Dictionary: Trust
Showing 4426 to 4450 of 4985 results

Philippians 2:1-11
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... . In some cities, such stores have gone upscale: they're now even found on Main Street (e.g. Gettysburg, Pa.). Reading the spidery signature of lines, swirls, and creases that crisscross the palms of the hands has an ancient history. People seek answers to such questions as "Where are we going?" "What lies in the future?" "How long will I live?" "What will life bring my way?" "What's the future of this relationship?" Palm readers claim to be able to discern answers by studying our palms. Life-lines, wealth ...

1 Corinthians 12:12-31
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... if we would truly find ourselves, we first must be willing to lose ourselves. The real Jesus came to rescue losers and re-name winners in a new reality called the Kingdom of God. As children of the Kingdom, our question is no longer whether we're among the losers or winners. Our question is: "Are we a healthy body of Christ?" When physical bodies are unhealthy it's because an organ, or a system of organs has failed to operate properly. We recognize the signs of these impending system failures in our own ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... stuck in. It is as though, if we refuse to acknowledge death, it will loose its ability to catch us up in its grip. There is an old story about three friends one afternoon who were vaguely contemplating the inevitability of their own deaths. They posed the following question to themselves: "When you are in your casket and friends and family are mourning upon you, what would you like to hear them say about you?" The first guy said, "I would like to hear them say that I was a great doctor of my time, and a ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... take the steps necessary to get him where he needs to be, to get him what he desires most. Finally invited to approach Jesus, Bartimaeus throws aside his cloak his final mantle of respectability to reach Jesus' side more quickly. He instantly responds to Jesus' question "What do you want me to do for you?" (verse 51), but with the respect and reverence he feels for the one he stands before: "My rabbouni , let me see again." Jesus proclaims Bartimaeus healed. Why? Because "your faith has made you well." But ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... joy; sees miracles everywhere, everyday; feels blessings; welcomes God; seeks to connect itself to others; is constantly amazed by life. Some years ago, a newspaper columnist asked his readers to participate in what he called an imagination test. The test included this question: "What would it be like if people had two heads?" Youngster were able to respond with great creativity and imagination. Among the answers were… With two heads you would be able to sing a duet in the shower. With two heads, if ...

John 15:1-17
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... the frozen ground. What The Big Moustache did to millions of his own people defies description. And Stalin's standard question "How many divisions has the Pope?" still echoes in the words of would-be dictators around the world. Listen to ... ears, but not our hearts. Clayton W. Johnston teaches a course on ethics at Brentwood College in Canada. He asks his students to answer the following questions: 1. If a girl or boy was drowning beside you what would you do? 2. If he or she was 100 meters away, what would you ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... two things: go where he is directed and respond to those who respond to him, and help them respond in faith to God's invitations and initiatives. David Henderson even argues that "If you have ten minutes to share the gospel with someone, spend the first nine asking questions and listening. Only then can we speak words on target. When we speak more than we listen, it's like flying a kite in the dark. Our words go out, but we have no idea if they ever get off the ground." (Culture Shift: Communicating God's ...

Sermon
James McCormick
... geography. I am talking about ideas and ministries. I believe that the task entrusted to the Christian Church is the most important on the face of the earth. It is far too important to neglect or misdirect. When we spend our time answering questions no one is asking, while neglecting the deepest concerns of the human spirit, we have gotten off into side street religion. When we use our time, energy, and resources doing things that really don’t need to be done, solving little, inconsequential problems ...

Ephesians 4:17--5:21
Sermon
James McCormick
... while she was unconscious, the young research assistant came into the room, making rounds. The caring nurse began asking questions about “Why? Why?” Without even looking up from the chart he was examining, he replied: “You can’t ... end of the day, what you have accomplished and how much you have accumulated is not nearly as important as whom you have loved. The basic question is, “Are you kind?” I want to conclude by sharing a true story, just as it was written by the person who had the experience. ...

