Dictionary: Trust
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Luke 2:8-20, Luke 2:1-7, Isaiah 9:1-7
Bulletin Aid
B. David Hostetter
... left us alone to find our own way out of the mess we have made of things. We have forgotten that the world was created by you, re-visited by you in Jesus Christ, and is still yours, a dwelling place of your choice for your Spirit. Forgive the belief that you are nowhere, that forgets that you are now here, in the Spirit of Jesus Christ. Amen. Declaration of God's Forgiveness Hear the Good News! The Lord has come, and is coming again. Let the peace of God keep guard over your hearts and your thoughts, in ...

777. The Laughter Of Faith
Genesis 17:1-27, Genesis 18:1-15, Genesis 21:1-7
Illustration
Richard A. Jensen
... a son in his old age" (Genesis 21:6-7). Sarah's laughter here is clearly a sign of her faith. At least that's how the author of the book of Hebrews understands the story. Sarah's laughter has turned from the laughter of unbelief to the laughter of belief. She has heard the promise. She has conceived. She has given birth. She has believed it all. And she has laughed about it all. As Sarah is our witness, what better response can be given to this promise-making, promise-keeping Lord?

Luke 5:1-11
Bulletin Aid
Dennis Koch
... , it is exciting to hear how you overcame the resistance of the disciples. They said that they had fished all night. They had caught nothing. They were prepared to give up, but at the word of Jesus, they let down the nets one more time. They experienced a catch beyond belief! They were astonished and afraid. Jesus reassured them. From that point on, they would be catching people. They were ready to be sent! It is exciting to think that you have called us to serve you. We are ready to be sent! Amen.

Sermon
R. Robert Cueni
... Christ's Church today. All around us we see the evidence of the trivializing of religion in general and Christianity in particular in America. In his book, The Culture Of Indifference, Stephen Carter builds an outstanding case for the fact that religious belief and practice are excluded from serious public discourse in America; that we treat religious faith as if it is nothing more than some sort of optional hobby; that, as a nation, we seem to have forgotten that strong religious institutions are mandatory ...

Sermon
R. Robert Cueni
... . As barbaric as it seems, it is really an advance over the common practices of the time. We should not forget that the religion of the Hebrew people was radically different than that of the surrounding culture. Their religion was more than just an early belief in one rather than many gods. They believed in a God of justice; a God who was concerned for ordinary human beings; a God who cared. This was a radically different concept in the ancient world where the gods were thought cruel and capricious. We ...

Sermon
Marc Kolden
... Christianity is only about some other life in the future. Precisely being a disciple of the triune God has everything to do with work and family and school and politics and the environment as well as the griefs and joys of this present life. This is the case because belief in the triune God means that the God who creates and the God who saves and the God who will raise us to eternal life is one God. Salvation in Jesus is not an escape from this world but a reclamation and renewal of the created world. Jesus ...

Sermon
William B. Kincaid, III
... about the role of women in the church?" "Why do bad things happen to good people?" Those questions, legitimate as they may seem, are out of bounds in many churches. Instead of a freedom to explore and grow in the faith, people are given a list of beliefs which eliminates all the questions. Often those who hand out the answers do so in a way that makes people feel guilty if they ever choose to believe differently. In many homes questions are frowned upon. The attitude expressed by a number of parents is, "I ...

Sermon
William B. Kincaid, III
... ministry. In our time we ordain ministers, and sometimes elders and deacons, but we have removed from our understanding of baptism the conviction that our lives are to be offered in service. When we enter the household of God, we do so with a vocation, the belief that God has called us to some particular work that will utilize our gifts in building up the body and in making a better world. To understand baptism as an ordination for all Christians is not a ploy on the part of ministers to get church members ...

Sermon Aid
John R. Brokhoff
... should baptize "in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit." To be baptized in only one or two names of God would be improper. In recent times three students at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Virginia, were expelled because they were spreading the belief that converts should be baptized only in the name of Jesus and not in the name of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. In prayer we use the Trinity. We direct our prayer to the Father through the Son by the power of the Spirit. To get to the ...

