Dictionary: Trust
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Revelation 11:1-14
Understanding Series
Robert W. Wall
... two olive trees” symbolize the reign of King Zerubbabel and the priesthood of Joshua, the anointed mediators of God’s covenant with Israel, “who serve the Lord of all the earth” (Zech. 4:14). In the wider context of the prophet’s oracle, Zechariah commends Zerubbabel’s work in completing the temple (Zech. 4:9) and Joshua’s ministry in purifying God’s people (Zech. 3:9). They are both viewed as effective mediators of God’s covenant with Israel. John looks to this wider context of Zechariah ...

Understanding Series
Robert W. Wall
... fitting since the Risen Jesus had taught his apostles that knowledge about the timing of salvation’s history belongs only to God (cf. Acts 1:7). We are not told about the people who are ready for harvesting. On the one hand, the image of a sickle commends the interpretation that John has God’s judgment of unbelievers in view; on the other hand, the image of the harvest is used by Jesus of gathering believers into God’s kingdom (cf. John 4:35–38). Both in the OT and in rabbinical teaching, however ...

Understanding Series
W.H. Bellinger, Jr.
... protecting the woman, since her case is regulated under priestly authority (Numbers, pp. 346–54). Still, a more honest approach to this text is to admit the gender inequity here and recall that other biblical texts, including some in the Priestly tradition, commend equity in relationships as a more appropriate standard. The purpose in Numbers is once again to protect the purity of the camp because of the dangers of encountering the holiness at the center of the people. Olson constructs a helpful excursus ...

Understanding Series
W.H. Bellinger, Jr.
... protecting the woman, since her case is regulated under priestly authority (Numbers, pp. 346–54). Still, a more honest approach to this text is to admit the gender inequity here and recall that other biblical texts, including some in the Priestly tradition, commend equity in relationships as a more appropriate standard. The purpose in Numbers is once again to protect the purity of the camp because of the dangers of encountering the holiness at the center of the people. Olson constructs a helpful excursus ...

Numbers 14:1-45
Understanding Series
W.H. Bellinger, Jr.
... desert. Now their wives and children will be taken as plunder. They even speak of choosing a new leader and returning to Egypt (vv. 3–4). This response leads Moses and Aaron to fall on their faces, and causes Joshua and Caleb, the spies who commended trusting the divine promise, to tear their clothes in grief. They then address the people and seek to counter the other spies’ bad report by reminding the people that the land is exceedingly good; God will provide the strength to possess it. Rather than the ...

John 4:27-38, John 4:1-26, John 4:39-42
Understanding Series
J. Ramsey Michaels
... :14) and at the end of this very journey in John’s Gospel when Jesus reaches Galilee (4:53), but in Samaria it is not to be. Perhaps in the hope of receiving the living water immediately, the woman tells Jesus that she has no husband. Jesus ironically commends her for telling the truth (vv. 17, 18) and so exposes her adultery (cf. Mark 10:12). The change of subject is not so abrupt as it appears. The narrative assumes a close connection between baptism in the Spirit and the forgiveness of sins (cf. Mark 1 ...

Understanding Series
J. Ramsey Michaels
... (e.g., 17:8: “They knew with certainty that I came from you, and they believed that you sent me”). More than anything else, the disciples’ explicit acknowledgment in verse 30 that Jesus has come from God is what occasions the long prayer and, specifically, the commendation of the disciples in 17:6–8. It provides a positive setting for the prayer in that it signals to Jesus that his work is finished (17:4). The group of followers that his Father has given him is now ready to continue his mission in ...

John 19:28-37, John 19:17-27, John 19:38-42
Understanding Series
J. Ramsey Michaels
... he has testified to the truth. Not that I accept human testimony; but I mention it that you may be saved (5:32–34). And another Johannine writing, 3 John, written from “the elder” to “my dear friend Gaius,” draws to a close with a commendation of a certain Demetrius: We also speak well of him, and you know that our testimony is true (3 John 12). These wider parallels suggest that verse 35 reflects merely the author’s normal way of speaking about valid testimony. The anonymous witness remains ...

