Dictionary: Hope
Showing 4426 to 4450 of 4973 results

Sermon
Paul E. Flesner
... placed upon every one of us: to open up a path to God for others who are in need of God's love and grace. If we really "hear" that, it will have an effect on both our preparation for and celebration of Christmas. John is telling us that God expects us to do something as a result of what God did at Christmas. While that may seem like a trite statement, I have observed that there are any number of folks in our pews who have what I call an "armchair faith." To be sure, they come to church. But ...

Sermon
Paul E. Flesner
... support. Whether it is "up" or "out," God is here. Christmas suggests a second direction in which to look to encounter the Holy One: look around at the everyday world in which you live! God came to earth in a smelly cattle shed -- the last place one would expect to find God. But those are the kinds of places where we do find God. I think it's hard to visualize meeting God in everyday life. What does God care about dirty dishes? What does God care about driving children from one school event to another? What ...

Sermon
Paul E. Flesner
... to be "saved." That's another way of saying that God wants to bring all people back into a relationship with God. The piety that we practice may be a wonderful way of expressing our faith, but when we use that piety as the criteria by which we expect God to include or exclude others, we have turned that piety into a pitfall. "Pious people" have a special need to be reminded of this dimension of who Jesus is! Is this picture included in your image of the Master? I realize what I have described for you ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... Murray’s faith impacts complete strangers. Even Time magazine is beginning to recognize the difference faith can make. They published a remarkable story recently about a young man named Peter Howell. Every week, the young men of Sigma Nu fraternity house at IndianaUniversity expect a visit from Peter Howell. Howell is a fellow student and president of Greek InterVarsity, a Christian group on campus. For the past two years, he has paid every guy in his dormitory a weekly visit and invited him to a Bible ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... the wrong things. We get angry when someone cuts us off in traffic. Or when someone takes credit for something we’ve done at the office. We get angry at the kids when they’re too noisy and at our spouse when they don’t meet our expectations. Sometimes we get angry when we’re simply tired and cranky. We don’t even need anything to set us off. The media reported sometime back on a fight that broke out in a nursing home. The Spring Haven Retirement Community in Florida found their peace disrupted ...

John 15:1-17
Sermon
David G. Rogne
... one who gives life and sustenance to their spiritual growth. We do that when we make time for prayer, when we make time to read the Bible and reflect on its implications for us, when we spend time in meditation and ask questions like, "What does God expect of me?" When we do those things, we find that our spirits are sustained and our spiritual lives continue to grow. But we have been chosen, not simply to develop personally, but to bear fruit. That is, our Christian faith should show some results. It is ...

Sermon
David G. Rogne
... were free to choose activity, but instead they sought stillness. They were free to keep right on competing, but they chose to take an upward look. The Sabbath principle involves remembering that we are creatures, not gods; we cannot do everything, nor ought we to expect ourselves to, for that smacks of pride, and we do better humbly to recognize our limitations. A third Sabbath principle is worship. Ralph Sockman once wrote, "Six days a week we sit at the loom. On the seventh day God calls us to come look ...

Sermon
David G. Rogne
... to leave. Sometimes, the best thing we can do is to move on to another place. Lawrence Welk began life in a Dakota farmhouse with sod floor and walls. He was one of eight children born to parents of German ancestry. They were farmers, and expected Lawrence to take up farming as well. From his earliest years, Lawrence was interested in music. His father played the accordion for the family's amusement. When he was a teenager, Lawrence bought a cheap accordion, but it soon fell apart. He saw a more expensive ...

Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... our heads covered and always wear a little prayer shawl. This shows our constant devotion to God. You may ask, how did this tradition start? I'll tell you -- I don't know! But it's a tradition! Because of our traditions everyone knows who he is and what God expects him to do." So it is that the Lord's Supper is a tradition, a landmark in our lives. Jesus wills us to remember him, to come often, to sit and look to our past, future, and present. It's been my experience that persons coming to the church have ...

Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... allow him to place you in the home, the job, the church of his choice. It means he can use you to serve in a successful spot or a position where he needs a noble failure or a humble, plodding mediocrity. It means you place all your attitudes, hopes, and expectations upon him. Have you done this? Is he your all? Is he in your life right now who he already is in the universe, King and Lord forever? Getting Started Where You Are The first question in the Bible is found in Genesis, chapter 3. God asks Adam and ...

Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... how it was in our text? Why didn't the disciples ask Jesus what he meant when he predicted his death? They were afraid. They were afraid of what the answer might be. What would his death mean to them? Was the nature of the Messiah different from what they expected? And someone settled the issue by deftly concluding, "Don't ask." A pastor once told me he'd been in the ministry 47 years and not once had a church member ever asked, "Pastor, do you think I'm a Christian?" Not once had an elder or deacon queried ...

Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... If we withdraw, if Christians cocoon themselves, if we keep our salt to ourselves, then our children's world won't be fit to live in! In the 1930s, as Hitler rose to power as a Nazi dictator, Albert Einstein watched with growing alarm. He expected the newspapers to expose Hitler's corruption, but the media was quickly silenced. So Einstein looked to the universities to stop Hitler. Instead, they went along. In the end, only the church stood squarely in Hitler's path. And Einstein wrote, "What formerly I had ...

Sermon
Cathy A. Ammlung
... pious religious language is stripped away, that's what Jesus was offering. This was invitation to Adventure, not proposal of a business venture. Following Jesus would mean taking roads and making choices that might have never occurred to the man. His priorities and expectations would be turned topsy-turvy. Following Jesus wasn't a matter of examining the bottom-line profitability of doing so; nor did it mean taking charge of his own destiny, even by doing good and doing right. It meant losing his heart (and ...

