Dictionary: Trust
Showing 51 to 75 of 120 results

Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... , but is rather a gift. In the 16th century, an elaborate theology had developed which made our relationship to God one of doing good deeds. If we did enough good deeds, then God would accept us; if we did not, then we were consigned to eternal punishment. Against all of this reward-and-punishment theology Martin Luther said “no!” Luther said that “Good works do not make a good man, but a good man does good works.” (Vergilius Ferm, ed., CLASSICS OF PROTESTANTISM, New York: Philosophical Library ...

Sermon
Eric Ritz
... give the people an anchor. It was done to provide a "centering" focus for the people. Dr. Eugene H. Patterson, pastor of Christ Our King Church in Bel Air, Maryland, shares an important insight concerning the power of worship: "Failure to worship consigns us to a life of spasms and jerks, at the mercy of every advertisement, every seduction, every siren. Without worship we live manipulated and manipulating lives. We move in either frightened panic or deluded lethargy as we are, in turn, alarmed by specters ...

Sermon
Robert Noblett
... ; in the ranks of each there are those who abuse trust and behave in wantonly selfish ways. We fool ourselves if we think the seeds of such are absent from us; always they are there. Therefore the agenda? Admit they are present and then consign them to our internal jails and throw away the key. And there is help with that assignment: "... and the angels waited on him." On us, they also wait. Calling, chastening, and now commissioning: "Now after John was arrested, Jesus came to Galilee, proclaiming the ...

Mark 6:14-29
Sermon
David G. Rogne
... than they are now. It's not that Lyons is such a bad place to end up, but I became used to a lot more luxury when I was Tetrarch of Galilee and Perea in Palestine. All that has been taken from me now by the Emperor, and I am consigned to remain here on the fringes of the Empire for the rest of my life. My family has exercised power in Palestine for many years. My father, Herod the Great, was King of the Jews. He wasn't even a Jew; he was an Idumean. My mother was a Samaritan ...

Sermon
Phil Thrailkill
... root comes good or evil fruit that can be inspected and will be judged. Verse 19, “Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire.” The broad and easy way leads to destruction, and in the end Christian false prophets are consigned to the fires along with their naive, obedient, and adoring followers. But you don’t have to follow false prophets to a dreadful end. You can get off the train of ease and error at any stop this side of death. The narrow gate is always available ...

Sermon
Jeff Wedge
... television special about the good old days of the 1960s. While it is uncanny that something written almost 1,900 years before the time the words seem to suit can evoke memories of a period only forty years ago, it is an unfortunate mistake to consign these words, along with other faded sayings of those days, to the collection of discarded remnants from that time. These words are quite pertinent for our situation today, and they should carry a lot of meaning for us. It is worth our while to make the ...

Matthew 28:1-10
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... in its climate controlled coffin. The collector said that it had become his prized possession, and he would not sell it. Keenly disappointed, Kreisler was about to leave, when he had an idea. “Could I play the instrument once more before it’s consigned to silence?” he asked. Permission was granted, and the great virtuoso released the violin from its fancy casket and filled the room with such heart-moving music that the collector’s emotions were deeply stirred. “I have no right to keep that to ...

Micah 1:1-7; 2:1-11
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... . Most others, when suddenly confronted with Rivers' dirty, disheveled self, took the ostrich-head-in-the-sand approach - looking through him, over him, around him or pretending not to see him at all. By refusing to make eye contact, it was as if one could consign the homeless to the realm of non-existence for the sake of one's own comfort and convenience. It was this psychological rejection of refusing to see, not the physical one of refusing to give, that cut Rivers - and he believes cuts most homeless ...

Mark 16:1-8
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... the "longer ending," perhaps the single most agreed upon point is that verse 8 probably is the final original words from the pen of Mark the gospel writer. Whether this was his intended ending or was the result of some fatal scribal faux pas that consigned Mark's final words to a permanently lost record continues to offer debating fodder among those who agree 16:8 is the end. A certain abruptness and less-than-elegant writing style pervades all of Mark's gospel. Scholars who wish to demonstrate that there ...

