Dictionary: Hope
Showing 4276 to 4300 of 4955 results

Sermon
King Duncan
... , when someone comes to Jesus with a question, he answers with another question, or with a parable or a challenge. In fact, author Philip Yancey says he once heard a theologian say that Jesus was asked 183 questions in the Bible, and he ... Curt Moore of Orlando, Florida, a questionable choice for any spiritual event, but one the family felt would be appropriate due to the fact that every time Toni heard Curt preach she prayed for Jesus to return at that very moment.” The obituary continued like this: “On ...

Sermon
Dean Feldmeyer
... the one who is to come, or are we to wait for another?” This was a curious question for John to ask, given the fact that he was the one who baptized Jesus way back at the beginning of the gospel story but scholars suggest that Matthew was making a ... the poor should be treated with compassion and respect and given the opportunity to lift themselves up and out of their poverty. In fact, laws were created in Israel that were designed to give the poor a break and help them live better lives — but those laws ...

4278. What Might Have Been
Illustration
Don Emmitte
A great autobiography is that of Loren Eisley, All the Strange Hours. Eisley was an American anthropologist, educator, philosopher, and natural science writer. In his book he tells of an incident early in his academic training, in fact in his first English class of college. It was a traumatic experience, one which changed the direction of his life. In his first theme assignment, the professor called him to stay after class and said, “You didn’t compose this; it is written too well.” He had labored ...

Sermon
Molly F. James
... ship come together like a giant puzzle. Thousands of people work at Bath Iron Works in three shifts around the clock. In fact, after the state government BIW is the largest employer in the state of Maine. The difference from the state offices is that ... , but I can’t help but think it still would have gone better if everyone had just taken a deep breath and alternated. In fact, I often think about that tidy, kind system whenever I am in merging traffic. Wouldn’t this all go better if we just alternated? ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... everything I possibly can? Can you help me?" Rudy asks. The priest hesitates as a rueful smile crosses his face. "In 35 years of religious studies," he says, "I've come up with only two hard, incontrovertible facts: there is a God, and I'm not Him."] The priest says that in 35 years of religious studies he has only learned two incontrovertible facts: "There is a God, and I'm not Him." Here is an educated man, a man who has spent his life in service to God. What kind of answers can he give people who want to ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... for her. (8) That’s interesting, don’t you think? The Queen of England needs someone to walk in her shoes for a few days. But here’s the Good News: Jesus, the King of Kings and Lord of Lords, didn’t need someone to walk in his shoes. In fact, he did just the opposite. He walked in our shoes to show us how much God loves us. He gave up his divine power and authority and became all these things—poor in spirit, meek, mournful, hungering and thirsting, a peacemaker—to show us just how far God would ...

Sermon
Molly F. James
... mourn and weep. Woe to you when all speak well of you, for that is what their ancestors did to the false prophets” (Luke 6:24-26). We will face challenges and difficulties in the course of our lives. It is best to come to grips with that fact and not live with the presumption that everything will go swimmingly. We will not always be full, laughing, or spoken well of. But that does not mean that our lives will be overwhelmed by pain or challenge. No; we are people of faith. We believe in resurrection. We ...

Sermon
Dean Feldmeyer
... or effectively. It doesn’t make it more real in our lives. It’s kind of like the engine in my car – it’s more important that it works than that I understand how it works. If it works, I’m willing to just accept that as a fact without really understanding how. Asked to define grace, author Philip Yancey put it this way: I don’t even try. Jesus talked a lot about grace, but mainly through stories. I remember once getting stuck in Los Angeles traffic and arriving 58 minutes late at the Hertz rental ...

