Dictionary: Trust
Showing 76 to 100 of 162 results

Romans 4:1-25
Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... precisely the issue in our lives. To trust God, really to trust God, is so difficult, especially when we face terribly difficult decisions and experiences. So how do we get such faith? How did Abraham get such faith? Saint Paul gives the answer in Romans 4:20: "No distrust made [Abraham] waver concerning the promise of God, but he grew strong in his faith as he gave glory to God...." There it is. His faith got strong "as he gave glory to God." Simple. Give glory to God and your faith will grow. So what does ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... translated "double-minded" -- "The double-minded man is unstable in all his ways" -- that word literally means a person with two souls or two minds inside him. One mind believes; the other disbelieves. The double-minded person becomes a walking civil war in which trust and distrust of God wage a continual battle against each other. We must learn to say Yes -- Yes with all our being -- to God. We can't mess with Mr. In- Between. There are so many issues in life that would not even call for a decision if we ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... us. Add to that our confusion about who we are and our uncertainty about where we are going, and you end up with a “stressed-out people.” I believe that all the strained relationships we know, the staggering divorce rate, the distrust that characterizes relationships, and the growing climate of violence, are the consequences of this “stressed-out life.” “Burnout” has become a term everybody knows, because we see people around us collapsing into numbness and addiction — if it’s not addiction ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... : Those who have gauged the depths of their own nothingness can no longer retain any kind of confidence in themselves, nor trust in any way to their works in which they can discover nothing but misery, self-love and corruption. This absolute distrust and complete disregard of self is the source from which alone flow those delightful consolations of souls wholly abandoned to God, and form their unalterable peace, holy joy and immovable confidence in God only. (Jean-Pierre de Caussade, Llewelyn, pg. 249). We ...

Sermon
Phil Thrailkill
... God for his companion; Cain slays Abel over a religious issue of sacrifice! The sweet innocence of the original marriage is spoiled; the peace of the first family is shattered, and the sad story of sin repeats itself in each life. The pattern is predictable: distrust God, trust the voice of the tempter, cross God’s good boundaries, take what I want, minimize the consequences, recruit others into my little rebellion, avoid God, cover up and lie about it, teach your children to do the same. We dream of a ...

Sermon
Phil Thrailkill
... said Yes, others No. If you say by heaven there is wiggle room, but if you say by God you have to follow through. What a mess! Every oath is a witness to the fact that all our normal promises are not to be trusted. It is a culture of distrust. No one can count on anyone. In a radical move for which he alone had the authority, Jesus cut through the convoluted practice of oath making with a simple command for his followers, “But I say to you, Do not swear at all.” As the Son of God, Jesus announced ...

Sermon
Phil Thrailkill
... . We are praying and looking for the kingdom of God and will settle for no earthly imitations or approximations, noble as they may first appear. We are not naive about the world in which we live. Our insights into universal sin and radical evil make us distrustful of all great promises and grand schemes to heal the wounds of this world apart from God. At our best we are content with the provision of daily bread and the gift of forgiveness received from God and extended to others. At our worst we are indeed ...

Sermon
Charles L. Aaron
... died and have been resurrected. This multitude is international, multi-ethnic, and multi-lingual. The barriers that divide people on earth have been torn down in the resurrection. We will worship side-by-side and hand-in-hand with all people. Fear, distrust, and suspicion will melt away, so that we can embrace each other as brother and sister. The resurrection will be a time of true community and baggage-free fellowship. The victorious, heartfelt worship of the multitude indicates a closeness to God that ...

1 Corinthians 1:10-17
Sermon
Mark Trotter
... of course. Or Africa, where the lifting of colonial tyranny revealed centuries-old divisions between tribal peoples that are still unhealed today. That's the way it was. And I would say that's the way it's always been--violence and hatred, suspicion, distrust, separation, ostracism. It's just expected in this world. Just as some of us in this country can remember the day when segregation and discrimination were the law of the land. It was just expected that we would be separated from one another, that ...

