Dictionary: Trust
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Matthew 22:34-40
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.” The “greatest commandment” Jesus chose was not a commandment “against” anything. It was a commandment “for” something. It was a commandment that commended an attitude of faith and love directed towards God. Yet Jesus could not stop there. Jesus could not uncouple the love of God from God’s love for this world. Jesus recognized that was impossible. So in response to the Pharisee’s question ...

2 Samuel 7:1-11, 16, Luke 1:26-38, Romans 16:25-27
Sermon
David J. Kalas
... one. He no doubt sensed the fundamental goodness of David’s plan, and he recognized that the Lord was with David. But Nathan’s seal of approval proved premature, for “that same night the word of the Lord came to Nathan.” David is to be commended for not running ahead with his plan before consulting the prophet of the Lord. That prophet, however, may be questioned for giving the green light to David’s plan without himself consulting the Lord. In any case, the Lord did not permit the project to get ...

Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21
Sermon
Timothy Cargal
... the only marks Paul identified of his ministry. His ministry was also charac­terized by “purity, knowledge, patience, kindness, holiness of spirit, genuine love, truthful speech, and the power of God” (vv. 6-7a). Now here are things that truly do “commend [his ministry] in every way” (v. 4a). But one might ask, “Which is it, Paul? Does your ministry of reconciliation with God portend ‘hard­ships’ or ‘the power of God’?” To that question Paul answers, “Yes.” The “day of salvation ...

Sermon
David J. Kalas
... of medications in our country today that home remedies may be a vanishing art. So many over-the-counter products boast that they can cure what ails us, not to mention the almost infinite number of prescription medicines that our doctors may commend to us for our good. An older generation, however, remembers the homemade treatments and concoctions that were hand­ed down from Grandma. It was hard to trace the science behind such traditional home remedies, but they had the credibility of years, experience ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... intended.” (Matthew 19:8, NLT) From the very beginning, divorce was never in God’s vocabulary. It was never in God’s perfect plan for marriage. Marriage is a divine institution. Divorce is a human invention. Understand, God never commands divorce and God never commends divorce. God never says, “Divorce is a good thing.” He never says it is best for the children. He never says it would be best for everybody concerned. If you really want to know what God says about divorce, He specifically tells us ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... by the Holy Spirit. (2 Peter 1:20-21, ESV) To put it another way, God revealed the truth. Humans recorded the truth. The church recognized the truth. Or to put it still one other way. This book was divinely communicated, providentially collected, and spiritually commended. To this very day whenever a British Sovereign is crowned, as the Bible is place in his or her hands these words are uttered, “This book is the most valuable thing the world affords” and it really is, because it was signed, sealed, and ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... of the earth” (1:8) and from Judaism to a Christianity that had Good News for all people. The suggestion that the martyrdom of Stephen has been influenced by the trial of Paul (cf., e.g., 21:28; see disc. on 19:21–41) has little to commend it. 7:54 By the time Stephen had finished speaking, the roles of those involved in this trial had effectively been reversed. It was as though the Sanhedrin were on trial and Stephen’s speech for the prosecution. With Stephen thundering against them, it is highly ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... been suggested. It was “the final outcome,” says Weiss, “of an inner crisis” caused by Paul’s sense of failure to keep the law (J. Weiss, vol. 1, p. 190). If Romans 7:14–25 reflects his preconversion experience, this theory has something to commend it, though it is far from an adequate explanation. Others attribute Paul’s experience to an attack of epilepsy or to his falling into an ecstatic trance. Some have argued that the whole thing has been fabricated from a legendary tale. Paul’s own ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... , for in each church they appointed elders to take care of the spiritual and temporal needs of their people (v. 23; see note on 11:30). These elders were commissioned with prayer and fasting, as the missionaries themselves had been (13:2, 3), and were thus commended to the Lord [Jesus], in whom they had put their trust (v. 23; cf. 20:32). For the expression “to believe into,” see disc. on 10:43. The perfect tense of the verb indicates that they had sometime past come to this faith and were continuing ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... that in Acts 11:30 Paul was still subordinate to Barnabas, whereas this does not appear to be so in Galatians 2:1–10. We are led, then, to the view that the visit of Galatians 2:1–10 is that of Acts 15:1–29. There is much to commend it. Both accounts have to do with the same question of circumcision and the law, involving Paul and Barnabas and the leaders of the church in Jerusalem. In both accounts they come to a common mind and adopt a common policy. Acts, it is true, describes a large gathering ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... they set out by land for the cities of southern Galatia. Silas now assumed the role of “supporting cast” that Barnabas had played, though he would never attain the stature of Barnabas. He is never called an apostle (cf. 14:14). He may have commended himself to Paul for two reasons: his readiness to deal sympathetically with the Gentile believers and his possession (implied in 16:37) of Roman citizenship. That no mention is made of Barnabas and Mark being similarly sent out with a blessing means nothing ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... the tirelessness of his labor, but more likely expresses the normal pattern of work, starting before daybreak (= night) and extending to about midday when most people took a siesta, but Paul preached in the hall of Tyrannus (see disc. on 19:9). 20:32 Finally, he commended them to God and to the word of his grace (see disc. on 13:43). Here the genitive is objective. It is “the message about grace.” This message is able to build … up the believer, that is, to bring the believer to maturity in Christ (cf ...

