Dictionary: Trust
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Ephesians 1:15-23
Sermon
Mark Trotter
... the doctrine of heaven is a panacea, that it is a religion for the weak, an opiate of the masses. But nothing could be more to the contrary. Nothing has stimulated human beings more to do good works and to try to make the world a better place than the belief that what I do here now is of ultimate significance. Saints arose because people of faith need heroes. They need models of what it means to be faithful in this life. It is believed that the saints are now in heaven cheering us on. I like to think that ...

James 2:1-13, James 2:14-26
Understanding Series
Peter H. Davids
... gave up his spirit” (the words for breath and spirit being identical in both Greek and Hebrew) he was dead (John 19:30; Luke 23:46; Ecclesiastes 3:21; 8:8; 9:5). A dead body is a liability that must be buried. Likewise faith that remains intellectual belief is dead. It cannot save; it is a liability, for it can deceive a person as to his or her true spiritual state. Only when faith becomes full commitment and is joined to actions does it have value. Additional Notes 2:1 The term for partiality (prosōpol ...

Matthew 4:12-23
Sermon
James L. Killen
... toward which God is moving the whole creation, both in this life and beyond it. It is an expectation that there will someday be an era of justice and well-being for all people, and a time when we will all learn to love one another. Belief in the kingdom of heaven is also a belief about the best way for us to put our lives together. It is an invitation to let God be the most important thing in our lives and do our best to live trusting God and trying to do what God wants us to do. Someone has ...

James 2:14-26, James 2:1-13
Understanding Series
Peter H. Davids
... gave up his spirit” (the words for breath and spirit being identical in both Greek and Hebrew) he was dead (John 19:30; Luke 23:46; Ecclesiastes 3:21; 8:8; 9:5). A dead body is a liability that must be buried. Likewise faith that remains intellectual belief is dead. It cannot save; it is a liability, for it can deceive a person as to his or her true spiritual state. Only when faith becomes full commitment and is joined to actions does it have value. Additional Notes 2:1 The term for partiality (prosōpol ...

Sermon
Roger G. Talbott
... die. Now this isn't Peter's understanding of what the Messiah is. Peter had a Sunday school picture of the Messiah in his head. It was a picture of a king who sat on a throne and ruled forever -- a king who would never die. He had inherited this belief from his ancestors. He had made it his own, especially as a follower of Jesus, whom he believed to be the Messiah. He starts to argue with Jesus. "You can't die," said Peter. That's not what the Messiah does. The Messiah lives forever. Peter's most sacred ...

Romans 4:1-5, 13-17
Sermon
Richard W. Ferris
... and gave him a way out did Abraham change his course of action. That, too, was because Abraham believed God. And what did Abraham's belief get him? Initially, it brought ridicule. Even his wife Sarah laughed at him. The very thought of a ninety-year-old woman and a man ... God. He didn't like the outcome that God had planned. But in the end, with the help of a great fish, Jonah's belief won out and God's plan was carried through. Are we so different? We believe God. We believe that Jesus came into the world ...

Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... in God... I am not saying that I know all about God (who does?) or even that I believe that such a being as God exists, Someone in the great Somewhere as a popular song put it some years ago. That sort of believing costs nobody anything. That sort of belief IS easy. But Christian Faith is not. Christian Faith means that I believe that I have come to know God’s character in such a way that I am willing to put my trust in God. No, true faith isn’t easy. If some of us have come to a ...

Sermon
J. Howard Olds
... tell me what religion, if any, I ought to practice. I took the challenge. Within a few minutes it was clearly determined that I was meant to be an Orthodox Quaker. Since Quakers have neither pastors nor sermons, I decided to wait until after Easter to make the switch. Beliefs—In some form or another we all have them. I go to doctors believing they will give me the right medicine to make me well. We get on jets believing pilots know how to fly the plane. Even though I was stuck on an elevator for over two ...

Romans 9:30--10:21
Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... and Philo, On the Posterity and Exile of Cain 84–85 as evidence of its varied interpretations in Judaism; see Romans 9–16, pp. 604–5. For Barth’s impressive exposition of this passage, see Romans, pp. 377–79. 10:9–10 For Augustine’s pertinent story of belief and confession, see Additional Notes §14 (6:3–4). 10:11–13 Luther applies verse 12 to prayer: “God is rich as he hears our prayers, but we are poor as we call upon him. He is strong when he fulfills our prayers, but we are hesitant ...

Matthew 25:14-30
Sermon
Albert G. Butzer III
... of his wrath. Clearly, the image that the one-talent man had of his master was inconsistent with the picture of the master that Jesus paints for us. It seems, therefore, that this man is paralyzed, not so much by fiscal conservatism, but by an ill-begotten and fearful belief that the master, that is to say God, is harsh and angry. Is this the God that we want to proclaim? Is this the gospel we want to preach — the angry old man in the nursing home who kicks over the jigsaw puzzles we make of our lives? I ...

Sermon
Carlyle Fielding Stewart
... test, but they had no choice. They had to go along with the demonstration, so they gathered in a crowd, thinking that they could make up in numbers what they didn't have in faith. Elijah was one man who stood on the strength of conviction and his firm belief in God. This was no play thing. He was serious about making his point about which God was more resourceful and responsive to the needs of the people! Third is the God of Action versus the God of Inertia. Elijah understood that the God of Israel was not ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... impact your behavior? "I believe in the forgiveness of sins." All sins? Even Hitler's? What does that mean? And if you believe it, do you behave it? "I believe in the resurrection of the body and the life everlasting." Do you? OK. So how does that belief make you behave? I BELIEVE... Do you? A great preacher of an earlier generation has said, "You don't really believe your creed until you want to say it standing at spiritual attention with the roll of drums in your ears, the light of love dazzling in ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... Where does the evidence lead? Ask Anthony Flew, a British Philosophy Professor, who had been a leading champion of Atheism for more than a half century and once debated C. S. Lewis on the existence of God. At the age of 81, after decades of insisting that belief in God was ridiculous, has now changed his mind and has now stated that based on scientific evidence, there had to be a super-intelligence, a first-cause, as the only good explanation for the origin of life and the complexity of nature. Do you know ...

