Dictionary: Trust
Showing 4751 to 4775 of 5000 results

Understanding Series
Donald A. Hagner
... the future. Thus, like the exemplars of faith, the readers are to be controlled by an unseen, future reality (cf. 11:1), the city that is to come. By implication, the importance of the literal Jerusalem, symbolic of the temple and the levitical sacrifices, must give way to that of the heavenly Jerusalem. But it is exactly the latter that the readers will not participate in if they remain in the Judaism of the literal Jerusalem (cf. v. 10). 13:15–16 There are forms of sacrifice—spiritual, and not literal ...

Understanding Series
Norman Hillyer
... out in verses 3–9, be all the more eager to make your calling and election sure. While calling and election, here treated virtually as synonyms, are both due to the divine initiative (John 15:16), the believer, as Peter has been stressing all along, must give a resolute and full response, and so make them sure (the Greek word for sure, bebaios, is a legal term in the papyri for a guaranteed security): “Show by the kind of life you lead that you have truly accepted God’s call, with all its implications ...

Understanding Series
James K. Bruckner
... to enter the promised land, the Lord said again, “See now that I myself am He! There is no god besides me. I put to death and I bring to life, I have wounded and I will heal, . . .” (Deut. 32:39). The Lord’s self-revelation in the giving of the law was as “the Lord your healer.” In the beginning of their life in service to Yahweh rather than the pharaoh, they were in need of healing and health. In the healing of the bitter waters at Marah, the Lord showed concern for safe drinking water. After ...

Understanding Series
James K. Bruckner
... the midst of the camp. These verses provide a key for understanding Exodus 25–31 and 35–40. The enterprise was to begin with an offering from the heart. “You are to receive the offering for me from each man whose heart prompts him to give.” Since the Lord would be very specific about the design and artistry of the tabernacle, this list of raw materials was also very specific. The patterns, in uniquely specific detail, were God’s (vv. 9, 40). The metals were gold, silver and bronze. “Bronze” is ...

Understanding Series
J. Gordon Harris
... Joshua 10:8, the Lord encourages Joshua and the people: Do not be afraid of them, because by this time tomorrow I will hand all of them over to Israel, slain. You are to hamstring their horses and burn their chariots (11:6). The Lord gives the tribal forces words of encouragement along with herem instructions. The tribal forces not only will win but also will cripple the horses that pull the chariots and burn the chariots, symbols of urban warfare. Truly the God of Israel will triumph over the most advanced ...

Understanding Series
Michael S. Moore
... to try again and again to resurrect Elimelech’s name, despite such harsh and unforgiving circumstances, is nothing less than remarkable. Naomi’s Decision 1:6 Having failed in her first attempt to salvage Elimelech’s heritage, Naomi decides to leave Moab. Verses 6–13 give us three reasons for this decision: the lifting of the famine in Judah, her desire to deal honestly with her widowed daughters-in-law, and her feeling that she is too old to be of further use. First, Naomi hears that Yahweh has come ...

Understanding Series
Michael S. Moore
... sandal. Those who see no linkage tend to see Boaz as the party removing his sandal (“it is usual for the purchaser to give the pledge,” Ruth Rab. 7.12). In lieu of clear ancient Near Eastern parallels, Gunkel cites a transaction from Indian myth (Ruth, p ... from God, not from human parents. Children are a privilege, never just a responsibility (Pss. 127–128). Second, may the LORD give . . . offspring (lit. seed) just like Perez, the son born to their ancestor Judah via the Canaanite woman Tamar. One of ...

1 Chronicles 17:1-15
Understanding Series
Louis C. Jonker
... altered from the source text, which mentions rest again. Here again it seems that the Chronicler is rather reserving the issue of rest for the Solomon narrative. In 17:10 there follows a solemn declaration that Yahweh will build a house for David. This declaration gives an ironic twist to the initial opening of the narrative, where David declares that he wants to build a house for Yahweh. The irony is created by means of the wordplay on “house,” which can refer to a physical palace (such as David’s ...

