Dictionary: Trust
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Revelation 3:14-22
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J. Scott Duvall
... . Why? Because one has been removed from the source of life; the other has not and can still be planted. In John 15, Jesus reminds us that he is the vine and we are the branches. Unless we are connected to him, we have no hope for life. No matter the outward appearance, complacent Christians are naked, blind beggars. Quote: What Christ Thinks of the Church, by John Stott. Stott observes, “They are beggars because they have nothing with which to purchase their forgiveness or an entry into the Kingdom of ...

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J. Scott Duvall
... 3:21). Without vision, endurance fades. When worldly powers seem to be in control, people need faith and hope to endure. These qualities grow stronger when they rest on the truth that God reigns from his throne and holds ultimate power over any and all hostile ... human authorities. Our faith and hope grow weaker when we neglect the truth of the heavenly vision. We also should remember that Revelation 4:1 refers to a ...

Revelation 6:1-17
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J. Scott Duvall
... death, Horatio Spafford penned his famous hymn, “When peace like a river attendeth my way, when sorrows like sea billows roll . . .” “It Is Well with My Soul” has comforted many grieving hearts, reminding us that one day, the clouds will be rolled back and the hope of our hearts will be fulfilled. The Fifth and Sixth Seals Big Idea: The plea by the martyrs to judge evil and avenge their blood will be answered when God’s people complete their suffering and God and the Lamb pour out their wrath on ...

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J. Scott Duvall
... . You will recall that Revelation 6 concluded with an important question: Who can withstand the wrath of God and the Lamb (6:17)? Among the inhabitants of the earth, the answer is clearly “no one.” But Revelation 7:1–8 offers a different and more hopeful answer: God’s servants will be able to endure or “stand” because of God’s protective seal. Perhaps this is why the great multitude is later portrayed as “standing” before the throne in 7:9 (histēmi in both 6:17 and 7:9). This interlude ...

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J. Scott Duvall
... no more delay,” when God will consummate his kingdom (11:15). This text provides an opportunity to help people understand the “already/not yet” situation in which we live. We hold on and wait and endure difficulties now as we look forward to the blessed hope of Jesus’s second coming (Titus 2:11–14). God will keep his promises! 2. In the meantime, we must continue to trust in God’s perfect character and his sovereign purposes. It’s no accident that three times the mighty angel is described as ...

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J. Scott Duvall
... 15:18–21; Mark 8:34–38; cf. 1 John 3:13; Rev. 2:10). As church leaders, are we preparing the people under our care to suffer for the gospel? If they meet with rejection and public humiliation, will it shipwreck their faith? 3. Our ultimate hope rests in God’s victory made certain by his faithfulness. This text strikes a death blow to some of our greatest fears. The greatest possible threat from hostile forces is death, but God has already raised Christ from the dead—our guarantee that he will raise ...

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J. Scott Duvall
... declaimed. With bolts of fire and rumbles of thunder, Oz attempted to overwhelm the travelers, wowing them into submission. But little Toto smelled a rat. Trotting over to the curtain, he pulled it back, exposing Oz for who he really was. When we place our hopes in any power but God’s, we are settling for an Oz. We conquer evil by imitating Jesus’s example of suffering. Church History: Many Christians in the ancient church would journey to Jerusalem near Easter to walk in Jesus’s footsteps. Over the ...

Revelation 20:11-15
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J. Scott Duvall
... only “the dead” are judged. Destiny judgment for believers occurred at their resurrection on the basis of their genuine faith in Christ’s faithfulness (Eph. 2:8–10: by grace, through faith, to do good works). Hence, this explains the apostle Paul’s humble hope that he might somehow attain to the resurrection from the dead (Phil. 3:11, 20–21). None of the dead can escape God’s judgment since both “great and small” are brought before the throne. There is no hiding place—not even in the ...

