Dictionary: Trust
Showing 526 to 550 of 4980 results

2 Corinthians 6:3-13
Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... recognition that our lives have been changed. We now have entered a struggle, a struggle that will continue the rest of our lives, a struggle that will never leave us complacent, at ease, or unmoved. Yes, "God loves to forgive sins," but we don't love to commit them. We hate to commit them. Yes, "Isn't the world admirably arranged?" Because if it were not for Christ and his mercy, we would be stuck in our sins and the same old miserable world. Were it not for Christ and what God did for us in him, we would ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... s Gospel, “He went down to Nazareth with them and was obedient to them. But his mother treasured all these things in her heart. And Jesus grew in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and man.” Jesus knew he was loved and that Mary and Joseph were committed to him. Mother Teresa believed in strong family ties. “Only when love abides at home can we share it with our next door neighbor,” she said. “Then it will show forth and you will be able to say to them, ‘Yes, love is here.’ And then you ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... his love. But here, with each assertion of his love, Jesus empowers Peter with a distinctive ongoing mission to “feed my lambs,” “tend my sheep,” and “feed my sheep.” Despite his failure of faith and nerve on the night of Jesus’ arrest, Peter’s commitment to Christ is itself resurrected and reaffirmed on this walk on the beach. Though it is not a part of this week’s gospel reading, the author of John 21 also affirms for the Johannine community the unique, beloved status of their disciple ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... God’s army as a four-star general who could sit behind a desk and give orders, but the first time they hear a bullet go by their head or a bomb explode they desert. The first time they realize that following Jesus means surrender, obedience, and commitment they check out. We have people here who will check off on our decision card that they prayed to receive Christ and give us contact information. We will call them, email them, and write them and never hear from them again. Just mention being baptized and ...

Luke 23:26-43
Sermon
James Merritt
... in the center? Why wasn’t He on the far right or the far left? I believe it was God’s way of illustrating to all of us in this room that just like those two criminals you have a choice. Those two men had so much in common. They committed the same crime, were convicted by the same court, condemned by the same death, castigated by the same crowd and both of them were the same distance from Jesus. They each had the same opportunity to make the same choice. There are a lot of things in life that we ...

John 8:1-11
Sermon
James Merritt
... you will leave with His grace. Frankly, this is where a lot of people would love to leave this story, but it is the third part of the story that absolutely convinces me this story really happened. There is one last thing you do with your brokenness. III. Commit to Jesus – He Will Lead You To Goodness Everybody has left. Apparently, even the Bible-study group had left. It is just Jesus and this adulteress woman and here are the last words He ever says to this woman on this earth, “Go, and from now on sin ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... on the floor and said, “The bat.” Kent said, “Well, where was the bat Hannah?” She said, “In my hands.”[2] The first thing you have to do and the best way to do it is immediately. When you are in the fault, when you have committed the sin, immediately go to God and confess that sin and begin a positive chain reaction that will lead to redemption, reconciliation, and restoration. II. God Cancels the Debt The first half of this verse deals with our part in repairing the fault, but the second half ...

2 Corinthians 7:2-16
Sermon
James Merritt
... you take these steps. I. We Must Truly Realize Our Sin One of the most loving things we can do for other people who have committed a sin and have done something wrong is when it is appropriate then it is our place to let them know it. This is ... adultery. Jesus said to her, “Go and sin no more.” That determination to do everything within your power and God’s help not to commit that same sin again is the spirit of repentance. I want to close by talking to two different groups of people today. There are ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... ? But I’ve got to ask us another question: Can’t we see who he is, as well? Researchers tell us that, nationally, every week over 53,000 people leave the church never to return. (3) But even among those who remain, only about twenty per cent are really committed to their faith. Why is that? Is it that there are many casual worshippers who come a few times a year out of mere tradition and not because they really believe that Christ is the Savior of the world? Is that why there are so few who are willing ...

