Dictionary: Trust
Showing 451 to 475 of 3543 results

Sermon
Mark Trotter
... by their people, but everyone of them chosen by God. That's who this man is. Luke wants you to see this. His ministry began the way it ended, with rejection. They were scandalized by what he was saying. From beginning to end, for three years, then rejected him. John says in his gospel, "He came to his own people, and his own people received him not." So what are we supposed to do with this, this strange story of Jesus' first sermon to his hometown folk? The Old Testament lesson read to us this morning ...

Sermon
Mark Trotter
... by the world because they were untouchable. They were the lepers of the world, especially in the Middle Ages. All the monasteries received into hospitals those people that were rejected by the society, like the people with AIDS today who are rejected by so many people. The word "hospital" comes from "hospitality." In the New Testament the Christians are mandated, "Practice hospitality." And they did it. It is the Church that began the universities and the schools in this world to lift people out of the ...

Genesis 45:1-28, Isaiah 56:1-8, Romans 11:11-24, Romans 11:25-32, Matthew 15:1-20, Matthew 15:21-28
Sermon Aid
John R. Brokhoff
... could care for them. With this reading we bring to a close a series of twelve stories of the Patriarchs. Old Testament: Isaiah 56:1 (2-5) 6-7 God promises to gather all people to him. Epistle: Romans 11:13-15, 29-32 The Jews' rejection of Christ results in the world's reconciliation. Paul now turns to address Gentiles, for he is the apostle to the Gentiles. He discusses the salvation of Jews and Gentiles. This aroused the Jews' jealousy who will in the end accept Christ. Their disobedience caused salvation ...

Sermon
Susan R. Andrews
... We're charitable to them. But we don't really value them. And so we keep them at a distance. But this woman spent her whole career working with these children, so much so that her values were transformed. Not only were these children not worthy of being rejected, they became, to her, chosen and precious. They became to her a blessing - the poor in spirit, the clean of heart, the sad and persecuted ones who somehow reflect the joy of God's grace. One year she decided to have her class put on a production of ...

2 Timothy 1:1-2:13
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... organic, we suspect anything ancient, anything biological, anything with messiness, with emotion, with blood and guts instead of silicon and circuitry. 5. Fear of Rejection. Instead of the Streisand Doctrine ("People . . . People Who Need People") we subscribe to the Sinatra Doctrine ("I Did It My Way") because we fear the rejection and pain that comes with needing people. The ultimate in our fear of rejection? We put a notice in the paper for people who didn't come to see us when we were alive, to come and ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... drinking and driving lead to death. We don't get our high cancer and heart attack rates because we don't want to face the fact that we eat our way to heart attacks and smoke and drink our way to cancer. We don't get the rejection of America because we think we're so lovable. How can we move from clueless to clued in? How can any of us possibly re-wire the programming, put in place by our unique family, region, city, culture, country? When corporations or international agencies want to acclimatize quickly ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... decadent vacation. Do you get it? The devil's temptation is not about bread. The devil's temptation is to live a "me-first" life a life devoted to gathering as much stuff to yourself as possible. A life completely focused on the world's trappings. Jesus rejects this vision of life, this fake fulfillment. He refuses to feed his face first and instead quotes back to his tempter "one does not live by bread alone" (Deuteronomy 8:3). It's the same sentiment that enabled the now over-cooked "Chicken Soup for the ...

Matthew 16:21-28
Sermon
James McCormick
... with the heart of Jesus. They began to reach out compassionately with the hands of Jesus. Over time, they began to look and sound like Jesus. And, they turned the world upside down. You remember that, toward the end of Jesus’ life, he became aware that most people had rejected him. Thousands had heard him teach, and most of them said, “No.” How sad. All Jesus wanted to do was to love them. All he wanted to do was to bring them to the Father. All he wanted to do was to give them life at its best, and ...

