Dictionary: Trust
Showing 4526 to 4550 of 4553 results

Mark 10:46-52
Sermon
Lori Wagner
To speak up, to speak loudly and boldly about who you are and what you need can be challenging, especially for those with a history of trauma or who have been raised in households in which being quiet and staying out of the way was your best form of survival. But Jesus’ message in the scriptures seems to indicate that in his presence, we are encouraged to “speak up!” ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... timing, we will find we have more “time” to be the people of God that Jesus called us to be. We human beings have a limited amount of focus. As Jesus once told us, we can’t serve both God and money (or any of our desires). And as Joshua challenged us: “As for me and my household, we will serve the Lord” (24:15). What about you? Can you “trust and wait?” Can your faith sustain you in the times to come? “For the harvest is plenty and the workers few” (Matt 9:37-38). Come, people of God ...

Luke 9:28-36 (37-43a)
Sermon
Wayne Brouwer
... as “Ice Road Truckers,” monitoring the dangerous winter haulage north of Yellowknife on the frozen Canadian tundra. Then, after several seasons of gaining familiarity with the top tonnage truckers, the network displaced them to northern Alaska and introduced new challenges and new road masters. Finally, in a thrilling new twist, three of these rig lords and ladies were transported to the Himalayan heights of upper India. There the cameras panned, with toe-tingling shock and awe, the dizzying cliffs and ...

Luke 22:14-23:56
Sermon
Wayne Brouwer
... , outplay!”? Three major families of atonement theory have been proposed over the centuries, to answer such questions. The first is linked to a story Jesus told shortly before this. In Luke 20, as Jesus was wrestling with the leaders, the crowds, and the challenges in Jerusalem during this emotionally charged week of Passover, he told the story we often call the Parable of the Tenants. Jesus said a man planted a vineyard and then turned it over to tenants while he traveled to distant places. The tenants ...

Sermon
Wayne Brouwer
... of a nightmare. They had traveled with their Master long and far, and they were not ready to fall into this painful pit, abruptly halting the movement that seemed destined for so much more. Suddenly purposeless, they cowered in hidden rooms, challenged at the very thought of appearing in public where their hero had been demonized. Judas, however, sensed it differently. Had he pushed the envelope and forced Jesus’ hand into an armed confrontation with the governing authorities, hoping this would goad Jesus ...

Sermon
Wayne Brouwer
... . He also mentioned, cryptically, that he had other sheep, not of the flock in front of him, and that he had to go and call them. The disciples must have thought about these things as they now stood with Jesus in the local cemetery. He challenged the keepers of the place, demanding that they roll back the stone covering the carved cavern where Lazarus’ body had been laid, allowing the maggots to do their work. The cemetery tenders shook their heads. “You don’t want to do that,” they replied. “He ...

John 20:1-18 · Matthew 28:10
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... and faith at the sight of an empty space. Despite all of Jesus’ messages to his disciples, they were totally unprepared for what they encountered on Easter morning. For us who follow Jesus 21 centuries later the question is no less “in your face.” The ultimate challenge that confronts us on Easter morning is this: “What if it’s true?” What if the God of the universe loves each and every one of us? What if that love walked among us in the person of Jesus? What if that love embraced the ultimate ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
No one wants to run out of food and drink for their guests at a party, let alone a wedding! It’s always a bit challenging to estimate how much you’ll need for the guests you’ve invited. Now picture planning for 7 days! Yes, 7 days. That’s how long people celebrated with feasting, dancing, wine, and celebration at a wedding in Jesus’ time. Apparently, at this particular wedding in Cana in Galilee, either ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
No one wants to run out of food and drink for their guests at a party, let alone a wedding! It’s always a bit challenging to estimate how much you’ll need for the guests you’ve invited. Now picture planning for 7 days! Yes, 7 days. That’s how long people celebrated with feasting, dancing, wine, and celebration at a wedding in Jesus’ time. Apparently, at this particular wedding in Cana in Galilee, either ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
No one wants to run out of food and drink for their guests at a party, let alone a wedding! It’s always a bit challenging to estimate how much you’ll need for the guests you’ve invited. Now picture planning for 7 days! Yes, 7 days. That’s how long people celebrated with feasting, dancing, wine, and celebration at a wedding in Jesus’ time. Apparently, at this particular wedding in Cana in Galilee, either ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... Great Awakening in mid 1700s New England, Jonathan Edwards, likewise invited people to reflect differently, to see themselves as part of God’s beautiful creation. The movement was controversial, because Edwards’ emphasis on a theology of blessedness challenged hierarchical and traditional social conventions of the time, asserting that all believers were equal before God! African Americans, American Indians, the poor and uneducated, women –all had their calls to preach the gospel blessed by Edwards and ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... of solitude, prayer, fasting, and preparation. The mission of the next three years will be for him harrowing to say the least. He will need to be spiritually able and strong to withstand the constant push back from others, the retribution from his colleagues, the challenges of training his own disciples, not to mention the continual temptations to walk a path that could seem 100 times easier than the one he’s promised to take. He will need to be able to wrestle with his inner “demons” who question his ...

Sermon
Will Willimon
... actually more strange and terrible than the Christ of the Church”? Christ in the clutch of the clergy is a good deal more tame than the Jesus, wild and unfettered, of the Gospels. When asked what he thought to be the greatest challenge to the American church today, University of Chicago church historian, Jaroslav Pelikan, is reported to have answered, “Boredom." Multitudes are tagging along after Jesus. Multitudes. “I think we may be having a revival of religion." Do you? Why, yes, didn't a recent ...