Sermon
Dean Feldmeyer
... occurred to me about what was going on there. To the casual observer it looks like we are rewarding Benny for his walking achievement, that all those hugs and kisses are payments for a job well done, when that is not the case at all. In fact, those hugs and kisses were simply demonstrations of our love for him. We were not praising him for his accomplishments. We were praising the accomplishments because we loved him. The hugs and kisses were gifts of love. Baptism is not a payment for something we have ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... sits), broken seal, feet, paralysis and trembling, money, and the “story.” In order to understand the story of the guards, we need to hear the entire resurrection story again, told this time by Matthew. When we do, we see juxtaposed stories that are, in fact, stories within stories. We see, along with Matthew, the moment of the women’s encounter with the angel at the tomb. We see guards also present at this encounter. Even though the angel speaks to the women and not directly to the guards, it’s ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... 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 “songs against demons” and are indicated in fact in the Talmud as useful to ward off an evil attack.^ Even the “sefer Torah” was often used in the case of an ill or dying person as a healing “charm.” Kabbalists in particular attribute deep mystical meaning to parts of the Pentateuch ...

Matthew 4:18-22, John 1:35-42, John 1:43-51
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... still others to them besides those already gathered’” (Isaiah 56:8). It’s clear that Jesus saw this as his mission. In fact, later in Matthew, Jesus would say, “I have come to seek the lost sheep of the House of Israel [the fallen northern ... of Israel (the northern kingdom)” were scattered and integrated among the gentiles. Jesus would never complete convert Capernaum. In fact, near the end of his ministry, he would be frustrated, because Capernaum remained essentially a city of unbelievers. However ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... it would be)? There is good reason to believe from John’s gospel that Simon the Leper (or former leper) is Judas Iscariot’s father. This would make a good deal of sense in the stories of the four gospelers. We know that Jesus healed a leper, in fact many, so it’s quite possible that Simon the Leper was healed by Jesus, and possible that he was also a Pharisee. Could this be the reason Jesus tells him the story using a comparison? Is leprosy the “lesser sin” compared to the woman’s “many”? Is ...

Matthew 9:27-34, Matthew 9:35-38, Matthew 12:15-21, Matthew 12:22-37, Matthew 12:38-45, Matthew 12:46-50
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... and dwelled in the area where Jesus loved to hang out –ancient southern Palestine, the area that was later known as the fallen northern kingdom. Ekron was about 25 miles from Jerusalem. In fact, the word Palestine, named by the Romans in the 2nd century came from the “Philistines” who inhabited Judea. In fact, we know that some Israelites were corrupted by the cult of Baalzebub and practiced some of their pagan rituals. The Philistines were Israel’s arch enemy in former times. They were sea people ...

Matthew 16:21-28, Matthew 17:14-23, Matthew 20:17-19, Matthew 26:1-5
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... of being the very trip wood that could make him stumble in his mission? The one who would “tempt” him to go the easy route? The early Church that Peter founded upon his own faith in the resurrection and in Jesus would in the end be rock solid. In fact, Jesus takes time out in a post-resurrection appearance, just to re-commission Peter, so that he is ready for the task, and forgiven all former “trip-ups.” You see, it’s never too late to be the kind of “rock” that Jesus meant us to be. Even if ...

Luke 1:26-38, Luke 1:39-45, Luke 1:46-56
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... “Here I am!” Rabbi Ari Kaiman says, “our deepest relationships are not defined by strength but by our vulnerability.” It’s far more frightening to bare our souls than to bear gifts this advent season. Or in any season. But being “available” to others, in fact being “available” to God is what God desires of all of us as true human beings. Just as Jesus’ sacrificial “I Am” revealed who he was and whose he was, for all of us, the ability for us to be “truly present” for God and for ...

Luke 2:21-40
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... of Daniel. Some believe that the magi who came looking for the Messiah child were of the priestly-political class of Parthians to the east in the region of Persia. There had been a tribe of magi/wise men who were also Semites. They may in fact have similar roots to Abraham, who came from Ur in Chaldea. The tribe lived in the Median nation in eastern Mesopotamia, were monotheistic, and had a similar tribal system to the Jewish people. These most likely became the wise men who served in the Babylonian courts ...