Sermon
James McCormick
... there was more than one voice. There always is. It was up to Jesus and it is up to us to sort out the many voices we hear. To focus on the One voice that is the source of truth, the source of strength, the source of life. The ultimate question is: in the presence of many voices calling to us, enticing us, and tempting us, to what voice will we listen? Jesus was there without any human companions, so he must have told this story to the disciples later. He must have considered it to be a watershed moment in ...

Sermon
James McCormick
... I’m sure that God looks at every one of us, just as he looked at Moses, and asks us that same searching, penetrating question: “What is that in your hand?” It is something, you know. You have something that God can use. And success or failure in ... But the reassuring promise of God is, “I will be with you!” Never underestimate the power of that presence! I leave you today with the question God asked Moses: “What is that in your hand? What do you have that God can use?” It may not seem to be very ...

Matthew 5:13-16
Sermon
James McCormick
... . It’s true. “You and I are living today in a world God did not make. He allowed it, but He did not make it.” II. The question is, what can we do about it? In our kind of world, it’s easy to feel helpless, to feel that the world is running us instead of ... commit ourselves to help make it a reality, whatever the cost. For those of us committed to God’s kind of world, the key question in every issue is, “What is it that God wants for His world?” And when we live above the standards of the present ...

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... were keeping their judgments upon Jesus' behavior under their breath, Jesus makes their thoughts public. He puts a rhetorical question before these scribes. Which is easier, he asks. To bring healing to the body, or the ability to bring spiritual healing through the ... forgiveness of sins? Jesus follows this question with a surprising answer, the first of fourteen references in Mark to the "Son of Man." In this phrase "Son of Man ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... a hero? Fred said, “The lady was mad at me because I broke the window. I just thought, ‘What’s more important, the baby or the window?’” (1) That’s a good question for us this Christmas Eve. What’s more important--the baby or the celebration? It’s an especially interesting question in our multi-cultural world. We don’t know what to do with the baby anymore. Every December, schools across the nation make preparations to celebrate “Winter Festivals”--pale attempts to celebrate Christmas ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... son had heard the other Christmas story last year at church--the story from the book of Matthew that set Jesus’ birth within an historical context of injustice and bloodshed. Rev. Cobb forgot that his young son had asked all sorts of uncomfortable questions after the service, questions that he and his wife struggled to answer. So as he tucked Jackson in that night, Rev. Cobb began telling the Christmas story, and then he got to the part about the magi leaving gifts, and he said, “The end.” And little ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... acknowledged Jesus’ preeminence and his own need for the kind of Spirit baptism Jesus would provide. Along with the issue of Jesus’ authority over John is the vexed question of why one who is sinless should seek John’s baptism which was specifically for repentance and forgiveness. Jesus’ explanation in verse 15 does not clear up the question. The first answer assures John that “for now” it is right for John to baptize Jesus for it is in accordance with Jesus’ own obedience to God. Jesus ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... that little girl. He was stunned when she held out her gently cupped hands and showed him the very same packet of sugar. Ward realized that the sugar packet was her one and only possession! In that profound moment, he envisioned his own abundant life. One question stirred in Ward’s heart: What does it mean to have nothing? During his years in Africa, Ward developed an under­standing of the people in a small, remote village in northwest Kenya who came to know the gospel. As a result, he gained deep ...

1 Corinthians 1:18--2:5, 1 Corinthians 1:10-17, 1 Corinthians 1:1-9
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... Mission of God (Intervarsity Press: Downers Grove, IL, 2006). Can you hear the counter-intelligence of the cross in these words with which he ends his 500-page book (533-534)? We ask, “Where does God fit into the story of my life?” when the real question is where does my little life fit into this great story of God’s mission. We want to be driven by a purpose that has been tailored just right for our own individual lives (which is of course infinitely preferable to living aimlessly), when we should ...

Psalm 146:1-10, Isaiah 35:1-10, James 5:7-12, Matthew 11:1-19
Sermon Aid
Marion L. Soards, Thomas B. Dozeman, Kendall McCabe
... character of Jesus' work. In turn, vv. 7-11 cohere as the next distinguishable section of the lectionary text. Whereas vv. 2-6 operated from the perspective of John's questions about Jesus and Jesus' reply, vv. 7-11 show us Jesus' view of the Baptist. First, in vv. 7-9 Jesus poses a series of questions, rhetorical and didactic. Jesus offers and rejects superficial, nontheological evaluations of John; and then he registers the theological assessment of John as a prophet, more than a prophet! Next, Jesus ...

