Dictionary: Trust
Showing 26 to 50 of 111 results

John 15:18--16:4, Acts 10:23b-48, 1 John 5:1-12
Sermon Aid
Russell F. Anderson
... a crisis reconciles them. During the crisis one of the friends makes a comment to the effect: "I know one thing. I need friends." We all need friends. Yet I fear that most of us are enjoying fewer friendships. Our mobility, our style of life, our mistrust of others hinders close friendship ties. As Christians, no matter what happens to us in life, we all have at least one friend. Jesus makes the unbelievable statement: "I do not call you servants any longer.but I have called you friends" (v. 15). Friends ...

Sermon
Kenneth E. Crouch
... us the way of love, we ask that you would bless this marriage. Give to __________ and __________ the desire and the ability to keep the vows that they have made. Where selfishness would show itself, give an extra measure of love; where mistrust is a temptation, give confidence; where misunderstanding intrudes, give gentleness and patience. Give to them many times of joy and peace and happiness as their love for each other deepens. May their home be visited frequently by laughter and pleasant surprises and ...

Sermon
Clement E. Lewis
... . Another danger is that we may tend to substitute resentment, and even anger for feelings of disappointment, allowing ourselves to become bitter and block out any further feelings of trust in anyone or any social structure. We may even mistrust ourselves both individually and as a collective group. The appropriate management becomes a necessity for us, else our lives experience disorganization and inner chaos. Spiritual concepts and values diminish; selfishness rises, and ignoring reality is used as a ...

Sermon
James Weekley
... friend." Like the citizenry of Nazareth, do we also question Jesus' intentions? "Can we really trust him? What ulterior motives does he bargain with?" The answer for us today is that Jesus has to be correct. Without his friendship, our paranoia of mistrust will continue. The grand gospel reminds us again and again that intimate friendships are salvageable. They are possible if we want them to be possible. There are flickers of hope. I recall the telephone commercial which hums, "Reach out and touch someone ...

Sermon
James Weekley
... , won't have any of it. Fear is the absence of peace. We fear those who are different from us. Their religion may be different. Their skin tone or dialect may be different. Wars are waged over paper-thin differences. Fear and its first cousin, mistrust, keep our differences on the battlefields. Reuel L. Howe calls fear that silent enemy which puts us on the defensive, it "turns us into our own worst enemy, so that our sufferings, instead of being caused by others, are often self-caused." Within the bosom ...

Sermon
Erskine White
... like anyone else. So, too, do our own enemies today have names and families, hopes and fears just as we do. If we got to know them a little better as people, we might become a little more human ourselves. In every age and in every nation, mistrust of peopie is fed and perpetuated by distance between people. This humanization of the enemy encourages Jonah to offer his life for theirs, but the ship's crew doesn't accept his offer; instead, they row harder, trying to escape the storm. Surely, the people of ...

Sermon
Larry Goodpaster
... , and the long-time faithful remnant rise up in protest. There is a sense of uncomfortableness as the new way confronts the old line. Whenever those who are “set in their ways” encounter those who call “those ways” into question, there is suspicion, mistrust and perhaps even anger or hostility. Our text for today gives us a glimpse of that growing conflict between the scribes and pharisees on the one hand, and Jesus on the other. It is the religious establishment versus God’s new way of being ...

Sermon
Johnny Dean
... of Tennessee had elected to the office of governor men who had been born out of wedlock. One of them was a man named Ben Hooper. Each and every one of us is a child of God. Rather than letting our lives get bogged down in jealousy or envy or mistrust, or worrying about the differences between men and women, let’s go out and claim the rich inheritance that is ours by the grace of God. AMEN

Sermon
... trait they acquire from living in him. They can only be happy about it. Do you know of any other way of living with yourself and your neighbor and with God that will bring greater happiness? Do you know of any other way out of the hell of unrest and mistrust in which the world is seething? Do you know of any other way that would bring more peace, more love, more justice than the Gospel - than if people believed that God loved them so much as to give his son for them? Surely the Gospel is the way to true ...

35. Death of a Blacksnake
Luke 17:11-19, Genesis 1:1-2:3
Illustration
Staff
... - equally bad. In the same way we categorize people and allow myth and rumor to determine our relationship with those who might be "different" from us. Catholic-Protestant; Jew-Gentile; Black-White; Indian-Anglo; Northerner-Southerner; Russian-American; etc.; each mistrusts or hates the other not because there is a valid reason, but merely because of some fear or prejudice which has been passed on by a parent, teacher, or preacher. That particular blacksnake is dead - killed by ignorance, perhaps, rather ...

Matthew 28:16-20
Sermon
... you are, can you overcome an addiction, be it physical or mental. Addictions always have to do with low self esteem. Our addictions, our fixes, are attempts to fill a void in our lives. This void of doubt and emptiness comes forth as a need for trust. If we are mistrustful of the world, if we are insecure, only a remaking will allow us to be full. We want love not criticism. We want action, not sermons. We want help. We feel empty and we want to be full so we try to stick some "thing" inside. I have heard ...

Drama
Tom Eberle
... Light: No, I’m just going to ask you to unlock the door and enter the light of each other. I’m going to ask you to listen to the jangle of keys, because wherever my light shines there are keys unlocking the darkness of human bitterness and mistrust. [The Light gives the candle to the couple, who carry it back to the altar while the congregation begins singing.] Congregation sings: O come, thou Key of David, come And open wide our heavenly home. Make safe the way that leads on high And close the path to ...