John 19:38-42, John 19:17-27, John 19:28-37
Understanding Series
J. Ramsey Michaels
... he has testified to the truth. Not that I accept human testimony; but I mention it that you may be saved (5:32–34). And another Johannine writing, 3 John, written from “the elder” to “my dear friend Gaius,” draws to a close with a commendation of a certain Demetrius: We also speak well of him, and you know that our testimony is true (3 John 12). These wider parallels suggest that verse 35 reflects merely the author’s normal way of speaking about valid testimony. The anonymous witness remains ...

James 3:13-18, James 3:1-12
Understanding Series
Peter H. Davids
... profession that does not lead to holiness. James stresses two marks of this lifestyle. The first is good deeds. Actions do speak louder than words (Matt. 5:16). The works one does show where the heart is really invested (e.g., Matt. 6:19–21, 24). James commends such practices as charity and caring for widows as marks of wisdom. The second mark is performing these deeds in the humility that comes from wisdom. Unlike the hypocrites of Matthew 6:1–5, the truly wise know how to act out of humility: They are ...

Understanding Series
Norman Hillyer
... lady. 3:4 Your inner self is lit. “the hidden person of the heart” (Rom. 7:22; 2 Cor. 4:16; Eph. 3:16). Unfading here translates aphthartos, imperishable. The same term is used in 1:23 in speaking of the new birth. The inner beauty Peter is commending is a fruit of the new life in Christ. Gentle (praüs): mild, benevolent, not pushing or insisting on one’s own rights; elsewhere in the NT the term depicts the Christ-character (Matt. 5:5; 11:29; 21:5). Quiet: the Greek word hēsychios (tranquil, calm ...

Understanding Series
Norman Hillyer
To All of You 3:8 Finally (not to end the letter but to complete this passage) there comes a general exhortation to the whole Christian community, married and unmarried alike. Peter commends a set of attitudes which together depict what relationships within the Christian fellowship should be. Christian believers must live in harmony with one another, literally, “being of one mind” (a single word in the Greek). The term is intended to convey a unity of aim and purpose, a oneness in ...

Deuteronomy 5:1-33
Understanding Series
Christopher J. H. Wright
... marriage! In this he has the support of Ezekiel, who defined his typical righteous person as one who not only refrained from theft but exercised positive generosity (Ezek. 18:7), a combination claimed by Job (Job 31:16–22, 31f., 38–40), commended in the Psalms (Ps. 112:4–9), and applied practically in the NT (Eph. 4:28). Like the sixth commandment, then, with its wide range of ethical applicability in matters involving human life, the eighth commandment has a comparably broad relevance to matters ...

Deuteronomy 16:9-12
Understanding Series
Christopher J. H. Wright
... were the Levites and priests who served at the sanctuary. The meat of sacrificial animals and the grain of the various vegetable offerings were their main source of food. They were thus in the same position as other classes of dependent people frequently commended to the generosity of Israelite households. So the command of verse 10b that the worshipper’s giving should be in proportion to God’s blessing was (and remains) a vital principle. It clearly echoes 15:14b and illustrates in the most practical ...

Understanding Series
Iain W. Provan
... nature of wisdom that we noted in 1 Kings 1–11 is also found in the NT. As pointed out already, Jesus himself exhorted people to “read nature” as a way of finding out about God and his ways (cf. 1 Kgs. 4:33–34). Jesus was also known to commend a worldly-wise attitude to the world, as in Matthew 10:16, “be as shrewd as snakes and as innocent as doves.” Solomon, it will be recalled, was quite good at playing the snake, if not quite so convincing as the dove (1 Kgs. 2). As far as wisdom in ...

1 Kings 11:41-43
Understanding Series
Iain W. Provan
... nature of wisdom that we noted in 1 Kings 1–11 is also found in the NT. As pointed out already, Jesus himself exhorted people to “read nature” as a way of finding out about God and his ways (cf. 1 Kgs. 4:33–34). Jesus was also known to commend a worldly-wise attitude to the world, as in Matthew 10:16, “be as shrewd as snakes and as innocent as doves.” Solomon, it will be recalled, was quite good at playing the snake, if not quite so convincing as the dove (1 Kgs. 2). As far as wisdom in ...