Psalm 80:1-19, Isaiah 7:1-25, Romans 1:1-17, Matthew 1:18-25
Sermon Aid
Marion L. Soards, Thomas B. Dozeman, Kendall McCabe
... this psalm in the northern kingdom sometime before its fall in 722 B.C.E. Structure. The refrains provide clear markers for separating the psalm into three parts: vv. 1-3, 4-7, and 17-19. Section one is a plea for help; section two raises the question of how long God will remain angry with the people of God; and section three is a promise that if God comes to the aid of his people, they will remain faithful to God. All three sections conclude with the congregation joining in with a petition for salvation ...

Psalm 29:1-11, Isaiah 42:1-9, Acts 10:23b-48, Matthew 3:13-17
Sermon Aid
Marion L. Soards, Thomas B. Dozeman, Kendall McCabe
... have such a disposition, God knows no favorites. Second, Peter declares that as Jesus was anointed with the Holy Spirit and did the work of God, he was the very demonstration of the power of God. It is this Jesus who is now Lord of all. When we humans have questions about God and God's will for our lives, to borrow the language of popular piety, Jesus is the answer. Want to know God? Look at Jesus. Want to know God's will for our lives? Recognize that Jesus is Lord and realize that his way of living is to ...

Psalm 116:1-19, Acts 2:14-41, 1 Peter 1:13-2:3, Luke 24:13-35
Sermon Aid
Marion L. Soards, Thomas B. Dozeman, Kendall McCabe
... in the events of Jesus' Passion. They know all the details of the events, and they even know all the rumors. In other words, they are familiar with all aspects of Jesus' story, but they are blind. Jesus, on the other hand, is presented as hopelessly naive. His questions even prompt one of the disciples to blurt out in v. 18: "Are you the only stranger in Jerusalem who does not know the things that have taken place there in these days?" Yet in the evolution of the story, the disciples are the fools, and they ...

Mt 4:1-11, Rom 5:12-21
Sermon Aid
Marion L. Soards, Thomas B. Dozeman, Kendall McCabe
... redeems Israel's history. The temptations are the testing of the truth and meaning of Jesus' Sonship. The devil challenges, "If you are the Son of God," thus making plain the character of the controversy. The tempter's words cleverly cut two ways: They question the veracity of Jesus' identity as Son, and they attempt to provoke him to prove his identity by becoming a miracle-worker, which was the standard posture of ancient, so-called "divine men." Jesus refuses to fall prey to the devil's ploy, responding ...

Mt 26:14-27:66 · Php 2:5-11 · Isa 50:4-9a · Ps 31
Sermon Aid
Marion L. Soards, Thomas B. Dozeman, Kendall McCabe
... the servant in v. 7 and a direct address to his oppressors in v. 8. In v. 7 the two "therefores" state the servant's resolve to be a disciple, because God is near. In vv. 8-9a the servant addresses his opponents through a series of questions: "Who will contend with me?" "Who are my adversaries?" "Who will declare me guilty?" The answer, of course, is no one. The striking thing about this suffering servant song, which must be emphasized in preaching, is how easily it moves between the images of student and ...

Psalm 119:1-176, Romans 8:1-17, Matthew 13:1-23, Genesis 25:19-34
Sermon Aid
Marion L. Soards, Thomas B. Dozeman, Kendall McCabe
... It is as though the momentary crisis of infertility provides the context to address a more severe problem, namely that the divine promise is too potent. The birth of twins creates a conflict of fertility in Genesis 25:19-34, for it raises the question of which one will continue the divine promise to Abraham. As the outline indicates, this conflict between the twins goes through four cycles—from the womb of Rebekah into their adulthood. The naming of characters is important to the story. An examination of ...