Matthew 2:1-12
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... perfume. Myrrh, a bitter resin, was used in Egyptian embalming, as an incense oil to anoint kings in the Jewish tradition, and as a healing salve or liniment, as well as an analgesic. All of these gifts were found in ample volume in the Arabian Peninsula. In fact, these are similar gifts that the Queen of Sheba brought to Solomon. In the Middle East, the gifts are given to royalty.*** In ancient Israel, a pound of Myrrh would go for about $4,000. A pound of Frankincense for about $500 per. In the scriptures ...

Mark 10:35-45, Matthew 20:20-28
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... . Yes. What was so special about that round table? That’s right. Because everyone around it was equal in status –even the place of the king. But it usually didn’t work that way. You see in Jesus day, and in all of the Hebrew scriptures, in fact in any culture throughout the monarchy, the best seats in the “house” are those to the right and the left of the monarch. They were the “power seats,” reserved for those closest to the king, the entrusted few. And it was these seats that the disciples ...

Luke 14:1-14, Luke 14:15-24
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... at its most conventional, just look at Downton Abbey! Check out the upstairs table of food, and the downstairs table of food. Now don’t get me wrong. We all need to be givers in some things, yes. But we all need to do some taking too! Some receiving. In fact, a theology of receiving is prior to a theology of giving. If you can’t learn how to receive well –and there are many people like that too—you may just be encouraging the takers in your life more! And if you can’t receive, you won’t have a ...

Luke 19:28-44, Matthew 21:1-11, Mark 11:1-11, John 12:12-19
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... go on a special diet? Those are the most popular. But I’ve heard a couple of really unusual ones too, like not using your curling iron for the duration of Lent. Or declining to watch your favorite tv show. And then there are the really strange ones. In fact, if you google strange things people give up for Lent, you’ll find a whole slew of those…..things like wearing the same outfit all of Lent. Or keeping a popped kernel of corn inside of your shoe. That one sounds a bit masochistic to me. Not washing ...

Luke 12:13-21, Luke 12:22-34, Luke 12:35-48, Luke 12:49-53, Luke 12:54-59
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... is the dog, our admired and intelligent hero, then our least revered furry friend by rights ought to be the “lemming” --that strange rodent-like creature that runs in herds to the point of taking “suicide” leaps off of cliffs and into traps. In fact, the “lemming” is known in pop culture as a kind of mindless creature that doesn’t think for itself, but simply follows along, even unto sure death. We may not admire the lemming. But sometimes, we sure do imitate them. And this is exactly Jesus ...

Luke 1:1-4, Luke 1:26-38
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... September 20th. I was WITH her. She was there.” That’s known as an alibi. An alibi frees someone from being considered as a perpetrator, if it can be proven that that person was not there, but was somewhere else. An eye witness can verify that fact. “I HEARD the sound of gunfire. There were three shots. I heard his voice shouting. He was threatening her.” An ear witness can testify in order to authenticate the reality of a crime committed. Short of other evidence, eye and ear witnesses are the most ...

Luke 1:39-45, Luke 1:46-56
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... century, it was no different. And when Mary and Elizabeth got together at Zechariah’s home in the hill country of Judea, they were celebrating much more than just a baby shower! They were claiming and proclaiming a prophecy and hatching a resistance movement! In fact, you could say that the real mystery of the birth story is not The Three “Wise” Men (we don’t know how many there were anyway) but “The Three Wise Women”: Mary, Elizabeth, and Anna. The first person to be told Jesus was the Messiah ...

Matthew 2:19-23, Matthew 2:13-18
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... are the metaphors of “foreign place” and “dreams” and “veil of anonymity” and “disguise” and “hiding places.” In fact hiding is a leitmotiv that runs through all of scripture from Genesis to Revelation –sometimes God hides us in ... ’s time is different from our time. And the time we hide doesn’t seem to bother God a bit. In fact, you might often call it “incubation” time, prayer time, contemplation time, strengthening time. Jesus often goes “apart” in gardens, on mountains, ...