Dictionary: Trust
Showing 51 to 75 of 4978 results

Sermon
James Merritt
... neighbor said, "Really?" She said, "Yes, whenever I ask him to do something he says, 'Do it yourself.'" Take her to the movie of her choice. Men, this may be the greatest sacrifice of all! Give her the remote control to the television. This is the kind of love God expects from us and that your wife desires from you. There is a third dimension to this love that I have to add or else you won't understand why sometimes it is so hard to give it. We must... III. Love Our Wives Sensitively Paul goes on to add one ...

Job 32:1--37:24
Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... . Job, therefore, is free to expand his own comments beyond the norm for the dialogue section—and he is met only by stony silence. Zophar neither interrupts nor responds to Job’s words, and the concluding postscript in 31:40 does not lead us even to expect him to do so. The prose link to the Elihu monologues understands the friends’ silence as an indication that they have failed to counter the declarations of Job and that they have given up any attempt to do so. Their silence paves the way for Elihu ...

2 Corinthians 5:1-10
Understanding Series
James M. Scott
... (2:14) and his speech in the presence of God (2:17). He has seen the glory of God in the face of Christ (4:6), and he has been caught up to the third heaven or paradise (12:2–4). Yet, as we would expect, his own personal experience is often expressed in terms of traditional expectations. The contrast here is between a transient tent and a permanent house, just as the tabernacle was to the temple (cf. 2 Sam. 7:2, 5–7). Paul knows that if his earthly tent (i.e., his mortal body) is destroyed, he has an ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... as our foundation a “stone of a different quarry.” We instead imagine a God who answers all of our prayers the way we expect God to answer, who fulfills our every want and need, who tells us what to do when we are confused, who looks not like ... man living on the street, or a child with a broken heart, a wise foreigner with a turban, or a dark-skinned rabbi. But the more expectations we build into our conception of who Jesus is, the more likely it is that we will fail to find Jesus in our lives. The ...

Sermon
Mark Trotter
... would be shut, and the party would begin. Those who were not there, those who slept through all of this, would be shut out. It was that custom that Jesus uses to tell a parable about the ten bridesmaids who are waiting to greet the bridegroom. But, as you expect (the custom is familiar to you now), the bridegroom is going to be delayed. They must wait for him to arrive. And they must be prepared for his coming. Five of the bridesmaids are prepared. They have extra oil in case the waiting is longer than they ...

Sermon
Thomas A. Pilgrim
... by a man pounding on the door downstairs. I heard voices, and I could tell the manager was talking with this man about needing a room. As I listened closer, I learned that it was a man and his wife. They had come a long way. The young wife was expecting a child any moment. They needed a place to stay. The manager of the hotel explained to them how all the rooms had already been taken. There was an unusual amount of tourists for that time of the year. Many of them were on business, in town for the same ...

Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... to humans on its own terms. It is not a precious commodity to be possessed, but a companion and guide for the journey. The fear of the Lord . . . to shun evil. With these words the book of Job comes full-circle to its beginning. The reader is expected to remember that these phrases are precisely those that characterized Job in the beginning. He is not only “blameless and upright,” but also one who “fears God and shuns evil” (1:1, 8; 2:3). What a radical redefinition of the nature of true wisdom and ...

Romans 11:36, Ephesians 1:5, Colossians 3:18-21
Sermon
James Merritt
... big happy family all the time. We also know the hard truth is our real family is not the one hanging on the wall. The real family is the one that lives in your home day in and day out. The real family does not always live up to the expectations of that family portrait. I read a story about a little boy who attended a special worship service where they had a parent-child dedication. It was a very moving service, but on the way home from church the little boy started crying in the backseat of the car. The ...

Sermon
Frank Luchsinger
... was the Old Testament. He would be Adam, wide-eyed and halting as he named the beasts -- 'You are ... an elephant ... a butterfly ... an ostrich!' " -- Adam naming, and we have been naming ever since.1 We have named this season "Advent." It is a time of preparation, of expectancy. The Bible says that the birth of Jesus came at God's appointed time. God set the time and we named it. It is little wonder that in the time of year when days are shortest and when we long for the coming of the light, Jesus is born ...

1 Corinthians 7:29-31
Sermon
Scott Suskovic
... it is one of those clear blue days, that's okay. But if the sky has a couple of those big, puffy clouds, his heart skips a beat and he thinks to himself, "Maybe. Maybe today. Maybe this is the day he's coming." Do you live with that expectation, do you live with the hope that this could be the day? Which brings up a good question. Paul wrote about Jesus coming back in his lifetime. The gospel authors wrote about Jesus coming back in their lifetimes. Luther wrote about Jesus coming back in his lifetime. Were ...

Zechariah 9:9-13, Matthew 24:36-44
Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... , not even the angels in Heaven, nor the Son, but the Father only." Then He uses a series of analogies to bring his point home in a dramatic way. First he talks about Noah, who heeded the warnings, saw the signs, and built an Ark. Others laughed at Noah -- not expecting God to act -- so they were unprepared when it happened. And you know the outcome. The only one who survived the flood was Noah and his family. That's the way it is going to be with the coming of the Son of Man, Jesus said. And then He talked ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... forgiveness as they realize that there are no picture perfect families and there are no picture perfect family members. The good news is we can experience the love, and the grace, and the glory of God in our homes if we are simply willing to fulfill the desires and the expectations that God has for the family as a whole and for each one of us. We have a clean frame that we want to give you this morning. It is just a blank picture frame. We would like you to take this home and place it on your mantel or ...

Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... place from the power of God’s anger. 14:14 The impossibility of what he desires comes home to Job as he cries out in response to his own foolish hopes: If a man dies, will he live again? In this context the question is rhetorical and he expects a negative response. Job has already covered this territory in verses 10–12 (note the similar terminology: geber yamut in vv. 10, 14). Dead men do not rise, awake, or rouse from their sleep (v. 12). Job will continue to wait for the arrival of his renewal, but ...

Sermon
John A. Stroman
... few would enter into it. He talked about loving your enemy and the wrongs others have done to you as God has forgiven you. Those who do not leave all behind and set their minds and hearts on the kingdom of God, he said, are not worthy of him. They expected a Christ who would be a smashing success, but to them he was not because he died the shameful death of a criminal. He was the unexpected Christ because he did not fit into their scheme or plan of things. They wanted a Christ they could keep for themselves ...

Mark 1:35-39, Mark 1:29-34
Sermon Aid
Wayne B. Keller
... did you think and feel? What did you do about it? Complain? Pout? Scream? Demand. Develop the idea further as necessary. At the beginning of Jesus' ministry, he healed a great many people. Later, the people asked for more and more. Then later, when they didn't get what they expected, they demanded his death. Even though he came to make people whole, he came to tell us about the love of God for the world. He asks us to do the same, even when we don't feel like it, or get our own way. Proclamation of the Word ...

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... gift of new life. This is why Jesus made the apparently surprising move of asking the Samaritan woman to render him a service (obtaining water for him), but then telling her that she should first ask him for the true living water. Contrary to what we would ordinarily expect from God, when he calls us to service (when he asks us to work for him and his church), he is actually first giving us a gift. Keep that in mind the next time you are called to serve: You are getting something for nothing. We are that ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... of God. While languishing in prison John must have wondered why more wasn't happening. What's he waiting for? he must have thought to himself time and time again. Why doesn't he drive the Roman dogs out? He was disappointed because of his faulty expectations. Leo Buscalgia learned about that kind of disappointment as a teenager. He writes, "I remember the sudden appearance under my family's Christmas tree of the largest present I had ever hoped to see. It stood at least a foot taller than I and was twice ...

Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... either option the specific referent of “violent people” is ambiguous. Given John’s demise soon to be narrated (14:1–12), Herod Antipas may be a type of the violent ones raiding the kingdom. The conflict generated by the kingdom (10:21–22) was an expected one in Jewish thought. The time of the Messiah would be preceded by “messianic woes” or tribulation for the faithful (e.g., 1QHa11:7–11). 11:14 he is the Elijah who was to come. John the Baptist is explicitly identified with Elijah, as he ...

Sermon
Robert P. Hines
... , in our heartache, in our disappointment. Is that not what it means to have a Crucified Messiah? The presence of God in our lives gives us courage and hope, even if it doesn't take away the pain. God does not always keep God's word in ways we would expect. But God is always faithful. And that faithfulness is what enables us to be people filled with hope. A husband and wife made it a point every year to take their children on a nice family vacation. It had become a tradition with them, and it was one thing ...

Sermon
Theodore F. Schneider
... make it." That's the question Jesus addresses in this parable and its conclusion. Are we going to make it? Do we pray constantly, keeping our eyes fixed on him whose will is our guide and whose faithfulness is the root of our hope? Do we live in the faith, expecting great things to happen in our lives, in our congregation, and even in our world? It was a Scottish preacher who once observed that to say something is hopeless is to slam the door in God's face! Again, it's Lucy who has planned a picnic for the ...

Sermon
... Amos says, there are two directions for their quest to take. They must seek fellowship with the Lord, and they must pursue good rather than evil. Faith is important to life, Jesus indicates. It is infinitely powerful and enabling. But faith is its own reward. Do not expect special favors because you have it. To live in responsive obedience to God is to live by the formula for which life was intended. The meaning of life is in this fellowship, and that is reward enough. Let us take a closer look at the basic ...

Matthew 24:36-51
Sermon
King Duncan
... visions of reality." Robert Southey tells of a certain Spaniard who "always put on his spectacles when he was about to eat strawberries, so they might look bigger and more tempting." That is to say that life is so often a matter of perspective. The person who "expects the worst out of life" usually gets it. There is an old German proverb: "If you paint the Devil on the wall, he'll come." Originally the Devil was painted on the walls of homes out of primitive superstition that he would NOT come. However, by ...

1 Thessalonians 5:12-28
Sermon
James McCormick
... and shouting, “You can’t fool me. You can’t fool me. With all this manure, there has to be a pony in here somewhere!” Is there any doubt in your mind as to which of the two boys will have the happiest, the most fulfilling life? If you constantly expect the worst, you cannot live the best. You just can’t! Write this down somewhere where you won’t forget it, because I’m about to say something important: what you look for in life, you tend to find. We tend not to notice those things we are not ...

Mark 4:30-34, Mark 4:26-29
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... Context of the Season We are at the fourth Sunday after Pentecost. It is in the midst of the growing season for much of North America. It is a time of waiting for crops to mature. The seeds were planted earlier. In the Corn Belt the typical farmer would expect the corn to be "knee high by the Fourth of July." For the church, much of the activity is engaged in the process of cultivating the Christian life. It is the long, steady time between the high events of the church year. What the pastor needs to do is ...

Sermon
Thomas Slavens
... how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him?(Luke 11:9,13) It is dangerous to ask for the Holy Spirit. It is easy to fall into the routine, the habitual, the expected, the socially correct. The Spirit breaks out of these molds and replaces these banal forms with creative living. Jesus did not say that his followers would get what they wanted when they prayed; he did not say that they would receive that for which they asked; he did ...

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