Sermon
R. Robert Cueni
... , he walked on his own. Then he learned to run. In college he joined the track team. Still later he ran in Madison Square Garden where he set the world's record for the mile run. Cunningham understood the interface between prayer and personal commitment. He practiced the adage: Pray as if everything depended on God and work as if everything depended on you. That day at the youth rally, Cunningham gave praise to God for answering his prayers for the courage and strength to do what he did. Personally ...

Understanding Series
Gordon D. Fee
... mechri) of being chained like a criminal, a clear indignity for one who was both a Roman citizen and innocent. The word criminal, which occurs in Luke 23:32–39 for the brigands who were crucified with Jesus, is an especially strong word, used for those “who commit gross misdeeds and serious crimes” (BAGD). It is clear from this sentence, as well as from 1:8, 16, and 4:16–18, that Paul’s imprisonment was a serious one, and that it was personally repugnant to him. But his repugnance at his chains is ...

Understanding Series
Cheryl A. Brown
... center. The overarching message of this whole section is that tribe by tribe—with the partial exception of Judah—the Israelites consistently failed to obey the Lord’s command to secure what he had promised to them as one of the covenant benefits. They committed a sin, not so much of commission as of omission. But the omission was serious, representing as it did their rebellion against God’s will and unfaithfulness to their own covenant pledge to obey him. Thus they missed out on the fullness of God ...

Judges 6:1-40
Understanding Series
Cheryl A. Brown
... if it were wet with dew in the morning and all the ground around it dry, he would know that the Lord would save Israel by his hand. The nearly identical phrases are repeated twice, expressing emphasis. Gideon was keen to know that God was committed to him and his mission. Many commentators and preachers have criticized Gideon for his “little faith” in asking for such a sign, and even a reverse sign—which would have been an even greater miracle, for wool absorbs water—but the text never denounces him ...

Understanding Series
Pamela J. Scalise
... teach Israel to understand its identity and history in terms of the story of the failure of the disobedient Israelite kingdoms to realize the Lord’s reign on the earth. Yet the story of Israel’s failure is also the story of God’s mercy, faithfulness, and commitment to justice and righteousness as expressed in the Torah. After the end of royal rule from Jerusalem in 587 B.C., Israel was not able to act as a nation in the person of the king and his court. There was no longer a central authority or ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... stand, to make a witness in our homes, in our personal relationships, on the job, in our civic and political affairs. There is no middle ground. It is a matter of personal integrity. It is a matter of saying “yes” to Christ--of making a personal commitment of our life to him. Duncan E. Littlefair, in his book Sin Comes of Age, tells about a small and little-known book by H. G. Wells called The Croquet Player. “Significantly, it came out in 1938, while the Western nations were passively watching Hitler ...

Understanding Series
Thomas F. Johnson
... the faith in Jesus, God’s Son, which they had formerly espoused (Plummer, Epistles, p. 122; Dodd, Epistles, p. 136). They have committed the unpardonable sin (cf. Matt. 12:32; Luke 12:9–10) of blaspheming against the Spirit’s witness to the full humanity ... he felt the need to reemphasize this teaching in view of his admitting in vv. 16–17 that a “brother” or sister can commit sins which are “not unto death.” In 1 John 3:3, 9 the Elder based his argument that authentic Christians do not ...

Understanding Series
Thomas F. Johnson
... by the schism. Love is the vital power to keep Christians together amid controversy and conflict. It can heal old wounds and keep new ones from opening. In this crisis, what the Johannine world needs now, to cite an old song, is love, the commitment to work together sacrificially for each other’s highest good. Again, as is characteristic of the Johannine writings, the author is thinking of love within the community, among those who are supposed to belong to the truth. This is what he writes to teach ...