1 Chronicles 18:1-13
Understanding Series
Louis C. Jonker
... may assume that once again this information did not fit the Chronicler’s purpose. His aim was to present a quick overview of victories and not to go into detail. First Chronicles 18:3–6 narrates the campaigns in the far north and northeast; 18:7–8 gives an account of the booty taken from Hadadezer and his men; 18:9–11 recounts the friendly approach by Tou king of Hamath, who brought David all kinds of articles of gold and silver and bronze; and 18:12–13 reports on the victories over the Edomites ...

Understanding Series
Leslie C. Allen
... wrote the king (v. 21). We are invited to look ahead at this point to the mission of Nehemiah, who obtained permission for this very work later in Artaxerxes’ reign (Neh. 2:1–8). A subsidiary role of this digression in verses 6–23, then, was to give the background to Nehemiah’s mission and to show that it represented an eventual victory over local opposition. The switch from temple to city in the digression is not the big jump it may appear to a modern reader. The holiness of the temple extended to ...

Understanding Series
Leslie C. Allen
... This verb occurs a number of times and now functions as an echo. Verse 26 speaks of God sending the prophets in order to turn their contemporaries back to you. Verse 28 mentions that ancestors who were punished “turned and cried to you” (NRSV). Verse 29 gives the purpose of God’s prophetic warnings—to encourage the hearers to return to your law. Finally, in verse 35, the preexilic people of God did not turn from their evil ways. The prayer is an account of Israel sinning and then confessing that sin ...

Understanding Series
Leslie C. Allen
... list. Its division into the old tribal territories of Judah and Benjamin corresponds to the same two tribal groups of the lay newcomers to Jerusalem in 11:3b–9, and this correspondence is likely the reason for the inclusion of the present list. Verse 30 gives southern and northern boundaries of the tribal territory of Judah by way of summary. The settlements in verse 25 up to “En Rimmon” in verse 29, over half of the Judean ones, were south of the Persian province, in an area under Edomite control. As ...

Understanding Series
Leslie C. Allen
... a series of refrains follows in verse 14, a petition to God to Remember his loyal acts on behalf of the temple (vv. 4–9) and its services (vv. 10–13). In position and content it is parallel to the petition in 5:19. The writer to the Hebrews could give assurance that “God is not unjust; he will not forget your work and the love you have shown him” (Heb. 6:10). 13:15–22 This next problem of Sabbath breaking has little to do with the guidelines. It was included here because of the mention of Men from ...

Jeremiah 8:4--9:26
Understanding Series
Tremper Longman III
... made such a heap of ruins that wild animals like jackals will take up their homes there. Why? (9:12-16): 9:12–16 This prose oracle asks the question, Why? Why has the land been punished so thoroughly? Who is so wise to give an answer? The Lord finally gives the answer, but not because the question is difficult. They have broken the law and deserve the curses of the law, which are quite clearly listed in Deuteronomy 28 and elsewhere. They not only have resisted the true God, however; they have also served ...

Jeremiah 18:1--19:15, Jeremiah 20:1-6
Understanding Series
Tremper Longman III
... these negative oracles is disclosed (v. 18), and finally another lament of Jeremiah (vv. 19–23), bemoaning the plots against him and calling on God to punish the plotters. 18:1–4 God begins by telling Jeremiah to go to the house of the potter where God will give the prophet a message. Jeremiah responds obediently and observes the potter at work. The basic method of throwing a pot is the same today as it was in antiquity. The potter would place a clay on a wheel and as it revolved would use his hands to ...

Understanding Series
Tremper Longman III
... eat the fruit of the womb, the flesh of the sons and daughters the LORD your God has given you. Even the most gentle and sensitive man among you will have no compassion on his own brother or the wife he loves or his surviving children, and he will not give to one of them any of the flesh of his children that he is eating. It will be all he has left because of the suffering your enemy will inflict on you during the siege of all your cities. (Deut. 28:53–55) The second example of excessive suffering that ...

Understanding Series
Elizabeth Achtemeier
... be read, “And this (one) shall be peace,” referring back to the messianic king of verses 2–4. It is clear then from verse 6c that this messianic king will be the deliverer of Israel from any future enemy. He will be the one who gives “peace” (šālôm), that is, prosperity and wholeness to the nation. The passage envisions, however, that even under the universal rule of the Messiah, there may yet arise threats to that rule. The kingdom has not come in its fullness, and the Messiah and his people ...