Sermon
James McCormick
... listen to the voice of the people and to become that kind of Messiah. It would have been far easier and more popular for Jesus simply to go along, and to become an earthly king. But, that’s not the choice he made. Listening to the voice of God, he rejected the urging of the people and embraced an image given by Isaiah in the Exile. Jesus sensed that God was calling him to be a suffering servant, one who would win people not by force, but by the redemptive power of a love that loves enough to suffer. Jesus ...

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 distress. That Jesus is Lord means that God's work in Jesus transcends the encumbrances of time and space, giving him universal power to accomplish the crucial work for which God has set him apart. Second, the gospel delivers the bad news that humanity rejects God's work, particularly the one whom God designates as the divine agent for the achievement of salvation. God acts, and we react, spurning God's will; but God prevails. This message does not let us off the hook. We do not hear simply, "You ...

Psalm 17:1-15, Romans 9:1-29, Matthew 14:13-21, Genesis 32:22-32
Sermon Aid
Marion L. Soards, Thomas B. Dozeman, Kendall McCabe
... 's account. He turns deliberately toward his smaller band of disciples to form them into a basic community of faith. The initial story in this fourth section gives the motivation for his alteration: Jesus is rejected outright when he returns to minister in Nazareth. This rejection forebodes and symbolizes the forthcoming rejection of Jesus, that brings him to the cross. Furthermore, we learn in the report of Herod's taking interest in Jesus (14:1-2) and of the concern of the governing authorities over Jesus ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... . A general belief in God is one thing, but it is quite another to embrace the miracles of the Virgin Birth of Christ, His rising from the dead, and His own ascension from the grave. Then responding to this naturalistic humanistic rejection of the supernatural, he then made this caustic response: "It is ‘irrational' to reject miracles a priori. One can be sophisticated and believe in God. Reason and intellect are not to be laid aside where matters of religion are concerned. What is irrational [is] to ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... does not have, even what he seems to have will be taken from him." You see, what Jesus was saying was this: When God gives you a little light, if you will just respond He will give you more light. But when He gives you a little light, if you reject even that light He will take away the light that you have. When you really boil it down, the difference between a man that is saved and a man that is lost, is whether or not he has responded to the light that he has. I like the way The ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... authority. King Saul, Israel's first king, lost his crown because he rebelled against authority. God said to him in 1 Samuel 15:23, "For rebellion is as the sin of divination, and insubordination is as iniquity and idolatry because you have rejected the word of the LORD, He has also rejected you from being king." (I Samuel 15:23, NASB) The only reason that people go to hell is because of rebellion against authority. The Bible says in Heb. 3:7-8, "Therefore, just as the Holy Spirit says, ‘TODAY IF YOU HEAR ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... , "that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Spirit." The Bible never tries to prove the virgin birth any more than it tries to prove the creation of this world, it just presents it. You can accept it or you can reject it. But if you reject the virgin birth you reject Isaiah, Jeremiah, Matthew, and Luke. Then you have a real problem, because if you cannot believe all of the Bible, how can you believe any of the Bible? b. The Savior Would Be Undependable If Jesus was not the Spirit-conceived virgin-born ...

Revelation 5:1-14
Sermon
James Merritt
... the Lion of the Tribe of Judah, as King of Kings, Lord of Lords, and as a Judge to take vengeance on all those who have rejected Him. b. As a Lamb, He Is Precious Now John turns, fully expecting to see a lion; but instead he says, "And I looked, and ... meekness, but He will be praised for his strength; He was butchered like a Lamb, but He will receive the honor of a King; He was rejected in shame, but He will be bathed in glory; He became a curse for the sinner, but He will receive the blessing of the saint. " ...

Sermon
Maurice A. Fetty
... humankind, in our time, had come of age, and that it must be weaned from dependency upon the divine Father and take responsibility for itself. And, just as an infant feels rejected in being weaned, or just as an adolescent feels rejected in coming of age, so too humankind, in our time, has felt rejected by God. God is silent. God is indifferent. God is dead. The other side of abnormal dependency is abnormal independency. This is the characteristic behavior of adolescent rebelliousness and self-assertiveness ...

