Dictionary: Trust
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Sermon
Carlyle Fielding Stewart
... of language; the same vocabulary; the same syntax, which are rules for arranging words; and the same lexicon, which is the total stock of words in a language. However, the connotation and denotation of words may be strangely different. One would assume that in speaking the same language we all have the same meaning. Similarly, we may all draw from the same spiritual lexicon but arrive at different meanings in the practice of spirituality which lead to confusion and division among us. Spiritually speaking ...

677. A Python in the Hut
2 Thessalonians 2:1-17; 2 Thessalonians 3:1-5
Illustration
John R. Steward
... . The python began to throw itself violently about. The missionary left the room and listened for some time as the python broke furniture and destroyed lamps and other personal items as it unleashed one last burst of energy. After some time things got quiet and the missionary assumed that the snake was dead. When he went back into his hut he found the snake dead and his home in shambles. This is often the case with the enemies of God. The victory has been won in Jesus Christ and until his return the battle ...

Psalm 32:1-11, Joshua 5:1-12, 2 Corinthians 5:11--6:2, Luke 15:1-7
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... selves. 2. Law and Gospel. The contrast between those who struggle to earn God's favor and those who throw themselves on the grace and mercy of God shows up most graphically in the two sons. The younger son recognizes his need and is ready to assume the role of a slave. Once he comes to that realization, the father receives him joyously. He finds it an occasion for celebration. The gospel is found in the compassionate and waiting father, ready to celebrate when a person comes from spiritual death to real ...

Luke 10:25-37, Colossians 1:1-14, Amos 7:10-17, Psalm 82:1-8
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... ." (v. 34) A small spring is found about halfway down the road from Jerusalem to Jericho. It is probable that the Samaritan brought the injured man to that location of the inn. CONTEMPLATION Issues and Insights 1. Who is My Neighbor? It is interesting that we naturally assume that the person who is the neighbor is the man who was in need. Yet the lawyer says that it was the Samaritan who showed mercy. In a certain sense we would therefore conclude that our neighbor is one who shows mercy toward us. So the ...

Psalm 85:1-13, Colossians 2:6-23, Hosea 1:1-2:1, Luke 11:1-13
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... God. What prayer does is to discover our real needs. If we believe that God is present to each person and cares about each person, then prayer is to help us know our true needs as we communicate with the mind of God. People too easily assume that what they want will work for their welfare. Too often if people get what they want, they get unexpected consequences that work against their welfare. Recent research shows that 4.7 million children over six are extremely overweight. They eat what they want but it ...

Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... belt, tightens it to hold the robe in place, and is ready to move about quickly. He now looks like the slaves. 7. "He Will Come and Serve Them." (v. 37) This is a role reversal. Usually it was the slaves' task to serve the master. Here the master assumes the role of the servant. One of the major themes of Jesus' ministry was that his lordship was characterized by servanthood. This image is of a different kind of master than the normal one. 8. "At What Hour the Thief was Coming." (v. 39) One perhaps needs to ...

Psalm 81:1-16, Hebrews 13:1-25, Jeremiah 2:1-3:5, Luke 14:1-14
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... or point out their imperfections are they really fishing for compliments? Are they really hoping that people will deny how imperfect they are and affirm their worth? How should we react to such persons? 5. The Resurrection of the Righteous. Some have assumed that Jesus' reference to the resurrection of the righteous means that only they will be resurrected. The unrighteous will not be resurrected. In the related scriptures cited above, note is taken of the reference to Paul's hope that both the righteous ...

Luke 17:1-10, 2 Timothy 1:1-2:13, Lamentations 1:1-22, Psalm 137:1-9
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... and experience. Christians should not require stars in their crowns or rewards in heaven to vindicate doing what they ought to do in obedience to God in Christ. Illustrative Materials 1. Questioning. Jesus asks three questions in the parable. The answers are assumed. Some Christians feel that asking questions in matters of faith is an expression of doubt that is wrong. Nevertheless, asking questions and seeking deeper answers can lead to deeper faith. Someone has said that it is better to ask big questions ...

1 Samuel 1:1-20
Sermon
John A. Stroman
... to you than ten sons?" Sadly, both lover and provoker treat Hannah as God-forsaken. While they were worshiping at Shiloh, Hannah rose early in the morning and prayed to the Lord. In her distress and bitterness, Hannah took the initiative to bring her case to God. She assumed that the God of Israel might care for those who are hurting and are without status and power. So in her prayer she cried out and said to the Lord: O Lord of hosts, if only you will look on the misery of your servant, and remember me ...

Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... . They are the brightest and best of China, Zimbabwe, Australia, Russia, the Sudan, and beyond. Not counting diplomats, spouses, children, and business travelers, foreign students number well over half a million souls. Eighty-seven percent return to their nations upon graduation. Most assume positions of leadership. And they take with them so much of what they learned here. Over the nine years I led a Bible study on Elon College's campus I met and had in my home youth from Holland, Israel, Peru, Iran ...

Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... that is why Jesus is so put off by this man's attempt to butter him with his flattering "Good Teacher." Flattery will get you nowhere with Jesus. Likewise, the man's "What must I do?" question makes the wrong assumption. With such a question the man mistakenly assumes that he is capable of doing whatever it takes to impress Jesus and become one of his gang. His question betrays, on the one hand, his anxiety and, on the other hand, his arrogance. He thinks he can do it, if Jesus will only tell him how. The ...

Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... because she is willing to give it all away. Jesus called everyone's attention to the example of this poor widow because she exemplified what he was all about. Jesus also lived his life breaking the taboo. Jesus came to shatter the taboo that everyone assumed was true about life and money and God. Jesus dared to call the creator of heaven and earth "Abba," Father, Daddy. Jesus dared to believe that his father loved him abundantly, without limit, even though he had nothing. Jesus refused to be afraid of ...

Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... and the destruction of the temple in 70 A.D. That experience was disastrous for the Jewish people. For them it was the ending of their world and everything in which they believed. But such an interpretation still doesn't take Jesus' words at face value. It assumes that Jesus' talk about the end of the world has meaning for individuals and their personal lives but says nothing about the end of the cosmos and the judgment of the universe. In other words, the world may have ended for the Jews of Jerusalem in ...

Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... is on trial before Pilate, in John's way of telling, the roles actually get reversed. Pilate is put on the defensive. Pilate has to justify himself. Pilate gets so unnerved and bewildered that finally he asks in desperation, "What is truth?" Everything that he had assumed to be true no longer seems so true in the presence of Jesus. Finally, with a sense of desperation, Pilate gives up and hands Jesus over for crucifixion. Jesus is the one who is really in control. He is determined to have the last word. And ...

Sermon Aid
Harold H. Lentz
... by obeying all laws, and by that way alone, one is on the pathway to heaven. In such a case no one would get to heaven since no one is in perfect obedience; no one is perfect. But Christ came to fulfill the law. Being sinless himself, he assumed our sins and paid their penalty on the cross. Now those who link themselves to Christ by placing their faith in him have forgiveness in God's sight, and are heirs of heaven. SERMON MATERIAL Sunday Observance The question of Sunday observance is before each one of us ...

Sermon Aid
Harold H. Lentz
... on their way home but are stranded without the necessary funds to buy a bus ticket or to secure a night's lodging. Should we help them? Are they merely trying to deceive us so they can take advantage of us? When such questions confront us, we can assume one of several attitudes. We can shake them off with any one of a dozen explanations: we have no money with us, we just helped someone else and our funds are depleted. But we can also try the alternative of actually helping them. Sometimes this results in ...

Sermon
William L. Self
... that when he crossed the Atlantic one summer he noticed a dark-skinned man sitting in a deck chair, reading the Bible. One day he sat beside him and said, "Forgive my curiosity, but I am a minister. I see you come here every day and read your Bible. I assume you are a Christian, and I am interested to know how it happened." "Yes," replied the man, setting aside his Bible. "I'm very glad to talk about it. You see, I am a Filipino. I was born in a good home in the Philippines, and some years ago I ...

Sermon
Paul W. Kummer
... the end of the movie? The eleven expected Jesus to come back immediately. He said he would and they only cared about their present condition! And they were stuck in their knowledge of the past, too. The only people they knew of who had ever been bodily assumed into heaven were those two guys with names beginning with E in the Old Testament. Now Emmanuel also joined the elite group of Elijah and Enoch. What did it mean? Why did it happen again? They ran to check their Hebrew scrolls to get some answers. The ...

Mark 4:30-34, Mark 4:26-29
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... and despair. 2. Expectations of Maturity. A frequent question in the church concerns the role of nurture in Christian faith. When should we expect people to be ready to respond to Christ's invitation? How much pressure should you exert on persons to assume the full responsibilities of Christian living? Children need to be nourished and supported. They need to be prepared for the time when the faith becomes their own. The seed has to be planted and as it sprouts in the life of persons, they need ...

Sermon
Alexander H. Wales
... to Jesus was to go through some of the temple and synagogue leaders. They're divided on how they respond to Jesus, but they all have at least a grudging respect for him and his disciples. If anyone was going to be able to speak to Jesus about Gaius, I assumed that they would. "I've always had a good relationship with the Jewish religious leaders here in Judea. I am well aware of the fact that most of the Legion thinks of this area as the worst possible assignment, but if you can stand the dust and heat of ...

Sermon
Gerald Whetstone
... . We don't have the blessing, or curse, of dismissing God as irrelevant because he is so distant, nor imagining our relationship as so chummy that we have him in our pockets. We can't hate him for dangling our salvation just tantalizingly and frustratingly out of reach, nor assume the love of God makes him a doting grandparent who can't say no, even for our good. Each possible heresy is held in check by the paradox of the other. We receive the gifts of both the knowledge of God and the fear of God. How then ...

Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... , to help them in time of need, to protect them when afraid. How might one decide how to influence a god? Wouldn't you start with how you influence another person? Of course. And so people began giving their gods things that were precious to them, assuming that such offerings would make the gods happy. And what are our most precious things? Well, that would be the cream of the crop, the best food, or, the very best, the most precious of all: one's very offspring, one's children. Therefore, child sacrifice ...

Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... the same man going through the same agony. Finally, Mr. Nichols struggled out of bed himself, and carried the dumbfounded man to the toilet, a small room with a simple hole in the floor. When he got back to the man's bed he said something to him that he assumed was "Thank you." You can guess the rest. From the time the sun came up that next day people were at his bed, asking for his leaflets and reaching out for the Gospel of Christ. All because he took a man to the bathroom. All because he treated him as ...

Sermon
Gerald Whetstone
... of their lives there. And in their present challenges they were forgetting the grandeur of the promises God had made to them as a people. Foolish people. Or notice the man healed by Jesus in today's gospel. Don't you suppose he had always assumed his troubles would be over if only he could see? Yet once healed he is subject to a barrage of questions by the townsfolk and by the Pharisees. Even his parents distance themselves enough to let him be interrogated by their suspicious neighbors. Unsatisfied with ...

Sermon
Gerald Whetstone
... final charge with no troops following after. It is one of those battles in which the observers need to watch for the dust to clear and the casualties to be counted before victory can be claimed. By Friday of this week the enemies of God and grace will assume their triumph, but the sunrise of Easter dawn will reveal our victorious Lord. This Lord is our Warrior King. He calls us to be his witnesses, to share in his victory and to invite others to join in its victory, too. This will be our Easter theme -- to ...

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