Dictionary: Trust
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Sermon
Will Willimon
... head. The transfiguration was to last only a moment. It was a glimpse of the future but the future had not yet become now. They had to go back down from the mountain, back down into the valley where there were sick people to be healed, and disputes among the disciples to be settled, and lots more work to be done, yes, and as Jesus promised, suffering, and death. There was no way to freeze the glistening mountaintop moment in time, to make it last forever, to somehow capture the radiance of Moses and Elijah ...

Matthew 24:36-44 · Romans 13:11-14
Sermon
Will Willimon
... cast ourselves into a totalitarian situation where the Bomb is bigger than God. Harvard theologian, Gordon Kaufman, has even written a Theology for a Nuclear Age, in which he argues, as best I understand him, that the Bomb is so big and so terrible, that disputes between nations or religions are potentially so destructive, that we ought to readjust the whole Christian faith to accommodate a world in which we have got to get along with people, no matter what. Of course, the real god in this situation isn’t ...

Sermon
Ronald Love
... on a cross, have remained unalterably the same. They believed since God was so slow to act that it was possible to assume that the second coming was never going to happen at all. They had no desire to change from their debauchery lifestyle. But Peter disputes this line of thinking when he wrote, “The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance. But the day of the Lord will come like ...

1 Thessalonians 5:16-24
Sermon
King Duncan & Angela Akers
... in the weeds. I told her that as much as it’s up to her to be at peace with all cats . . . yet she expects me to tend to her wounds from the fights she is always in. “She embarrasses me in front of the neighbors by instigating disputes with their cats . . . she thinks she owns the whole block. She is constantly doing what she ought not to do and suffering the consequences. Worse, she seems to blame all her misfortunes on me . . . at least she expects me to deal with all the results of her disobedience ...

680. Of Cats and People
1 Thessalonians 5:12-28
Illustration
Angela Akers
... in the weeds. I told her that as much as it’s up to her to be at peace with all cats . . . yet she expects me to tend to her wounds from the fights she is always in. “She embarrasses me in front of the neighbors by instigating disputes with their cats . . . she thinks she owns the whole block. She is constantly doing what she ought not to do and suffering the consequences. Worse, she seems to blame all her misfortunes on me . . . at least she expects me to deal with all the results of her disobedience ...

Sermon
King Duncan & Angela Akers
... faced years of trouble and uncertainty while serving in India. She dealt with frequent water and power outages, and rodent and snake infestations. At one point, the Indian government denied the renewal of her medical license. She ended up in court over a labor dispute at the hospital. And for a few years, the Indian government wouldn’t renew her visa, making it difficult to travel home to visit family. In an interview with the Baptist Press, she admits that there were many times when she wanted to quit ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... are being sarcastic or stating a fact about Jesus’ character. I suspect some sarcasm lay beneath their syrupy introduction. The quest for “truth” telling marks the clue for today’s interaction. The scripture for today show Jesus in dispute once again with several colleagues –some Pharisees and some Herodians. Interestingly, the Pharisees don’t approach Jesus themselves, but they send their disciples as guinea pigs to try to “entrap” Jesus in a dilemma regarding “partiality.” In other ...

1 Corinthians 8:1-13
Sermon
Ronald Love
... Mussolini, and the third Stalin. I am sure that if the superiors of those schools had given those boys another chance, they might have turned out differently in the world. Maybe this boy will prove himself worthy if you take him back.” Unable to dispute the wisdom of Fulton Sheen, the Mother Superior reinstated the boy. Upon graduation, the young man accepted the calling to be a missionary among the Eskimos. Every human being is a child of God, whom we must appreciate and admire. Each man, woman and ...

Sermon
Ronald Love
... hobby, such as woodworking. Other just sat in a comfortable chair, reading a book. But for each it was a time for renewal and refreshment. So, the question again is, “Where is your high mountain?” Jesus went up onto the high mountain to pray. There is no disputing the fact that prayer is a central theme in the Bible. In fact, it would be near impossible to find a biblical character who did not pray. Prayer is so important it is the only thing that the disciples asked to be taught. In Luke’s gospel we ...

Psalm 122:1-9
Understanding Series
Craig C. Broyles
... no peace without justice. Isaiah 2:2–5 (// Mic. 4:1–5), which shares key terminology with our psalm (“let us go,” “go up,” and “judge”), expands on this idea. The nations make a pilgrimage to Jerusalem in order that Yahweh may teach them and arbitrate their disputes, so war may be no more. A subsequent oracle in Isaiah 11:1–5 speaks of a future Davidic king who will be the just judge of the earth. In verses 6–8 of our psalm, prayers are made that Jerusalem live up to its name: Pray for ...