Understanding Series
Pamela J. Scalise
... Jewish exiles from around the world. This prophecy is about many peoples and powerful nations, the inhabitants of the lands and cities among which God’s people are dispersed, who will say to the Jews, “Let us go with you.” Isaiah 2:2–4 (and Mic. 4:1–3) gives a stirring picture of many peoples coming to the Lord at the temple in Zion in order to learn to walk in the Lord’s ways. The portrayal in the final oracle (v. 23) is on a more personal level, ten men from all languages and nations and one ...

Understanding Series
Pamela J. Scalise
... ; Ezek. 34:8, 23). The book of Zechariah presents other non-royal leaders as shepherd figures (e.g., 11:4–14). By praying to the Lord for help and guidance Israel accepts the leadership of their true divine shepherd, the LORD who makes the storm clouds and gives showers of rain to men. In the end times, as portrayed in Zechariah 14, only the nations that serve the Lord will receive rain. This command to ask the LORD for rain also reverses the judgment in Jeremiah 14. In a time of drought the people asked ...

Zechariah 11:4-17
Understanding Series
Pamela J. Scalise
... your shepherd.” With God’s protection removed, the flock was free to tear itself apart, and even to eat one another’s flesh. 11:10–11 We return to the prophet’s sign-act with the symbolic breaking of the staff named Favor, but God gives the interpretation in the first person—revoking the covenant I [God] had made with all the nations. The afflicted of the flock, the prophet’s audience, knew that the sign-act and its interpretation were the word of the LORD. While this symbolic act took place ...

Malachi 2:10-16
Understanding Series
Pamela J. Scalise
... alternate translation in the NIV margin has adopted a slight textual emendation of the first word to ʿed, “witness,” and interprets the pair of words as the object of the verb “cut off”: “May the LORD cut off from the tents of Jacob anyone who gives testimony in behalf of the man who does this.” It is best, however, to retain the MT and interpret the object of the punishment as “the man who does this.” Both verbs, “rouse oneself” and “answer,” are used in cries for help addressed to ...

Malachi 3:6-18
Understanding Series
Pamela J. Scalise
... 5, 11–12). The Lord’s offer, “Test me in this,” is made within the context of covenant. Israel will carry out the test by obeying the covenant requirement to bring the whole tithe, the full ten percent, and they will see the results when God gives them blessing (v. 10), as Deuteronomy 14:29 promises. This is not just a test of God’s power and will to do them good; it is specifically a test of God’s faithfulness to the covenant with Israel. For this reason, individuals who desire to demonstrate ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... telling. She shared an attitude that was very prevalent in biblical times. Her son was sick and therefore she felt she was being punished for some sin she had committed by having her son taken away from her. There are some people who feel like that today. How sad. “Give me your son,” Elijah replied. He took the boy from her arms, carried him upstairs to his own room, and laid him on the bed. Then he cried out to the Lord, “Lord my God, have you brought tragedy even on this widow I am staying with, by ...

Children's Sermon
King Duncan
Object: A heart, a Hershey Kiss (Have one for each of the children), and a star Good morning, boys and girls. I want to give each of you a very small Christmas present this morning. (Hand out the Kisses). I want to give you this to express my love for you. If this were Valentine's Day, I could possibly give you a heart like this one. Or perhaps I could take Merlin Olsen's advice and give you a flower. We all love to get presents and I'll bet you got lots of presents this Christmas. The best thing about ...

Children's Sermon
King Duncan
... with candy on it Boys and girls: I'm going to be very popular this morning. I want to give somebody a piece of candy. Any volunteers? I thought so. O.K., _____. In just a moment, I am going ... with some people. They are so angry, and so bitter, and even so mean that He can't give them the joy of Christ. He can't give them faith and hope and love until they let go of they own hostile feelings. It's also hard for other people to give us anything when we are like that, isn't it? Let's open our fists and open our ...