Dictionary: Trust
Showing 4851 to 4875 of 4987 results

Sermon
Paul E. Flesner
... had. All this testifies to our concern that people will be able to get up and walk. On the level of material and physical need, the picture is bright and getting brighter. Yet, despite all our efforts, the eyes of people are still empty and fearful. Political demagogues find eager followers for their offers of security at the expense of freedom and justice. New age spirituality promises to fill the vacuum in peoples' souls with its brand of religion. Add to it a pinch of corruption in government, a dash of ...

Sermon
Paul E. Flesner
... and nourished through scripture and the sacraments. The Spirit calls us to reflect God's glory in our lives. I know what you're thinking: I don't always feel like that. I'm not always loving and forgiving and kind like Jesus. I sometimes have doubts and fears and questions. I have failings and shortcomings and sins. Don't be discouraged! We have the same answer for failure and guilt and doubt that the disciples had -- Jesus Christ, God's answer to it all! Jesus is not only our example, he is also the power ...

Sermon
Robert Noblett
... : "I was praying for greater patience and understanding, but I quit ..." In the last frame, she continues: "I was afraid I might get it." James Evans McReynolds was onto something when he wrote: Whatever else the resurrection of Jesus means, it means that God is getting close to us. We fear that. Easter, we say, is a day of joy and it really is. We say it is a day of hope and it really is. We say it is a day of promise and it really is. But we are not as fond of it as we think. We are ...

John 17:6-19
Sermon
Robert Noblett
... be a good listener? Will I be belittled, upbraided, or laughed at? This window on the priestly prayer of Jesus can serve as a reminder that all the contents of any heart can be poured out before God and given a compassionate listening. There is nothing we need fear in doing that. If words come hard for us, our thoughts can initially be our words. And if giving the contents of our hearts verbal shape continues to perplex us, there is no reason we can't use others' words in giving shape to heartfelt concerns ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... a New Year. I want to begin with a football story, but you don’t have to be a football fan to appreciate it. It’s about a young man named Kyle. Kyle Maynard was born with some of the birth defects that every parent fears--stunted arms and legs and misshapen hands and feet. Most people would consider him to be handicapped. But most people don’t know Kyle Maynard. This young man, who chooses not to use prosthetic limbs, constantly challenges himself to break physical barriers. He played middle school ...

Mark 1:35-39
Sermon
King Duncan
Sue Buchanan shares a good story about her father, a pastor in a small Southern town. This pastor wanted to help his granddaughter, Dana, deal with a particular fear. In this small town, a siren blew at noon every day. It was probably installed generations ago in order to let factory workers know it was time to go home for lunch. When little Dana visited her Grandpa, the siren scared her silly. So Grandpa suggested that, since this was ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... doctors didn’t give them much hope. The colleague was waiting at the airport for a flight to take him to his family, and he desperately needed comfort at that moment. Would Buechner come and be with him while he waited for the plane? Frederick Buechner’s first response was fear. His friend’s grief scared him, He didn’t know if he could be of any help. Although he knew what he should do, he told his friend that he had things he needed to do, and to call him in ten minutes to see if he could come ...

Drama
Angela Akers
... our next appointment. Have a great day!” (Therapist slams door, wipes his brow and rolls his eyes like he is exhausted. Looks over at receptionist’s desk) Therapist: “Wow! That was one long hour.” Receptionist: “Does she talk about her fear of aliens every week?” Therapist: “Every week.” Receptionist: “Wow!” Therapist: “She’s got a heart of gold, but I’d have to say she is a little. . . flaky.” Receptionist: “Who’s your easiest client to work with?” Therapist: “I’d ...

Sermon
David G. Rogne
... In the scripture we are dealing with, Jesus has healed a man, and apparently cast out demons. These were good acts, and any unbiased person would have declared them to be so, but the vision of the religious authorities was so distorted by anger, fear, and hatred that they called these good works evil. They called the light darkness, and they tried to persuade others that actions which were obviously good were evil, and done by an evil person for an evil purpose. In this they demonstrated their own blindness ...

Mark 4:30-34, Mark 4:26-29
Sermon
David G. Rogne
... advised his mother to take him out of school. Winston Churchill was admitted to school in the lowest level classes and never moved out of the lowest group in all the years he attended Harrow. Albert Einstein seemed so slow and dull that his parents feared that he was mentally deficient. One observer has said, "Great minds and high talent, in most cases, cannot be hurried and, like healthy plants, grow slowly." It is so with God's Kingdom. We scatter the seed, but we are not ultimately responsible for its ...

Sermon
David G. Rogne
... she is to go in peace, and that she is healed. While Jesus is still speaking, one of Jairus' servants comes to inform him that his daughter has died, and that there is no need to trouble Jesus further. When Jesus hears this, he urges Jairus to have no fear, but only to believe. When they arrive at the house, Jesus takes the girl by the hand and urges her to get up. She immediately gets up, and gives evidence of being very much alive. There are many things to be gotten from these two incidents, but what I ...

Sermon
David G. Rogne
... seemed to him to be like sheep without a shepherd. What does it mean to have compassion? Mark spends the remainder of the chapter showing us. Jesus proceeds to teach the people, then to feed them, then to comfort his disciples and allay their fears, and then to heal people who are sick. The work appears to be never-ending. Those first century disciples experienced firsthand the mission and ministry of Jesus. They learned by observation what compassion meant. Then they were called to put it into practice. So ...

Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... not stupid. They would not have started a Passover pilgrimage without provisioning themselves. So, when 5,000 souls gathered to Jesus on a hillside and supper time drew near, the food was really there. It's just that no one wanted to pull theirs out for fear others would mooch off them and their personal provisions would be seriously eroded. So, as the story goes, meal time comes and no one wants to share. There is bread enough but it's being hoarded selfishly. And Jesus shames the crowd with the child's ...

Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... I've known satisfaction. Here's my story. What I Was Saved From Most testimonies begin something like mine. "I was born at a very early age." Seriously, I was born into a Christian home. No greater privilege could one ask for than a mother and father who fear God, who worship Christ, who love each other, who work hard, who provide a loving home, and who exercised their spiritual authority over me by baptizing me into the covenant when I was only a few weeks old. I was baptized not because I loved God as an ...

John 6:51-58, Revelation 7:9-17
Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... what God has created for those who love him" (1 Corinthians 2:9). At the beginning of Christianity, when all of this first came to be known, Clement of Alexandria, Egypt, wrote of Jesus, "He has turned all our sunsets into sunrise." And this day may he turn all your fears into faith.

Sermon
Cathy A. Ammlung
... torn apart by controversy and wounded by betrayal. Persecution still happens, even in the supposedly civilized twenty-first century. Like a woman gasping in anguish hour after hour, struggling to deliver a breech baby into the world, creation and humanity also cry out in fear and anguish. God's new creation certainly is long a-borning! And yet, it is coming to birth. We are coming to birth! Because of Jesus, firstborn of the new creation, we are assured that this will not be a stillbirth. Because Jesus has ...

1 Corinthians 1:1-9
Sermon
Fredrick R. Harm
... is usable. The Eternal Architect never makes a mistake! He merits our unconditional trust. He will never let us down. Because they know God will never let them down, Christians are convinced that none of them -- not the least among them -- need ever fear that he or she is living a life without purpose. Unfortunately this happy conviction is not shared by those who have dismissed the claim of Christ upon their lives. Someone has suggested an imaginary conversation between inhabitants of Mars and residents of ...

Sermon
Fredrick R. Harm
... top of his voice. It was not very convincing. We are really on top of the world when we have mastered the art of self-control, when we are on top of those forces which might draw us down: our appetites, our greed, our hatreds, our anxieties, our fears. It is Christ whose power and love make us masters of ourselves -- and our circumstances. In reality it is Christ- control not self-control, but more of that later. Then, there is our relation to others, "Live a life that is upright." To be upright in all our ...

Sermon
Fredrick R. Harm
... tomorrow, and back again into yesterday." At this season of the year our minds are crowded with recollections of the past year, some cheering and some sobering. But before long we find our minds occupied with anticipations of the coming year, some hopeful and some fearful. At this time the past and the future wrestle for dominance in our thinking. During this season there is a strange mingling of memory and hope. None of us are strangers to this experience. As we begin to reflect on this morning's text, we ...

Sermon
Fredrick R. Harm
... his strong, calm face had impressed her. On the way to the execution she said, "If I may ride with you, will you let me hold your hand? I am not afraid, but I am very small, and it will give me courage." They rode together, her hand in his. Fear left her eyes and soul. She looked up into his face and said, "I think you were sent to me from heaven." Love does that. As we live and walk in love we celebrate the truth of 1 Corinthians 13:8, "Love never fails!" Never! A final ingredient of the ...

Sermon
Fredrick R. Harm
... we know how things will eventually work out. He and his truth will win in the end! As E. Stanley Jones put it so well, "The whole universe is on the side of Christ. Why? Because truth is stronger than falsehood, hope is stronger than fear, life is stronger than death, and Christ embodies them all." Woodrow Wilson, past president of Princeton University, the twenty-eighth president of the United States, led his nation through the horrors of World War I. His shining achievement, his consuming passion, was to ...

Sermon
Fredrick R. Harm
... , and rallied them with the words, "Christ is risen, Christ is risen." This idea he kept repeating in desperate moments as a guarantee of recovery and victory. For Christ's resurrection is God's power for repair available to all broken lives and all hearts fearful and anxious about what lies ahead. "Be not anxious," said Christ to his own. The thing that redeems those words from being mere hollow advice is this: the One who spoke them was the One who also said, "I am the resurrection and the Life." And ...

Romans 4:1-25
Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... voice. "I am the Lord. I am here to save you!" The man was beyond relieved. "Oh, thank you. Thank you, Lord! But please hurry. Do something!" The Lord returned, "I will, my son. All you have to do is follow my every direction without doubting or fear." "Fine. Fine," hollered back the man. "Anything! But please hurry! What do you want me to do first?" The booming voice came back, "Let go." The man was silent for a moment. Finally he hollered out, "Is anyone else up there?" This business of "having faith" in ...

Hebrews 4:14-5:10
Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... least one person in the world who truly understands us. How often have we known folks who try to be such a one for us, but we know they just don't understand. Surely there are many of you here today who carry great burdens of worry or anxiety or fear. Just the words job or spouse or child or cancer or finances or death bring up such an overwhelming baggage of emotions. (And for some of you, you are already gone and will hear little of the rest of the sermon because of one of those words I just used ...

Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... its final form. Palm Sunday was the day when a string of events began that would change Jesus' life and the life of the world. Palm Sunday was the day when obedience won out over any hesitation or doubt, though there may well have been lingering, human fear of what obedience might bring in pain or suffering. But it would be worth it, to say the least. Jesus was unique in his relationship with God and with his sacrifice for all of humanity. However, Jesus also was part of a long line of splendor of those ...