785. Is there really a God?
Illustration
John R. Brokhoff
... other than to trust and believe in him from the heart -- or, as I have often said, that only trust and faith in the heart make both God and a false god. If your faith and trust is right, then your God is right as well, and again where the belief is false and wrong, then the right God is absent, too. For the two belong together, faith and God. So that to which you give up and hand over your heart is truly your God. In summary, then, Luther tells us what makes a god: "Whatever, then, your heart clings ...

Matthew 3:1-12, Isaiah 11:1-16, Romans 14:1--15:13
Sermon Aid
Russell F. Anderson
... are we rooted in God's love and holy Word? Are they deep enough to provide an eternal anchor? Epistle: Romans 15:4-13 Sermon Title: Harmony and Hospitality. Sermon Angle: Paul was very cognizant that our Christian faith is not merely judged on the merits of our beliefs but on the manner of our relationships to others. We are known by the fruit of our lives. Two of those fruits are harmony and hospitality. A sermon on this subject could be developed as follows: 1. Begin by citing an example of how a group of ...

Mt 3:13-17 ·Acts 10:34-48 · Is 42:1-9
Sermon Aid
Russell F. Anderson
... of God. Consider Peter, his concept of Jesus is greatly enlarged. First, Jesus is merely a man, then the Jewish Messiah, then the Son of God, and finally, the Savior of the world. Consider Cornelius also, his concept of deity must have dramatically transformed from belief in the multitude of Roman gods, to acknowledging the God of Israel and finally to confessing Jesus as the Son of God. Some time ago, a book was written called Your God Is Too Small. This would be a great opportunity to address the many ...

Exodus 12:1-30
Sermon
... no longer went about with him" (John 6:66). The thought of a meal with juice symbolizing blood is awesome and barbaric to the outsider. But in the drinking of that cup we spread the blood of Jesus Christ on the doorposts of our lives. We do it in the belief and out of the assurance that God acts decisively for us in Jesus Christ as He did for the Hebrews on that Passover night. God has not hesitated. God has not waited for us to change our minds. No, God comes and acts decisively to set us free. 1. Shirley ...

John 4:1-26, Exodus 17:1-7, Romans 5:1-11, John 4:27-38, John 4:39-42, Isaiah 42:18-25
Sermon Aid
Russell F. Anderson
... with is not her husband. Yet, Jesus is not judgmental. There is witness; the woman leaves her water jar and invites her neighbors to hear Jesus. There is the subject of worship, which Jesus defines not as a matter of place but of spirit. Finally, belief is defined as personal encounter with Jesus rather than merely accepting the reports of others (v. 41). The person who receives Jesus is compared to a spring of flowing water (vv. 10-15). THEOLOGICAL REFLECTIONS Old Testament: Exodus 17:1-7 Job Burnout. Job ...

Lk 22:14-30 · Jn 13:1-17, 31b-35 · 1 Cor 11:17-32 · Ex 12:1-14 · Ps 116
Sermon Aid
Russell F. Anderson
... meter race but what really impressed the world was Liddell's shining Christian example on and off the track. His life was imbued with spiritual potency, not because of any innate ability, but because the pattern of his behavior fit the pattern of his beliefs. His life was a glorious example of the Christ's life. Illustration: There was a chief executive of a large corporation who did a very unorthodox thing. He would arrive at the office an hour before his staff arrived and proceeded to go from department ...

Romans 13:8-14, Romans 13:1-7, Ezekiel 33:1-20, Exodus 12:1-30, Matthew 18:15-20
Sermon Aid
Russell F. Anderson
... view of government, especially in light of the grave abuses of government authority we have witnessed in this century. Paul saw the Roman government as a protector of the budding Christian community; he himself was a Roman citizen. If we are to sustain the belief in a God active in the world, we must maintain that all governments derive their rightful authority from God. Yet, we cannot claim that all governments are an expression of God's will. Christians have a duty to obey their government only if it ...