Deuteronomy 10:12-22
Understanding Series
Christopher J. H. Wright
... could also be used metaphorically with the ears (Jer. 6:10 marginal note) or the heart to speak of willingness to hear and obey the word of God (cf. Deut. 30:6; Lev. 26:41; Jer. 4:4; 9:26; Ezek. 44:7–9). The phrase thus indicates an inner commitment to obedience that lives out the meaning of the physical sign in the flesh. Paul’s observation in Rom. 2:28f. is not some new spiritual insight but an authentic articulation of the ethos of the Torah itself. 10:17 On the vocabulary of this verse, cf. Pss. 24 ...

Deuteronomy 14:1-21
Understanding Series
Christopher J. H. Wright
... of a whole apostate community and all its property (13:12–16) is worlds away from the question of what you were allowed to cook for lunch, but in fact a common principle governed both—the distinctiveness of Israel as a people wholly and exclusively committed to Yahweh. This principle, which underlies all the preaching of chapters 4–11 and finds its most succinct expression in 7:6, is repeated at the head of this chapter (v. 2) as an introduction to some domestic matters that must also conform to the ...

Deuteronomy 26:1-15
Understanding Series
Christopher J. H. Wright
... by God. The essence of the covenant is that Yahweh is Israel’s God (v. 17) and that Israel is Yahweh’s people (v. 18). This central covenantal reality is then reinforced by Yahweh’s promise that Israel will be his treasured possession and by Israel’s commitment to walk in his ways, to keep his decrees, and to obey him. Verse 19 then expands this essence of the covenant relationship with a declaration of its goal, in terms that echo Exodus 19:4–6—a text that has already been brought to mind by ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... to the people by the lengths to which the servant would go as the embodiment of Yahweh’s power (53:1b). That might be another ground for Ms Jerusalem’s not fearing that power (see on v. 5). Here the point is that it was a commitment that issued in well-being for the people, and Yahweh invites Ms Jerusalem to take that therefore as a reliable promise. In that context Yahweh once again reasserts compassion and unfailing love (the same word translated “kindness” in v. 8). 54:11–14a The battered city ...

Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... discernment regarding when to offer correction to others (and when not to [7:6]). Discernment as the pursuit of wisdom and self-reflection is a form of judgment that should characterize Christians.4 2. God will answer prayer; it is part of God’s covenant nature and commitment to do so. As Jesus has done a number of times in the Sermon on the Mount, in 7:7–11 he grounds an exhortation (here to prayer) in right ways of thinking about God. He addresses any tendency to see God as capricious and acting on ...

Matthew 13:24-30, Matthew 13:31-35, Matthew 13:36-43, Matthew 13:44-46, Matthew 13:47-52
Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... of the yeast). Its apparent insignificance at present should not be mistaken for a lack of worth. Indeed, it is worth more than everything a person might possess (parables of the hidden treasure and of the pearl). It is worth one’s full commitment and loyalty. And given that the kingdom’s full significance and influence are still in the future, faith is required to believe that God will bring its consummation. The hiddenness of the kingdom means that Christians always walk by faith in this life. This ...

Matthew 26:31-35, Matthew 26:36-46, Matthew 26:47-56, Matthew 26:57-68, Matthew 26:69-75
Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... aside a memory shelf: Dedicate a shelf in your home to objects chosen as symbols of God’s faithfulness. Perhaps you can snap a photograph of a place or thing that will help you remember a moment when God was quite evidently at work. Matthew portrays the commitment to “being with” Jesus as fundamental to discipleship. Quote: To live in relationship with the living God in a way that focuses on being prior to doing, it can be helpful to return to the truth that being with Jesus begins and ends with his ...

Luke 10:1-24, Luke 9:57-62
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... duties must give way to the demands of discipleship. Hymn: “Take My Life and Let It Be,” by Frances Ridley Havergal. In this beloved hymn (1874) Havergal (1836–79), a poet and hymnist who suffered greatly in her life, spells out the kind of dedication and commitment that this principle teaches. Take my life, and let it be consecrated, Lord, to Thee. Take my moments and my days; let them flow in endless praise. Take my hands, and let them move at the impulse of Thy love. Take my feet, and let them be ...

Showing results