the punishment, but knows that it will happen as a result of their rejection of his way. So the Lord admits that he cannot give up on his children. He asks, rhetorically, "How can I give you up, O Ephraim? How can I hand you over, O Israel?" (Hosea 11:8) Can the Lord just scratch them out of his book? Can he consider ...

Sermon
... off this man Jesus, who comes humbly, lowly, riding on an ass, and in peace. It is easy to write him off when what we think we need is power, money, a miracle drug, the right person or friend, or the exact event. So, Jesus continues to be denied and rejected. People still ask, "What can he do?" Others, however, join in that ancient procession begun so long ago in which we shout, "Hosanna! Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord. Hosanna in the highest! Save us Lord." What we are doing is not simply ...

Isaiah 52:13--53:12
Sermon
... from whom men hide their faces" or we want to get rid of them. Isn’t that what gossip is frequently about? There is no question that Jesus was "a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief." Who else has ever loved so deeply and has been so severely rejected as he was? Any one of us who has openly wanted and tried to love another who would not let us love, or even be near them, except on their terms, knows something of this grief. Is there any greater pain than unrequited love? But "who has believed what ...

Lk 12:49-56 · Jer 20:7-13; 23:23-29; 38:4-10
Sermon Aid
John R. Brokhoff
... meaning of faith. We look to him as the model of endurance in suffering. We look to him in his glory seated in power at God's right hand. 3. Rejected (v.17). This is a hard word. Would Christ reject anyone? The author of Hebrews felt that a Christian, who deserted Christ, could not be re-instated. In that sense, like Esau, he/she would be rejected. Probably the meaning is this: Though Esau wanted his father's blessing, he could not get it because it was already given to Jacob. A missed opportunity cannot be ...

Jn 1:1-18 · Eph 1:3-6, 15-18 · Isa 61:10--62:3 · Jer 31:7-14
Sermon Aid
John R. Brokhoff
... , to have life, and to go to heaven. This was God's will even before the world was created. To accomplish this, he sent his Son to the world to die for us that we might by faith become people of God. Though this is our divine destiny, we may reject God's will and refuse sonship. 3. Heard (v. 15). What do people hear about us? What do people say about us Christians? Paul tells the Ephesians what he heard about them. He heard about their faith in Christ. What a good report! Also he heard about their love for ...

Lk 4:21-30 · 1 Cor 13:1-13 · Jer 1:4-10
Sermon Aid
John R. Brokhoff
... him. Today church people do not kill the preacher but by non-violent and often under-handed methods, they get rid of him. Outline: How to get rid of your preacher - A. Accept him/her at first - vv. 21-22 B. Object to his/her preaching - vv. 23-27 C. Reject him/her - vv. 28-29 3. Can You Take the Truth? 4:21-30. Need: The truth hurts! Most of us do not like people who hurt us with the truth about ourselves. Consequently, preachers through the centuries have been wiped out or driven off. Amos was ordered to ...

Lk 6:17-26 · 1 Cor 15:12-20 · Jer 17:5-8
Sermon Aid
John R. Brokhoff
... 1 - A choice to trust or not to trust God. Lesson 2 - A choice to believe or not to believe the Resurrection. Today we are given a choice: to receive blessings or woes (Gospel), to trust or not to put our trust in God (Lesson 1), and to accept or reject the fact of Jesus' resurrection. In the light of having to make so serious a choice we pray in the Prayer of the Day: "Help us to see and understand the things we ought to do." The Psalm (Psalm 1) and Lesson 1 are almost duplicates.

Lk 9:18-36; 13:31-35 · Php 3:17--4:1 · Jer 26:8-15 · Gen 15:1-12, 17-18
Sermon Aid
John R. Brokhoff
... . Jeremiah could say, "Don't blame me, blame God." Jeremiah's message of doom resulted from his obedience to God - v. 8. What is God saying today through the preacher that we oppose? Do we object to the teaching of a tithe as a minimal gift to God? Do we reject the idea of loving one's enemies? Do we resist the message that a plague will come upon us lest we repent? Do we resent this open and frank criticism of our wayward ways? Is the preacher just letting off steam or is he expressing his anger at his ...

John 17:1-11, Acts 1:6-14, 1 Peter 4:12-14; 5:6-11
Bulletin Aid
... feel safe in our faith. But we resist the unkindness of society; and we protect ourselves from being hurt by those who do not share our faith. And in our defense, we deny our faith. Forgive us for weakening, instead of growing, when we feel our faith brings rejection or pain. Fill our hearts with joy for being a part of the Christian fellowship of believers; and use us even when ridiculed, to bear witness to your love. In our Savior's name we pray. Amen. Hymns "Am I a Soldier of the Cross" "Be Not Dismayed ...

Sermon
... too deep) and the services are not over by twelve noon." "It's too cold in the winter and I'm afraid of snakes in the summer!" Will these excuses for our defection stand the scrutiny of the allseeing, all-knowing eyes of God in the Judgment Day? The Rejection God sees it all. God knows exactly what's going on. God is not fooled. And God is mad! When God sees those people whom he had redeemed out of slavery only a short while ago, those people who had acknowledged him as Lord, had entered into Covenant with ...