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J. Scott Duvall
... God’s presence will mean all healing and no curse. All of us have been devastated by the death of a loved one, many of us have dealt with a life-threatening illness, and some of us have experienced poverty. To survive such enemies now, we need hope—hope that we are coming closer to a time and a place when we will only know complete physical and spiritual healing. This will accompany the full and unhindered presence of God. And don’t miss the point: the presence of healing is one thing, but the absence ...

Revelation 22:7-21
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J. Scott Duvall
... equivalent of the Aramaic Marana tha (“Our Lord, come”), and is used by Paul to close 1 Corinthians (1 Cor. 16:22; cf. Did. 10:6). Jesus’s promise to return comforts faithful believers and warns compromising believers. The great Christian hope, or the “blessed hope” as Paul calls it (Titus 2:13), is the return of Christ—the final chapter in God’s great story. Revelation closes with a benediction typical of Paul’s letters, calling for grace to empower believers to persevere in faithfulness to ...

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Joe M. Sprinkle
... (cf. layout of the camp in Num. 1–2).5 Alternatively the word roba‘ may mean “dust,” in parallel with the first line of the verse (NRSV, ESVmg). W. F. Albright argues that the text is corrupt and needs emendation.6 the death of the righteous. Balaam hopes to end his life as blessed as Israel has been, possibly alluding to its afterlife (cf. 1 Sam. 28:6–16; Ps. 73:17). 23:13–26 These verses relate the second oracle. 23:13–14  Come with me to another place . . . Pisgah. In Balak’s mind ...

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Joe M. Sprinkle
... hang in the air. We would fill in the blanks with various forms of discipline. On our good days we would heed the warnings, button our lips, and get along for the rest of the ride. If we crossed the line and kept quibbling, our only hope was that the promise of parental punishment would be forgotten or go unfulfilled before we reached our destination. On our lucky days, it was. But that is never the case with God. Absent repentance, all we can expect is retribution. God always keeps his promises. Literature ...

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Robert B. Chisholm Jr.
... , living in the aftermath of the shattered ideal of Zion theology, the account of David’s bringing the ark to Jerusalem is cause for both sorrow and renewed hope. The joy that accompanies the ark’s arrival in Jerusalem stands in stark contrast to the reality that God has abandoned the city. But the story also brings renewed hope: the prophets, who have announced the city’s downfall, have also promised that God will eventually restore Zion. They anticipate a day when the Lord will return to Jerusalem ...

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Robert B. Chisholm Jr.
... of his heinous sin and its consequences, is proof of God’s commitment to him. Historical and Cultural Background When David’s baby dies, he laments, “I will go to him, but he will not return to me” (v. 23). This is a statement not of hope, but of finality. David understands that no one returns from the land of the dead. Passage between the realms of the living and the dead is strictly one direction. In ancient Mesopotamian texts, the subterranean world of the dead is called “the land of no return ...

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Robert B. Chisholm Jr.
... :11). Yet Fokkelman comments on the tragic reality: “David should have realized that he could not retain both, the throne and his son. Retention of one really presupposes the loss of the other.”9 If only I had died instead of you. Earlier David expressed his hope that the Lord would repay him good instead of (tahat) the ruin that Shimei predicted for him (16:12; cf. 16:8). But now that the Lord has delivered David from ruin and death, he wishes that he had died “instead of” (tahat) Absalom.10 David ...

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Robert B. Chisholm Jr.
... caused by Absalom’s coup continues to threaten the nation’s unity, and Nathan’s prophecy that the sword will not depart from David’s royal court (2 Sam. 12:10) continues to ring true. For the exiles the sustaining of the Davidic throne generates hope as they read the account, but the reality of God’s discipline in David’s experience also resonates with them: they know all too well from their own experience how persistent the consequences of sin can be. Teaching the Text 1. The consequences of ...

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Robert B. Chisholm Jr.
... are not your sufferings; they are not beating you. These are My sufferings.”8 Hymn: “If Thou but Suffer God to Guide Thee,” by Georg Neumark. Here are some sample lines from this hymn (1641) of confidence in God: If thou but suffer God to guide thee, And hope in Him through all thy ways, He’ll give thee strength, whate’er betide thee, And bear thee through the evil days. Who trusts in God’s unchanging love Builds on the rock that naught can move. Be patient and await His leisure In cheerful ...