1 Corinthians 15:1-11
Understanding Series
Marion L. Soards
... his being a believer, since he was no disciple of Jesus. Orr and Walther remark, “James’ new status as a believer offers an indirect proof that there was nothing he could remember from his acquaintance with Jesus in the family that would make such belief impossible” (1 Corinthians, p. 322). But the facts of James’s coming to leadership in the early church cut two ways: That James did not believe before and without this appearance is a direct proof that there was nothing he knew from the family ...

Drama
Dr. Raymond Bailey
... , everyone of you has daydreamed as I have been speaking. As a consequence, each of you is hearing a slightly different message. That's selective perception. There is also a matter of expectation, and belief systems, through which we filter all information. Indeed, we avoid information that is contrary to strongly held beliefs. We expected a Messiah that was very politically powerful -- a world ruler over the kingdoms of this world. We thought Jesus would do this, and do it now. We simply tuned out any hint ...

Sermon
Carlyle Fielding Stewart
... -American spirituality, but the adaptive needs - that is the ability to face, adapt to, and overcome great odds - are an equally important element of our spiritual heritage. How could we have survived slavery and all the troubles we've faced, were it not for firm belief in a higher power? We didn't have psychologists and psychiatrists to give us therapy to cope with our condition, so there had to be something to help us through, and I say it was God, very God. Our spirituality has equipped us with methods ...

Sermon
Ron Lavin
... man sees himself as the measure of all things, he will remain in what John Bunyan in Pilgrim's Progress calls the "Sloth of Despond." If when doubts assail you, you bring them to God and act on what you believe, you will discover that tomorrow your belief is richer and deeper than today. Only in the atmosphere of free expression and willing obedience will you hear your name called. "Thomas." It is almost as if Jesus says what he said to the blind man long ago: "Ephphatha." ("Be open.") It is important that ...

Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... . What are we to make of them? Is Jesus here stepping out of character and being unkind, or is He merely revealing the true nature of things? And what are we to make of Jesus’ words about the devil, anyway? Over the years many of us have abandoned any belief in the devil. We have been embarrassed by the fact that Jesus seems to have believed in his Satanic majesty. We have tried to deal with Jesus’ language in several different ways. One way is to say that Jesus was a child of His age, and shared the ...

Isaiah 1:1-31
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... of devotion has no life of its own outside its secluded, like-believing community. You can't be a Shaker in midtown Manhattan. You can't be a Dead Head in a Mill Valley cul-de-sac. True believers must be surrounded by the object of their belief in order to keep their unique identity alive. That's why, in today's First Testament text, God uses Isaiah to pronounce such a sound, scathing, scolding to the Israelites. The chosen people, the descendants of Mt. Sinai, the children of God, had become a bunch of ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... what you need when the storms come. There is a difference! You can believe in God the Father Almighty, maker of Heaven and Earth, and in Jesus Christ His Only Son, our Lord. You can give intellectual assent to that that’s pretty easy — that’s belief. Belief is something that you recite in a creed; faith is staking your life on what you believe. He wasn’t asking them, “What do you believe?” He was asking them, “Why don’t you trust what you believe?” And isn’t that our desperate need - to ...

Sermon
James McCormick
... else in life growing out of that, and gaining its meaning and direction from that. Faith, Christian faith, means that I build my whole life on that foundation. I trust in God. I depend upon God. Are you with me so far? Faith begins with belief, and then moves to include trust and reliance. But only recently have I come to understand a third dimension of faith: faith as perception – perception – the willingness and the ability to see the hand of God at work in the world; the willingness and the ...

Psalm 65:1-13, Luke 18:9-14, Joel 2:28-32, 2 Timothy 4:9-18, 2 Timothy 3:10--4:8
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... are able to receive God's grace and mercy which will enable them to continue to live. They allow God to sustain their growth toward the perfection found in Jesus Christ. 2. Putting Others Down. One of the subtle deceptions that misleads persons is the belief that they can be superior by putting others down. No person gains in status by denigrating or undermining another person or group of persons. The very fact that they engage in such activity shows that they have not matured. They may attempt to raise ...

Sermon
Carl B. Rife
... up. Paul uses that language in 2 Thessalonians: "We shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air." Then there is the whole doctrine of the second coming in which the rapture is a part in at least some people's belief. It is the belief that Christ will physically return to earth at the end of the present age and set everything straight. Now let me share with you that as I was growing up I was not excited, enthused or enamored in any way about the idea of a second coming. It ...

Sermon
Wallace H. Kirby
... takes more than its physical toll; it diminishes one’s ability to believe. The Book of James says that if we tell the poor, "Go in peace, be warmed and filled," without making effort to feed and clothe the poor, then there is a death-quality about our belief. "So faith by itself, if it has no works, is dead." In my office I have a copy of the 1908 Discipline of The Methodist Episcopal Church. To me it is a very important edition of that document which we Methodists revise and publish every four years. In ...

Sermon
Robert G. Tuttle
... a big difference. Look at the "Bannister Effect." Up to 1954, no one had run a four-minute mile. Then Roger Bannister ran the mile in under four minutes, and since then many runners have broken it. They now know it can be done; the belief barrier has been broken. Faith opens the belief barrier, and miracles take place. A sense of the present action of the Spirit of God makes many things possible! Look at the healing powers of Jesus: The people knew he could do it. He did it. He still can. Let us listen to ...

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