Sermon
... to God for the sins of the people. Well as I said, in his early years as a priest Luther believed in the doctrine of transubstantiation and in the practice of withholding the wine from the laity. But in the midst of the Reformation, he rejected both the doctrine and the practice. He wrote that transubstantiation "is a monstrous word for a monstrous idea. The bread remains bread and the wine remains wine." (Theodore Tappert, The Lord's Supper, p. 12) Since the bread and wine do not actually change into ...

Sermon
... do not really want it. We say we believe in it, but we vote against it. We say we are for it, but only as long as it does not interfere with some special interest close to our hearts, or our pocketbooks. We say we want it, but we mostly reject it. Though we try to ignore him, and dress him up in our clothing, and put our words in his mouth, and interpret his message according to what we want to hear, Jesus Christ still stands among us and says, "Repent, and believe in the Gospel." Gospel? Good news about ...

Matthew 21:33-46, Philippians 4:2-9, Philippians 3:12-4:1, Numbers 27:12-23, Psalm 81:1-16, Isaiah 5:1-7
Sermon Aid
... it produced "wild grapes," so he does to those to whom he gave the kingdom of heaven in Jesus Christ. God is merciful and kind and just, but he cannot act against his own character and will. The cross of Calvary rips up the vineyard, condemning those who reject or neglect Jesus, just as surely as it reconciles the faithful to God. 4. The faithful are the "pleasant planting" of the Lord today; they produce "fruit" high on the hill that was made fertile by the cross of Christ. And the heart of God rejoices in ...

Sermon
Robert Bachelder
... , in the Revelation of St. John with his vision of the Christ who says: "Behold, I stand at the door and knock; if anyone hears my voice, I will come into him." The accent here is not on God’s power but on human freedom, freedom to accept or reject God, to choose goodness or sin. It is an accent we find also near the beginning of Scripture, in Deuteronomy, where we read: "I am setting before you this day the ways of life and death." Life or death, happiness or misery it’s your choice. Right through the ...

Sermon
George Bass
... it even dug a grave; lowered itself into it, and pulled in the dirt behind him. The younger brother who had viewed the coffin and said to his brother, "To hell with you," was actually judged and condemned - and killed - by that which he had rejected, his brother and his coffin. To reject the death of Christ on the cross and simply call it nonsense is to place oneself in the same sort of jeopardy. "Now is the judgment of this world, now shall the ruler of this world be cast out." The cross of Christ - in the ...

Sermon
Robert G. Tuttle
... where you can land with safety. That’s what Jesus was telling us. There is a way of life that God has prepared for us. We can reject it and destroy ourselves, but it is there to save us, to give us life. That’s what a high sense of Christian morality is all ... had disobeyed her mother. She felt guilty and, therefore, hostile toward her mother. The mother tried to help, but the child rejected her. Angry and hostile the child stamped out of the room, stamped up the stairs, went into her room and slammed ...

Sermon
Richard Hoefler
... . Each of the Gospel writers who records this miracle makes it very clear that "Jesus came to them walking on the water." So when faced with this miracle there are only two options: accept it in faith and attempt to hear the lesson it teaches, or reject it and move on to a more believable text. We choose to accept the first option and, learning the great lesson it has to teach, are not embarrassed for having accepted it as miracle; rather, we are grateful. Exegetical Problems Bultmann believes this story to ...

Sermon
Allan J. Weenink
... will you believe? Ultimately it becomes an utterly personal matter. Life leaves no room for neutrality. One believes he is an atheist, a materialist, a hedonist, a skeptic, a Mohammedan, or a Christian. By accepting some things, an individual by the same token rejects other things. This is the point of particularity. One cannot be an atheist and God-fearing at the same time. One cancels out the other. A Christian is a person of distinction because what he believes motivates what he is. He faces decisions ...

Exodus 20:1-21
Sermon
Frank H. Seilhamer
... as he wanted him to be. Hence man was not by nature "sinful and unclean." When the man turned his back on the God who lovingly fashioned him, he did it, and does it, by choice, not because of some inbuilt defect. Because it is by choice that man often rejects him, God at times raps us for what we do, and holds us accountable for our actions. Too often we take one another off the hook for our behavior by blaming what we do on some sort of pre-determinism. Man, therefore, is not capable of a positive response ...

Luke 23:26-43
Sermon
Burton F. Blair
... him. They laughed at him, and they killed him. They turned away from the one person who could give them the answer to their struggle with God. They simply ignored him. They refused to believe his words or believe who he was. That is ignorance to the fullest. Denial, rejection, and death is the way we, too, live in ignorance. We, too, practice the same kind of ignorance. What is it but ignorance when we grow cold in our loyalty to Jesus? We have all kinds of excuses why we can not be a burning fire for Jesus ...

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