Understanding Series
Iain W. Provan
... invest great faith in his ability to heal—and even to raise from the dead—when present (e.g., John 11:17–37; cf. also Mark 5:21–24, 35–43; Luke 7:11–17 for resurrection stories that pick up elements from 2 Kgs. 4). Nevertheless, the highest commendation is reserved for those who believe that only his words are necessary (e.g., Luke 7:1–10). 4:38 In that region: The Hb. is lit. “in the land,” referring not just to the region of Gilgal but to the land of Israel as a whole. From here ...

2 Kings 4:38-41
Understanding Series
Iain W. Provan
... invest great faith in his ability to heal—and even to raise from the dead—when present (e.g., John 11:17–37; cf. also Mark 5:21–24, 35–43; Luke 7:11–17 for resurrection stories that pick up elements from 2 Kgs. 4). Nevertheless, the highest commendation is reserved for those who believe that only his words are necessary (e.g., Luke 7:1–10). 4:38 In that region: The Hb. is lit. “in the land,” referring not just to the region of Gilgal but to the land of Israel as a whole. From here ...

Understanding Series
Iain W. Provan
... invest great faith in his ability to heal—and even to raise from the dead—when present (e.g., John 11:17–37; cf. also Mark 5:21–24, 35–43; Luke 7:11–17 for resurrection stories that pick up elements from 2 Kgs. 4). Nevertheless, the highest commendation is reserved for those who believe that only his words are necessary (e.g., Luke 7:1–10). 4:38 In that region: The Hb. is lit. “in the land,” referring not just to the region of Gilgal but to the land of Israel as a whole. From here ...

Understanding Series
Leslie C. Allen
... , and letters back and forth were evidently the source of Samaria’s constant access to information about Jerusalem. Tobiah’s Judean contacts were members of a family network by marriage and were his sworn political supporters. They lost no opportunity to commend him to Nehemiah and to report back Nehemiah’s stated views. Tobiah sent letters of a different character directly to Nehemiah—hostile letters meant to intimidate. We have not heard the last of Tobiah. Nehemiah was later to confiscate his ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... how it is that Jacob-Israel continues in being at all. Verse 25 explains: Yahweh has been willing to turn a blind eye to the way Jacob-Israel behaved, for my own sake. That statement corresponds to the comment in 42:21 on Yahweh’s concern to commend to the world the revelation embodied in Israel’s life. Yahweh is not going to be put off from fulfilling that purpose merely by Jacob-Israel’s attempt to reverse the master-servant relationship. So Yahweh is quite happy to argue matters out in court. Yes ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... might happen. That is the Gospel. Leslie Weatherhead puts that truth in a beautiful way in his book, Key Next Door. When Weatherhead was visiting some friends he noticed that they had an old dog named “Pete.” Pete, Weatherhead said, “did not have much to commend him as far as appearances were concerned.” The dog tottered about, had a raw spot on his back, and some had suggested that the dog should be put to sleep. Furthermore, Weatherhead was about to suggest the same thing to his hosts. But then he ...

Sermon
Don Tuttle
... , who refused to run on a Sunday in the 1924 Olympics because of his faith. Or Dietrich Bonhoeffer, whose allegiance to Jesus would not allow him to bow down to Hitler’s Nazism. Or Kelvin Cochran, the Atlanta fire chief who lost his job for publicly commending Jesus Christ in a book he wrote. Following Jesus got them into trouble. Or imagine the storm within a Muslim family when a member converts to Christianity. Or imagine the tempest likely to follow when you tell your 13-year-old’s soccer coach that ...

Mark 12:38-44
Sermon
April Yamasaki
... never-ending task of keeping house. The money you donate to the church and to other worthy causes. The time you give to prayer. These things might be relatively small, but what commitment of faith and risk do they require? Like the poor widow that Jesus commends, let's commit those things to God. Lord, sometimes the things we do seem so small and insignificant. We get tired of working so hard for so little. We get discouraged by our small results. We wonder why bother at all? Help us to re-commit ourselves ...

Psalm 126:1-6, Psalm 145:2-11
Sermon
King Duncan
... thee Lord.” The psalmist certainly did not forget God’s many blessings. He wrote: “Every day I will praise you and extol your name for ever and ever. Great is the Lord and most worthy of praise; his greatness no one can fathom. One generation commends your works to another; they tell of your mighty acts. They speak of the glorious splendor of your majesty--and I will meditate on your wonderful works. They tell of the power of your awesome works--and I will proclaim your great deeds. They celebrate ...

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