Psalm 126:1-6
Understanding Series
Craig C. Broyles
... refers to the turning of fortunes in general or of the Babylonian captivity in particular. In the early postexilic period, in which the psalms of ascent appear to have been set originally, the phrase’s association with the restoration from exile would have been inescapable. The disputed term is somewhat different in the MT of v. 4 than in the MT of v. 1. The Kethib reading is šebût (the reading followed in the main text of the NIV) and the Qere reading is šebît (the NIV margin). This difference may ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... faithful as they have been doing. Third, they are to rescue everyone they can from the false teaching, exercising mercy rather than judgment yet being careful that in the process they themselves are not sucked in. In fact, a better translation of Jude 22 is, “Be merciful to those who dispute,” that is, the others. There is not a word about attacking and expelling the others who have come into the community; rather, the faithful are to live the truth themselves and rescue those trapped in desire.

Sermon
David Coffin
... on for generations since the industrial revolution came to America. Some people were happy to have the job and income, while others complained about the dirty factory conditions, loud noises that impaired hearing, and the sporadic layoffs due to labor union disputes or changeover of model cars for the next year. Some families desired to pass the factory work tradition onto the next generations — and even viewed such well- paying jobs as entitlements of sorts. Other people did go into higher education in ...

John 6:35, 41-51
Sermon
David Coffin
... book up rest upon. These are symbols of the faith that point people to the new life we all share with Jesus the Christ as our bread in life. Amen. Sources: 1. Walter Brueggemann, Theology of the Old Testament: Testimony, Dispute, Advocacy, (Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg Fortress Press, 2012). 2. Ruth B. Edwards, Discovering John: Content, Interpretation, Reception, (Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Erdmann’s, 2003). 3. Daniel J. Harrington, S.J., Sacra Pagina: The Gospel of John, (Collegeville, MN: The Liturgical ...

Mark 7:1-8, 14-15, 21-23
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... for Christians meant to be different, unique, not simply ordinary. That’s an important distinction, because the opposite of not being ordinary is of course to be “ordinary.” That’s the word we encounter frequently in the scriptures in discussions or disputes with Jesus and his contemporaries. The word is “koinos” –the same word we use for “koine Greek,” meaning the “common” language of the people. When the same word is used to describe a person, it has additional shades of meaning: not ...

Mark 9:30-37 · Proverbs 31:10-31 · Psalm 1
Sermon
Thomas C. Willadsen
... of him. The first time, Peter rebuked him. Six days later Jesus told them again, but they did not understand and were afraid to ask. The third time he told them, it doesn’t say how they reacted. But the very next thing that happened was a dispute between James and John, two of the disciples on the executive committee who were brothers, who requested to sit on either side of Jesus in glory. This indicates to me that they still didn’t get what Jesus was talking about. Jesus told them, repeated the message ...

Mark 10:35-45, Psalm 104:1-35
Sermon
Thomas C. Willadsen
... rebuked him, been afraid to ask what he meant, and squabbled over who would have positions of leadership in his movement after he left them. Mixed in with his instruction and preparation to his disciples are stories of Jesus healing people seized with demons, disputing with the Pharisees, and lifting up the needs of children and “little ones,” those weak in their belief and new to the Christian faith. While this is happening they were slowly working their way to Jerusalem. The clock was ticking and the ...

Sermon
Thomas C. Willadsen
... every time someone reads John’s gospel and a few other New Testament texts without appreciating this distinction. John’s gospel was certainly set in a context very different from ours, when John was being written Christianity was a sect within Judaism, [so the disputes like family feuds we find in John.]) Pilate asked, “What accusation do you bring against this man?” and the answer was, “If this man were not a criminal we wouldn’t bring him to you.” John 18: 29-30 (NRSV). There’s nothing ...

Sermon
Thomas C. Willadsen
... every time someone reads John’s gospel and a few other New Testament texts without appreciating this distinction. John’s gospel was certainly set in a context very different from ours, when John was being written Christianity was a sect within Judaism, [so the disputes like family feuds we find in John.]) Pilate asked, “What accusation do you bring against this man?” and the answer was, “If this man were not a criminal we wouldn’t bring him to you.” John 18: 29-30 (NRSV). There’s nothing ...

Sermon
Wayne Brouwer
... realize in all of her doing good, she had let the central relationship of her life lapse. This is why Jesus pointed us to Mary. Judas said, “What a waste! We could have done so much with that money! We should get busy looking after the poor!” Jesus did not dispute that. We need to help the poor. But helping the poor, bringing justice to society, and evangelizing the world began with the one thing Mary got right. We need to love Jesus.

Sermon
Will Willimon
... who betrays me is on the table.” And all lifted their hands off the table. Who could do this? You know the answer. An argument arose among the disciples “as to which one of them was to be regarded as the greatest” (22:24). Mark puts this dispute over greatness elsewhere, when Jesus and his disciples are on the road one day. Luke, with his typical dramatic genius, places it here, at the table, just after Jesus has predicted that one of his own will betray him. “When the campaign is over and we get ...

Luke 14:1, 7-14
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... ’s life and God was the only host. It was a time when the gentleness of the Dove, not the predatory motives of the Hawk, became the eye’s entire focus! It’s hard to argue with Jesus when he tells these kinds of parables. It’s hard to dispute God when you’re receiving God’s blessings. Perhaps the greatest gift of the Sabbath itself is the command to keep your eyes on God, to train your heart and brain to guide your eyes toward loving embrace rather than hawkish critique. It’s easy to fall into ...

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