Exodus 22:16-31, Leviticus 19:1-37, Deuteronomy 34:1-12, Matthew 22:34-46, 1 Thessalonians 1:1-10; 2:1-16
Sermon Aid
Russell F. Anderson
... a mother with child (v. 7). The leaders in the church should not assume the hierarchal power structure of the world, whose aim is to dominate, but tenderly nurture those whom they are trying to teach. Incarnated gospel. Paul did not only share ideas and beliefs with his converts, but his very self. The message of the gospel was incarnated. Actually, there is no other way to authentically share the gospel than through our own being. Faith is more apt to be caught than taught. Epistle: 1 Thessalonians 1:5-10 ...

Sermon
Jerry Eckert
... was also the God of all, including theEgyptians, the Amorites, the Jebusites, the Hittites, andeven of us Canaanites. I've never heard those otherforeigners mention that. They never heard of Abraham's "MostHigh" or "Everlasting God." Most of them think he's alittle strange because of his beliefs. But I have this to say for him. He keeps his word. Evenwhen those outlaw kings went into negotiations with him, hewas fair and he hasn't ever gone back on what he promised.If he weren't such a nice old man, I'd be ...

Sermon
Harold Warlick
... beauty, and class. For forty years she had hung together with her husband through a number of his debilitating illnesses and financial reversals. The road she had traveled had been a rough one. But determined pride, the intervention of Alcoholics Anonymous, sheer will-power, and belief in God had helped her persevere and maintain that marriage. With a glint in her eye and a smile on her lips, she addressed her daughter and future son-in-law. Her toast was as simple as it was profound: "Honey, I hope you and ...

Sermon
Harold Warlick
... 's children, as diverse as they are in matters of philosophy, religion, race, morals, and earthly status. Our American electoral process is the culmination of a tremendous experiment in government. A truly diverse people of all nationalities, income levels, philosophical beliefs, races, and religious persuasions yell at each other for months; then tens of millions vote for one candidate and tens of millions for another. Then, they are all governed by the winners, and the losers subscribe to it. After four ...

Jeremiah 30:1--31:40
Sermon
Harold Warlick
... . People seeking hope for lasting recovery from sex addiction, alcohol addiction, and other forms of negative addictions would not be caught without their book of daily meditations. That little book of comfort is a day-by-day reminder of their belief in a Higher Power. When we enter many general bookstores today, we find that some books which would formerly have been cataloged as "Religion" are shelved under such headings as "Inspiration," "Spirituality," or "Wellness and Recovery." Little books of comfort ...

Sermon
E. Carver McGriff
... about the current moral situation, suffice it to say the one hope we all have for a solution to America's current unhappy state as regards our myriad social problems is a change in our inward values -- not those to which we pay lip service, but the deeply held belief systems which determine our feelings and conduct day by day. Although Joel didn't use the word "repent," it's a word that expresses what he was asking his people to do. It's to be found often in the New Testament and, frankly, isn't a very ...

Sermon
E. Carver McGriff
... time, even though it's perfectly usable biblical language. Perhaps each of us would define "salvation" uniquely, depending on our life situation. John Wesley would have included in it a desire "to flee the wrath to come." This, of course, would presume a belief in hell, or some form of unpleasant afterlife. Christians are divided on that matter and we won't try to settle it here. Certainly, when one looks inward, we discover an assortment of personal struggles from which we earnestly wish to be set free ...

Sermon
E. Carver McGriff
... all he could, Philip quietly slipped away. There was no feeling of indebtedness, no effort to be reimbursed in some way, no follow-up to ensure that the man joined the right church, or donated an acceptable sum, or subscribed to a particular set of beliefs. Philip went on about his work leaving the eunuch free to pursue his own faith as he felt moved to do. Bishop Fulton Sheen once said there are three important characteristics of a Christian: kindness, kindness, and kindness. That's what is displayed here ...

Sermon
William G. Carter
... him it was the husband's prerogative (Deuteronomy 24:1-4). The prophet Malachi claimed God hates divorce, equating it with an act of violence (Malachi 2:16). But Ezra the priest lamented how the men of Israel had married women of other races and foreign beliefs. "Get rid of them," he said to the men. "Send them away!" (Ezra 10:10-11). When we get to the New Testament, Jesus gives his unique word, "Whatever God has brought together, let no one separate." That causes some to wonder if God really does bring ...

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