1 Corinthians 15:1-11
Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... Saint Paul, after one has heard or received the message of the gospel, one must stand in it. There's a great German phrase, "zur Kenntnis nehmen." It means "to acknowledge something." It often is a way of deflecting a criticism or warning. "Okay, I hear you, but don't expect me to take any action on it or be affected by your words." To stand in the gospel is to receive it and allow it to influence your life. To stand in it is to stand against that which would deny the gospel. To stand in it is not to ...

Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... with youth. Visit the elderly. Teach a Sunday school class. Tell your boss to stop using the Lord's name in vain. Tell your best friend to cool it with the swear words. Find new ways to love and forgive friends and members of your family, beyond what is expected. Go BASE jumping with Jesus, and you will find eternal life. And even if you fall, God's Spirit and the Body of Christ are there to catch you. What would eternal life look like? I'll give you one example: Two brothers worked together on the family ...

Sermon
Glenn McDonald
... to God for help, and it's hard to know just how he answers. Really, what can we count on God for? That is the question. If we're trusting that God is here, at work in our lives, actually changing us, what exactly can we expect? Does Christian discipleship deliver real power for real change? Before such real change in our lives can come about, we have to understand why change is necessary ... and why our search for the evidence of spiritual progress can be so exasperating. The Bible provides a fascinating ...

Sermon
Glenn McDonald
... the day. A television commercial portrays a group of stunned consumers standing in the middle of the night outside a conventional store at a mall. No lights are on. The customers are puzzled: "It's closed. Man, that is so weird." We are taught to expect that everything should be available every hour of every day. What season is it any more? We no longer have to wait for summer to get strawberries and watermelons. We can find ripe peaches year-round in Snow Belt stores. Contemporary culture clearly wants to ...

Ephesians 3:14-21
Sermon
Harold Warlick
... don't work with them, worship with them, or go out of their way to attend the same parties. Blue-collar workers are used to a life apart from white-collar management. A wage earner may drive through the neighborhood of his employer, but hardly expect to be invited in for a barbecue. Protestants are used to being separated from Catholics. Pentecostal church members rarely cross paths with those in Orthodox congregations. Likewise, most of us are used to a degree of separation from certain members of our own ...

Sermon
Harold Warlick
... . We want to accept people as they are."2 Indeed, she posits, we have come to the point in our society where we will forgive almost any wrong and accept almost any lifestyle in the name of Christian love. Forgetting Christ's purposes, we, in similar fashion, expect to be forgiven and accepted no matter how we live. According to James, not all wisdom is true wisdom come from above, and we do ourselves and those around us no great favor when we pretend that it is. James recognizes the battle of the wisdoms ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... collarbone when another cyclist slid and fell in front of the pack, causing a crash that involved thirty-five other riders. Collarbone injuries are notoriously painful, and they heal slowly because the collarbone cannot be isolated and immobilized by a cast. No one expected Hamilton to return to the race. But the following morning, Tyler Hamilton set out on the next leg of the Tour de France. Against all predictions, he finished the race. How tough was it? According to one report, the pain was so great ...

Sermon
Curtis Lewis
... them to respond to his love. This same comfort is at the heart of Advent. As the chapter 40 of Isaiah suggests, Advent offers us the good news that we can find this same comfort in the midst of our exile and estrangement from God. The expectation of such comfort can lead us to the Christ event which is the climax of Advent. It begins with the prophetic thunderings of judgment, but it moves to the fullness of time when hope emerges from the womb of Mary and our comfort is visible, physical, identifying ...

Sermon
Curtis Lewis
... a sense an invitation to the viewers: "If you build it, he will come." Building God a house was David's Field of Dreams. God had never whispered to David, "Build me a house," nor had God ever revealed to David in any manner that he needed, wanted, or expected David to build him a house. Both David and Nathan failed to realize that sometimes dreams and ideas are from God, and sometimes they are not. Even you and I often have friends who will encourage us to go for something which is our dream, our plan, our ...

Sermon
Curtis Lewis
... exclaim, "I yam what I yam." Popeye was a simple seafaring man who loved Olive Oyl. He was unpretentious, and yet his story belonged to him. "I yam what I yam." When you look closely at Popeye, it seems he is saying, "Don't get your hopes up; don't expect too much. I yam what I yam, and that's all." Ancient Israel could say before Samuel, "I yam what I yam." God did not want Israel to remain as she was. Thus, through Samuel, God called Israel to a new resolve, a new beginning. This new beginning was to ...

Sermon
Curtis Lewis
... way to be happy in Jesus, than to trust and obey." Jonah surely wouldn't have written a song like that, nor would he sing it. As Jonah sat on the beach, stewing in his own juice, God called him a second time, and he responded as a prophet is expected to respond. So Jonah set out and went to Nineveh, that great city. Jonah went to the city of Nineveh with a message of ... Bad News Which Became Good News Jonah walked toward the city of Nineveh, called by God a "great city." He was not a happy prophet. He ...

Sermon
Curtis Lewis
... take you for my wife forever" (v. 18). This vow is repeated three times. It is not a period of engagement, but of marriage, for this vow is "forever." As the groom stands with his bride to renew their wedding vows, he knows that he can expect nothing from the bride. As they stand together at the altar, the bride is asked to promise nothing. Only the groom makes promises. The promises of the groom are fantastic, unconditional, and anchored firmly in God's unchanging nature. The vows of renewal contain some ...