Bulletin Aid
Frank Ramirez
... task of giving life and nurturing lives. Bless us as we seek to mirror your perfect loves in our imperfect lives. These things we pray in your mighty name. Amen. Prayer Of Confession God of history, we know that to reject the world is to be rejected by the world. But that which the world rejects becomes the cornerstone of your kingdom. Break us, shape us, mold us to your purpose and will, use us in the building of your church. Amen. Hymns Morning Has Broken Mothering God, You Gave Me Birth Savior Like A ...

Bulletin Aid
Frank Ramirez
... in between we read that Jesus went about among the villages teaching. Weeks, even months, squeezed into a few words. That's Ordinary Time for you. Extraordinary things happen. Let us take hold of the Ordinary Time, squeezed in between rejection and commission, and with God's help do great things! Collect Lord we may reject you. God, we may serve you. You have granted us the freedom to come to this place, or to stay away, to serve you with our hearts, hands, and feet, or to serve you with our lips only. Send ...

Jeremiah 31:31-34
Sermon
Ron Lavin
... of suffering for the people point beyond himself to Christ. In Christ, Something New Has Come Near Another prophet spoke about the possibilities of a new personal relationship with God being achieved through the suffering servant, "a man who was despised and rejected, acquainted with infirmity ... despised and held in no account" (Isaiah 53:3). We pick up the story of the Savior of the new covenant in Isaiah. Surely he has borne our infirmities and carried our diseases; yet we accounted him stricken, struck ...

Sermon
Ron Lavin
... of our fathers, has done this, but you have misplaced the authority behind what has been done here. We have no authority. The authority for what you've seen is Jesus, not us." Second, "You handed Jesus over to Pilate and the secular authorities. You rejected Jesus who is the real authority for life. You missed God's authority. God's authority is firmly lodged in Jesus, his servant. The authority for life is in Jesus, not Pilate, not in your religious leaders, but in Jesus who is the Christ." Third, "Because ...

Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... on the part of "this generation." The parables of chapter 13 now serve to both discuss and illustrate the division and strife that will result because of this rejection. They also serve to heighten the wall of separation between those who hear Jesus and those who reject him. Chapter 13 is concerned in its entirety with parables of the kingdom. But it is through the unique power of parable that this kingdom can be both described and incarnated by the same parable. Jesus was not so much word-painting ...

Matthew 16:21-28
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... provides, it is still hard to miss the final ending the Resurrection that could never occur without the presence of God's guiding hand. But God is exactly whom Peter invokes in his horror at hearing the news of Jesus' impending death. Peter's outright rejection of Jesus' death is closely tied to the identification he had just made in verse 16. Peter recognizes Jesus as "the Messiah, the Son of the living God," a well-known, and long-expected figure in Jewish tradition. But the arrival of the Jewish Messiah ...

Philippians 3:17-4:1
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... " may also have been Jewish-Christian Gnostics _ and the fact that Paul specifies they are "enemies of the cross of Christ," and not just of Paul's own teachings, may indicate this is the group in question. As Gnostics, these would-be Christians reject any notion that physical matter could have goodness or worth. In Gnosticism there is a strict dualism between spirit and matter. That which is spiritual is the good, the superior _ that which is matter is inherently bad and unredeemable. Because the cross of ...

Luke 13:1-9
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... point of this grisly tale is to try to get Jesus to judge whether these Galileans died as a result of some hidden greater sinfulness they all shared _ or whether their suffering and death were the result of a random act of violence. Jesus utterly rejects the notion that those who died at Pilate's hand were somehow more sinful than others. But Jesus does not leave his answer at that. He calls up yet another example of apparently random tragedy. Whereas the slaughter ordered by Pilate was an intentional act ...

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