2 Corinthians 10:1-18
Understanding Series
James M. Scott
... Lord for the original “in this.” His point in adducing this citation is made clear by the subsequent interpretation in verse 18. The opponents’ self-recommendation shows a fundamental lack of understanding (cf. v. 12), for only a person whom the Lord specifically commends is approved. Paul implies by this that he alone is commissioned by God to undertake a mission in the territorial jurisdiction under discussion (cf. v. 13). Paul never lets the reader forget that he is an apostle “by the will of God ...

Understanding Series
L. Ann Jervis
... may well be setting up a subtle contrast between his actions and those of Peter, which he will shortly denounce (2:11–14). Whereas in Paul’s view Peter at Antioch acted hypocritically in front of the people from Jerusalem, the apostle commends himself to the Galatians as one who has the courage of his convictions. Paul’s convictions and actions stem from nothing other than a revelation. The Greek word used for “revelation” (apokalypsin) has the sense of “to uncover.” It was originally used ...

Galatians 5:1-15, Galatians 5:16-26
Understanding Series
L. Ann Jervis
... the ancient world to express “actions that surpass all legal prescriptions and are therefore beyond any legal accounting” (Galatians, p. 264). 5:24 Dying to passions was a goal of the ancient philosophies. We find it also in writings of Philo. For instance, Philo commends “the light of Isaac—the generic form of happiness, of the joy and gladness which belongs to those who have ceased from the manner of women [Gen. 18:11] and died to the passions” (On the Cherubim 8 [Colson and Whitaker, LCL]). See ...

Galatians 5:16-26
Understanding Series
L. Ann Jervis
... the ancient world to express “actions that surpass all legal prescriptions and are therefore beyond any legal accounting” (Galatians, p. 264). 5:24 Dying to passions was a goal of the ancient philosophies. We find it also in writings of Philo. For instance, Philo commends “the light of Isaac—the generic form of happiness, of the joy and gladness which belongs to those who have ceased from the manner of women [Gen. 18:11] and died to the passions” (On the Cherubim 8 [Colson and Whitaker, LCL]). See ...

Ephesians 6:10-20
Understanding Series
Arthur G. Patzia
... ). There is very little evidence to indicate whether such an exhortation was connected specifically with baptism. Although baptism would be a suitable occasion to remind new Christians that they have spiritual armor to face the world, there is little to commend this connection in Ephesians. The most tangible evidence in this respect is found in Ignatius’ letter to Polycarp: “Let your baptism be your arms; your faith, your helmet; your love, your spear; your endurance, your armor” (6.2). The most that ...