Sermon
Dean Feldmeyer
... meant a promotion and a sizable raise in his pay, but he was ambivalent about it. His kids were in middle school and had friends they’d have to leave. He and his wife were active in the church and the schools. While he looked forward to the new challenges of his job, he was sad about all that he would be losing in the move. He shared that sadness and ambivalence with me one day over lunch. There was a long pause in the conversation and he shrugged and said, “But change is good.” Later, as I recalled ...

Luke 10:1-11, 16-20
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... penchants for control, autonomy, power, materialism, competition, envy, validation, or some kind of personal gain. Jesus understood these human urges well. He went through them himself in his wilderness experience and likely struggled at other times as well, when challenged by Peter, likely in prayer, and certainly in the Garden of Gethsemane. One of his great gifts to humanity we see in his ability to overcome even his survival motivations in favor of empathy, compassion, sacrifice for the greater good ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... the expectations, the schedules, and the responsibilities to really just “sit at the feet of Jesus?” Can you hear God’s voice amidst the din of culture? Of your household? Of your own frenetic mind? Being “present” has in our culture become a challenge for any relationship, let alone our relationship with God. Even the concept of “sabbath” in our culture has devolved into a “me time” commodity, “time” being the key word in the equation. But as we all know, God’s time is nothing like ...

Job 19:23-27 · John 12:23-26 · John 14:1-6 · Acts 1:21-26
Eulogy
Richard E. Zajac
... Especially upon the hearts of his children Christine and Susan and Patrick. Pat’s death also left a stain on the hearts of his sister Maureen and his brother Kevin, his two nieces, his nephew, his cousins and all the friends he made throughout the course of his life. The challenge for all of them, for all of us, is that we make something of the stain. And when you look back on Pat’s life, he’s left behind a lot of paint. He’s left behind plenty of examples of positive living that can well be used to ...

Sermon
Dean Feldmeyer
... the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. The task of every Christian, the main thing, if you will, is to have a personal, loving, faithful relationship with God. That was the task which challenged Abraham and compelled Moses. It was the task that empowered Joseph and frustrated David. It was that task that inspired courage in Esther and faith in Ruth, which enflamed the Maccabees, comforted Mary, impassioned John the Baptist, consumed Jesus, and drove Paul. It is ...

Matthew 24:36-44
Sermon
Frank Ramirez
... the fourth grade. It was a special moment. I felt like I’d read everything in the kids half of the library and I chafed to read new books. Holding my card out like a passport, I walked tentatively into the grownup section fearful I would be challenged, but I had my card in hand, just in case. But the doors opened. I entered. A new world beckoned. The first book I checked out that day was the novel Second Foundation by Isaac Asimov. I still remember the orange, pebbly library binding of that book. Cracking ...

Sermon
Heather Sugden
... as I read these words from the New Testament book of James — I hear you speaking to me when you urge us all to be patient. I know — patience is exactly what I need and exactly what would provide me a proper frame of mind to face the challenges of each day. I know that I even desire patience as a necessary ingredient for my life’s best recipe. And yet, patience can be elusive — especially, it seems, when we need it the most. “Be patient,” the author of James wrote, “until the coming of the Lord ...

Sermon
Kenneth L. Gibble
... the divine mystery we call God. And it gave me an idea for a sermon series. My purpose is simply to help all of us appreciate and understand more about God and to discover appropriate responses to this Holy One. I hope our exploration will provide both comfort and challenge. And I think a word of warning is in order: we should be prepared for some surprises along the way, because the older I get, the more I keep discovering that both the universe we live in and the God who created and loves it are far more ...

Sermon
Kenneth L. Gibble
... to feel good. Instead of confronting their problems honestly and directly, they enlist God to make their troubles go away. When our faith becomes little more than “what’s in it for me?” it becomes childish, self-indulgent. It seeks consolation without challenge and comfort without commitment. We must return to that word “comfort.” When I looked into the origin of the word, I made a surprising discovery. The ancient root of the word “comfort” does not imply being soothed or pacified. Instead it ...

Sermon
Jill J. Duffield
... , completely, utterly welcomed. They don’t feel like they are at home, that they have a home in the household of God, in the body of Christ, in the communion of the saints, in the church, or even in the world. This season of so many challenges, so much acrimony, and such relentless hurting, reveals the need to expand our tables and show the limitless love of God. Just like those church suppers, we need to trust without a doubt that there is enough for everyone, that there will be baskets left over, that ...

Sermon
Jill J. Duffield
... . It means we are privy to and a part of seemingly small victories that, in reality, are huge. I know a woman who volunteers with an organization that uses horses, caring for them, riding them, to help reach children with a wide range of challenges. Some of the children have autism. Others are physically disabled. Some have behavior problems at school. This particular woman’s one passion is this work. She volunteers one day a week. She works with one child at a time. The children often participate for ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... of stewarding the property to benefit the owner, honoring both owner and property, the manager was taking advantage, skimming for himself, doing what he liked, benefiting financially from the arrangement, no doubt by over-charging customers and keeping the cream. When confronted, he’s challenged and dismissed from his post. Now the manager is worried. He has lost his job and doesn’t know how he will get by. So, he decides to gift as many people as he can through the business in the time he has left ...