Mark 10:35-45
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... attempts to explain just what true discipleship means. Jesus appeals to his followers to sense the essence of their uniqueness by contrasting them with Gentiles. Gentile rulers, or great ones, are described as "tyrants." The disciples of Jesus who wish to be "great" must consign themselves to being "servants." The very highest status, in fact, will be accorded one who becomes "slave of all." It is the Son of Man, not Gentile rulers, that the disciples are to emulate, living "to serve" not to "be served."

Sermon
King Duncan
... rednecks aren’t confined to the southern part of the United States. According to this story a man in Australia was fined after police discovered that he had used a seat belt to buckle in a case of beer while his five-year-old son was consigned to playing in the car’s floor totally unprotected. Constable Wayne Burnett said he was “shocked and appalled” when he pulled over the car one Friday in the Australian town of Alice Springs. A 30-can beer case was strapped safely in between two adults while ...

Sermon
John Smylie
... , great need, and a profound faithfulness. There may be someone in your life right now that is on that journey between diagnosis and death and perhaps you are called to walk with them, and like Simon who was a simple bystander in Jerusalem, you may be consigned to be with them to help them carry this burden, to help them carry their cross. The final Good Friday reflection that I wish to share concerns a service that is held on the night of Good Friday, preferably in the dark. Thirteen candles are placed ...

Sermon
Ken Lentz
... . The witnesses have missed something. Have they not heard about the raising of Jesus, the man from Nazareth? "It's a new world! The promises of God to Abraham and Isaac and Jacob have been fulfilled in Jesus! You remember Jesus, don't you? He's the one you consigned to death when Pilate the governor wanted to acquit him! He's the innocent man you sent to the cross! But know this! That very man you murdered has given new life and hope to the lame man at the gate! What do you think about that?" There was ...

64. Saved From Silence
Illustration
Staff
... 's home and offered to buy the violin. The collector said it had become his prized possession and he would not sell it. Keenly disappointed, Kreisler was about to leave when he had an idea. "Could I play the instrument once more before it is consigned to silence?" he asked. Permission was granted, and the great virtuoso filled the room with such heart-moving music that the collector's emotions were deeply stirred. "I have no right to keep that to myself," he exclaimed. "It's yours, Mr. Kreisler. Take it ...

65. Do As You Please
Illustration
Michael Horton
... gospel of grace as it is found throughout Scripture, has always had its critics. Jimmy Swaggart once said that by trusting in God's justifying and preserving grace, we would end up living a life of sin before long and thus, lose our salvation and be consigned to hell. Paul anticipated that reaction from the religious community of his own day after he said, "Where sin abounded, grace abounded much more" (Romans 5:20, NKJV). So he asked the question he expected us to ask: "Shall we continue in sin that grace ...

2 Kings 5:1-14
Sermon
David E. Leininger
... anything. The psalmist says, "The earth is the Lord's and the fullness thereof." That means all of it, even that little bit we think belongs to us. If you own a wristwatch, who will own it in a hundred years? Probably no one... it will long since have been consigned to the scrap heap. Do you own a pair of shoes? Whose will they be in a hundred years? Probably no one's. They'll have fallen apart. Do you have money? Will you have it in a hundred years? Of course not. You'll be dead. Will your heirs ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... . Children had been sacrificed to the god Moloch there during the days of Ahaz and Manasseh. But when King Josiah ascended the throne, he ordered that it be desecrated. It was turned into a rubbish heap where fire burned continuously. Everything there had been consigned for destruction. Thus, the "city dump" came to be identified in the Jewish mind as the perfect symbol of God's final rejection of wickedness. This was Jesus' description. Of the twelve times in the New Testament that we run across the word ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... a man to divorce his wife?” It would be unthinkable in that culture for a woman to divorce her husband. Marriage was unequal. Still, it was about all the legal protection that a woman had. If her husband threw her out, a woman would probably be consigned to a life of abject poverty. If she had no family to take her in, she would starve, or turn to begging or prostituting herself to survive. She might even lose her children since the children too were property of their fathers. These one-sided arrangements ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... rulebook. It is hard for us to accept that Jesus sees more hope in the much-deserved humility of the prodigal than the self-righteous indignation of his brother. And yet it is important that we do hear Jesus’ message. We sometimes read this parable and consign the elder brother to the supporting cast, a minor character in the narrative. The truth is, Jesus may have intended for him to be the central character in the story. Remember who Jesus is telling this parable to. It is the religious leaders of the ...