Understanding Series
Arthur G. Patzia
... , powers, and authorities that Paul mentions throughout the epistle. If so, they would be worshiped for their power as well as for their control over human beings. The Greek word used for humility is tapeinophrosynē, which, on other occasions, is a positive and commendable disposition of character (3:12; Eph. 4:2; Phil. 2:3; 1 Pet. 5:5). Here the context shows that the heretics were guilty of a false humility in connection with their worship of angels. The RSV translates it as “self-abasement ...

Understanding Series
Arthur G. Patzia
... is a strong imperative and is a good translation of zēteō, which means to seek, examine, or search something out with the desire to possess. Those things above, both here and in 3:2, are not identified. They may be the virtues of the Christian life that Paul commends in 3:12–16 in contrast to the “earthly” things mentioned in 2:20–23 and 3:5–9 (cf. Phil. 3:19). Above (i.e., heaven, cf. GNB), where Christ is seated at the right hand, should not be understood as some geographic place in the cosmos ...

1 Thessalonians 5:12-28
Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... indication of the stature of the Lord as Paul saw him” (Morris, Themes, p. 33; see disc. on 3:11 and 2 Thess. 2:16). 5:28 The letter ends much as it began (1:1) and in a manner that would soon become the trademark of the apostle. He commends his readers to the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ (for an expanded form of this grace, see 2 Cor. 13:14, and for a shortened form, Col. 4:18; 1 Tim. 6:21; 2 Tim. 4:22; Titus 3:15; for the titles Lord and Christ, see note on ...

2 Thessalonians 2:1-12
Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... neuter to the masculine. But it is difficult to see in what sense the Holy Spirit would be taken out of the way. Some advocates of this interpretation say that this would be the case in the Rapture, but we have already seen that there is nothing to commend the theory of a rapture prior to the coming of the Lord (see disc. on 2:1 and note on 1 Thess. 3:13). Oscar Cullmann saw a reference to Paul’s missionary preaching in this passage. According to Cullmann the apostle believed that “before the End the ...

2 Thessalonians 3:6-15
Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... : 2 Thessalonians in the Pauline Tradition [Tübingen: Mohr-Siebeck, 1988], pp. 82f., argues that the problem of the disorderly in 2 Thessalonians is a new one concerning a group setting themselves up as spiritual authorities. There is little to commend this suggestion). Most scholars find the idleness to be rooted in an eschatological excitement stemming from the Thessalonians’ belief in the imminence of the Parousia (see, e.g., von Dobschütz, Die Thessalonicher—Briefe, pp. 179–82; B. Rigaux, Saint ...

Understanding Series
Gordon D. Fee
... the whole section, finally clarified in verse 16, suggests that give proper recognition to in the sense of “caring for” is what is in view. Whether they are also to be recognized because they serve the church in some way is not so clear, but the commendation for good deeds in verse 10 would certainly allow it. It must be noted that, even though this section has ultimately been shaped by the activities of the younger widows, the care of genuine widows is indeed a real concern. Such concern has deep roots ...

Understanding Series
Arthur G. Patzia
Now that Paul has sufficiently commended Philemon for his exemplary Christian life, he moves to the heart of his request regarding Onesimus. In one way, Paul gives the impression that he is “shadow boxing,” that is, skirting around the real issue and not confronting Philemon directly. But Paul’s strategy is determined by two factors: First, ...

Understanding Series
Gordon D. Fee
... high ideal of being virtuous, occurs frequently in that essay and others (esp. Advice to Bride and Groom). In this latter essay (conj. praec. 33) Plutarch also notes: “So it is with women also; if they subordinate themselves to their husbands, they are commended, but if they want to have control, they cut a sorrier figure than the subjects of their control” (Loeb). On these matters Plutarch speaks for all antiquity. 2:8 There has been general disagreement about to whom Paul is referring in speaking of ...

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