1 Samuel 30:1-31, 1 Samuel 29:1-11
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Robert B. Chisholm Jr.
... be concerned that the Philistine leaders might have heard about his deceptive actions in the Ziklag region. (In v. 6, Achish gives little detail; he simply says that the leaders consider David unreliable.) If so, by asking Achish for evidence of disloyalty, he may hope that the king will give more detail about the leaders’ suspicions. If there is any hint that David’s deceit has been uncovered, he and his men can flee for safety while the Philistines are engaged in battle with Israel. It is possible ...

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Daniel J. Estes
... a blameless person like Job who experiences adversity. 8:21–22  He will yet fill your mouth with laughter. At the end of his first speech, Bildad leaves the door open for hope for Job, but only if he will repent of his sin (cf. 8:5–7). Suggesting that Job’s situation can be redeemed, Bildad paints a hopeful picture of what Job’s life restored to God’s blessing would look like. Theological Insights Bildad takes the general retribution pattern taught in traditional wisdom (e.g., Prov. 26:27), and ...

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Daniel J. Estes
... in doing that Job comes to an even more troubling observation, that the just God does not seem to insist on justice in his world. Too many times people do what is wrong and get away with it. Too many times those who are oppressed unjustly cry out hoping for God to intervene on their behalf, and yet he does not respond to them, in contrast to his response to the cries of the Israelites in their Egyptian bondage (Exod. 2:23–25). This is indeed a troubling state of affairs for Job, because God’s inactivity ...

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Daniel J. Estes
... , with the princes of his people. He settles the childless woman in her home as a happy mother of children. Praise the Lord. Teaching the Text In his final speech, Bildad is short and to the point, as he concludes that humans have no hope before God. Bildad and the other friends come originally to comfort and encourage Job, but instead Bildad ends up offering the opposite. According to Bildad, no human, including Job, is able to satisfy God’s righteous standard. By speaking about the awesome dominion of ...

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C. Hassell Bullock
... Psalm 53 (see the sidebar “The Divine Names” in the unit on Ps. 4). Outline/Structure Psalm 14 falls into four parts: 1. The fool’s perspective (14:1) 2. God’s perspective (14:2–4) 3. God’s presence among the righteous (14:5–6) 4. Hope for Israel’s salvation (14:7) Historical and Cultural Background In view of the adaptation of Psalm 14 to fit the context of Psalm 53, the impression is that Psalm 14 is probably the original form. It belongs to the first Davidic collection (Pss. 2–41) and ...

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C. Hassell Bullock
... decision that awaits him, or he is speaking of waking from death. If this is a reference to life after death, then the difficulties of 17:14 are partly resolved—he is contrasting the life of the wicked in this world with that of the righteous who have hope in the world to come (Job 19:25–27). The Scriptures instruct us that Moses saw “the form [temunah] of the Lord” (Num. 12:8), the same word used for “likeness” in 17:15. David may very well have Moses’s experience in mind to describe his own ...

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C. Hassell Bullock
... happened, since Israel has not forgotten God or “been false” to his covenant (44:17). Psalms 42–43 celebrate the psalmist’s hope that he, isolated and dejected in a foreign land, will someday worship in the Jerusalem sanctuary again. Psalm 44 is an expression ... the prophets and psalmists know that in God’s self-directed course of action can be found the best that Israel can ever hope for or imagine. The mystery is bundled up, not in the “secrets” of Israel’s heart (44:21), which God knows so ...

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C. Hassell Bullock
... impatient; the work of progress so immense and our means of aiding it so feeble; the life of humanity is so long, that of the individual so brief, that we often see only the ebb of the advancing wave and are thus discouraged. It is history that teaches us to hope.14 There are times when we get frustrated with God because he is not moving according to our time frame. Lee reminds us that our perspective is limited, and we would be wise to be still before God and to reflect on his pace in history and his mode ...