Eulogy
William Shakespeare
... ; To thee the reed is as the oak: The sceptre, learning, physic, must All follow this, and come to dust. Fear no more the lightning-flash Nor the all-dreaded thunder-stone; Fear not slander, censure rash; Thou hast finish’d joy and moan: All lovers young, all lovers must Consign to thee, and come to dust. No exorciser harm thee! Nor no witchcraft charm thee! Ghost unlaid forbear thee! Nothing ill come near thee! Quiet consummation have; And renowned be thy grave!

Eulogy
Percy Bysshe Shelley
... to marble; and beneath, A field is spread, on which a newer band Have pitched in Heaven’s smile their camp of death, Welcoming him we lose with scarce extinguished breath. LI. Here pause: these graves are all too young as yet To have outgrown the sorrow which consigned Its charge to each; and if the seal is set, Here, on one fountain of a mourning mind, Break it not thou! too surely shalt thou find Thine own well full, if thou returnest home, Of tears and gall. From the world’s bitter wind Seek shelter ...

1 Chronicles 18:1-13
Understanding Series
Louis C. Jonker
... be the result of a scribal error. The high numbers here and elsewhere (18:4–5) were probably used as a literary device to emphasize the comprehensiveness of David’s military successes. 20:3 The Masoretic Text of 2 Sam. 12:31 indicates that David’s men consigned the Ammonites “to labor with saws and with iron picks and axes,” but the MT of 1 Chron. 20:3 has the Ammonites “hacked to pieces” with those same tools (unlike NIV, which does not follow the Masoretic Text of 1 Chron. 20:3 but rather ...

One Volume
Tremper Longman III
... would (and in the case of Babylon in 586 B.C., did) take against a walled city like Jerusalem. But in keeping with the metaphor of the man, this siege is accomplished not by an army but with bitterness and hardship. The final bet verse (v. 6) indicates that God consigned the man to the fate of the dead. He lives now in darkness like a corpse in a grave. The thought of the man in darkness continues into the next stanza. 3:7–9 Gimel. In the final verse of the preceding stanza, we learned that God placed the ...

Understanding Series
Elizabeth Achtemeier
... LXX and of many commentators to read, “Ephraim’s sons, as I have seen, are destined for a prey” (so the RSV), the reference being to the destruction that has already taken place in Ephraim in 733 BC. Verse 13c–d then repeats the judgment consigning Ephraim’s children to destruction. Thus, in this verse, Hosea is affirming God’s judgment upon his people. But in verse 14, the prophet turns to God in prayer, and apparently begins an intercession that would ask that Ephraim be spared: Give them, O ...

Understanding Series
Elizabeth Achtemeier
... nature of God’s recompense? In response to the corruption and faithlessness of human beings, will God’s wrath finally burn up the world? Will God abandon the goal of making the earth once again “very good,” as it was in the beginning? Will God consign earth’s inhabitants to the annihilation of death that their sin so richly deserves (Rom. 6:23)? Or will God, in lordship over even the worst of human evil, choose a different outcome? Those are cosmic questions, and Hosea 11 is not dealing with the ...

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