Sermon
Leonard Mann
... failed. And he failed because he was afraid, afraid of the outcome. I say to you, my dear friend, that one of the secrets of living in the interim is to believe in the outcome, how things will come out, how the interim will end. This parable of the mistrusting servant is one of the most directly revelant of all the parables of Jesus. In this parable he is speaking to us right where we are, right here in this interim where we live. And he is saying: You occupy until I come. The fearful servant in the parable ...

Sermon
William McKee Aber
... s easy for you to preach about it; you don’t live in my neighborhood; you couldn’t possibly like the so and so’s that live on our street." I don’t doubt it for a minute! I have more than my own share of resentments, annoyances, and downright mistrusts of people. Fred Speakman, in a powerful sermon titled, "Love is Something You Do," helped me a great deal by pointing out that Christian love was never meant to begin in the way we feel about people. Of course we won’t all be fond of the same people ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... only as pawns in the wider struggle. Israel and Judah were constantly threatened by one power or another. It was a difficult time. Like Amos, Micah was a product of the countryside...a farmer...and like farmers throughout the centuries, he had a certain mistrust of city slickers. In his case, he had good reason: it was the city slickers who were fleecing the folks of the countryside that Micah knew as friends and neighbors; it was city slicker judges who took bribes to render unfair judgments; city slicker ...

Philippians 4:2-9
Sermon
King Duncan
... of you are familiar with John Bunyan's classic allegory, PILGRIM'S PROGRESS. There is a character in PILGRIM'S PROGRESS called Little Faith. On his way to the celestial city, Little Faith is attacked and robbed by three rogues, Faint Heart, Mistrust, and Guilt. When he recovers, he finds that while they took all his money, they overlooked his most precious possessions, his inheritance and his certificate of admission to the celestial city. But Little Faith was devastated by the loss of his silver. Though ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... a rather lamentable figure to the children of this world. We keep thinking about all the things "we can no longer do" as Christians, instead of enjoying the riches of Creation and then accepting with open hands what God wants to give us. Is God, then, a mistrustful miser who locks everything away from us so that we cannot get at it? Is He not rather the Father who is always giving with full hands and unparalleled generosity, always pouring out his gifts? I am afraid that the germs of a neo- pagan culture ...

Ephesians 1:15-23
Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... to spend it on your passions, unfaithful creatures.” It’s a scathing and stunning word, but it supports Jesus’ beatitude, “Blessed are the meek for they shall inherit the earth.” Possessions, position, and power. Not approached with meekness, generate mistrust, severing of relationships, even violence. Meekness generates reconciliation and caring, and meekness is the telling mark of our being Christ in the world. I heard a beautifully simple but poignant story the other day, and with this I close ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... a rather lamentable figure to the children of this world. We keep thinking about all the things "we can no longer do" as Christians, instead of enjoying the riches of Creation and then accepting with open hands what God wants to give us. Is God, then, a mistrustful miser who locks everything away from us so that we cannot get at it? Is He not rather the Father who is always giving with full hands and unparalleled generosity, always pouring out his gifts? I am afraid that the germs of a neo- pagan culture ...

Sermon
Richard W. Ferris
... and worn out. Sometimes it seems like we've been robbed of all hope. We often question the meaning and purpose of life itself. That's why God has given us each other in communion with Christ Jesus. Together, we can see above the pain, the hatred, the mistrust, and the violence that goes on all around us. Together, we can reach up to find the strength to endure and the spirit to persevere. Together, we can find the joy in living that God intended for us. Together, Jesus has taken us all to another level. Not ...

Matthew 10:1-42
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... from the Mexican border into the heat-blasted desert of southern Arizona, the dangerous, bubbled-tar roadway has been dubbed the Devil's Highway. Boundary lines are where those on either side glare and glower at each other, throwing hostility and mistrust across the divide. Boundaries create a no-man's-land that divides the healthy from the sick; the "acceptable" from the "unacceptable"; the successful from the failures; the loved from the unloved. Going back and forth across those boundary lines is ...

John 4:1-26
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... they all have in common is a fundamental cynicism about life, a basic disbelief that anything or anyone can be trusted. Buster Jim Anderson remembers asking his mother what a bumper sticker meant that read "Impeach Nixon." Acronyms like LAPD and PTL spell mistrust and misdeeds for busters. They especially don't trust boomer-produced items and ideas. Skeptical and pragmatic at the same time, busters trust their own kind most readily. They want to buy and read and ride in things produced by their own. They ...

Matthew 14:22-36
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... , or spouse. It's another thing altogether to accept being on-call for 24 hours over Christmas Eve/Day; it's another thing studying for and taking the bar exam three or four times; it's another thing facing a roomful of bored, destructive, mistrustful, even hostile teenagers; it's another thing picking up after and putting up with all the annoying, unappealing habits that come along with your beloved. Believing can give you dreams. Following can give you blisters. Or as Peter finds out in today's gospel ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... of human existence. When we examine the moments, acts, and statements of all kinds of people not only the grief and ecstasy of the greatest poets, but also the huge unhappiness of the average soul is evidenced by the innumerable strident words of abuse, hatred, contempt, mistrust, and scorn that forever grate upon our ears, as the man swarm passes us in the streets we find, I think, that they are all suffering from the same thing. The final cause of their complaint is loneliness.1 Of all the ranges of human ...

Sermon
John E. Harnish
... from Rome, Cretans, Arabians, we hear them telling in our own languages the mighty works of God." What a vision, what a promise for the people of God. Tragically, brothers and sisters, we know we aren't there yet. Race and language still divide us. Mistrust and distrust and demonizing of those who differ from us can be heard from every corner of the globe. It seems we are becoming more divided over religion, ethnicity, nationality. And in this day, the world desperately needs to hear a word from a church ...

Showing results