Matthew 22:1-14
Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... brain as the fellows washed him in the shower? Soap and water were alien to a dog used to ugly, smelly, matted fur. Then there was the mange medicine and the rabies shot and the new taste of dog food. In that animal's eyes, I could see fear and distrust. I didn't blame him when he once tried to run away. But slowly that stray became a pet. He understood that we loved him. We weren't out to hurt him or to take his fun away. Indeed, with the right care his fun became funnier! His coat shone ...

2 Corinthians 5:11--6:2
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... are no less than a new creation and that everything old has passed away (verse 17). God sent Christ to "fire" our old way of life. Everything old our old self, our old sins, our old failures, our old hatreds, our old insecurities, our old fears, our old distrusting nature, our old suspicions, our old alienations, our old despair all of this is fired by the redeeming, re-creating act of Christ. Christ doesn't say "You're Fired!" to our old way of life with a lone finger. Christ says "You're Fired!" to our ...

Psalm 147:1-20, Jeremiah 30:1--31:40, Ephesians 1:1-14, John 1:1-18
Sermon Aid
Marion L. Soards, Thomas B. Dozeman, Kendall McCabe
... the beginning was the Word, which "became flesh and dwelt among us." The preacher may well wish to emphasize that central, scandalous fact from v. 14 as an antidote to the kind of spirituality that refuses to see God at work in the physical and that distrusts all things material. Although the psalms are intended to be acts of corporate worship in response to the Old Testament lesson rather than a "scripture lesson" on their own, there is no reason why they cannot serve as the text for the sermon from time ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... from an old German word wurgen which literally means "to struggle" or "to choke." Worry throttles our thinking, chokes out the truth, and prevents us from bearing the fruit of peace. I want you to really consider what worry is and what worry does. Worry, first of all, is a distrust in the wisdom of God. You see, every time you worry, what you are really saying is: "God, I don't believe you can handle this. I don't believe you can be trusted in this matter. I guess I'm going to have to carry this burden all ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... quickly change a home, and especially relationships between brothers and sisters, than the quality of kindness. Love is selfless "Love does not envy." (v.4) Nothing will destroy family harmony quicker than jealousy. I know marriages that have been destroyed because of the distrustful jealousy of one spouse by another. There are brothers who are engaged in sibling rivalry all of their lives because they were jealous of one another. Real love is glad for the good that is in another person, and also glad for ...

Sermon
John E. Harnish
... Cretans, Arabians, we hear them telling in our own languages the mighty works of God." What a vision, what a promise for the people of God. Tragically, brothers and sisters, we know we aren't there yet. Race and language still divide us. Mistrust and distrust and demonizing of those who differ from us can be heard from every corner of the globe. It seems we are becoming more divided over religion, ethnicity, nationality. And in this day, the world desperately needs to hear a word from a church which honors ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... parent-child relationship. As the only one of Gruenbaum's five bonds on which we can blame our parents, it is the bond for which our behavior has the least rational explanations. Patterns of attachment or detachment, of trust or distrust, of closeness or distance are imprinted on our newborn psyche, patterning our adult behavior for reasons we sometimes cannot even remember. The second bond Grunebaum calls one of friendship and partnership. Grunebaum notes with surprise that while the aspect of friendship ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... himself. But it was not just an incarnate Christ emptied of divinity who strode the roads all over Israel. Jesus was also free from the loads all of us carry strapped to our backs - the weights of ego, of self-importance, of insecurity, of bigotry, of fear, of distrust. From a psychological standpoint, Jesus would have made a great frequent flyer. Unlike the rest of us, he never had any baggage he needed to check. Before we set out on a journey, we are sure to "fill'er up." We fill the gas tank to the top ...

John 20:19-31
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... them into preaching powerhouses. In John's Pentecost, the disciples' first Spirit-assisted missionizing attempts are considerably less productive. The story of "doubting Thomas" which follows this gift of the Holy Spirit is not only about Thomas' doubt and distrust. It also demonstrates just how faltering were the disciples' first attempts at witnessing the miracle of the Resurrection. Despite the new shalom-relationship they now share with the risen Christ, despite the presence of the Holy Spirit in their ...

Exodus 17:1-7
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... that all this bad behavior was not yet subject to Yahweh's unbridled judgment. In ancient Near Eastern covenant relationships, part of the covenant bond involved trusting in the integrity and responsibility of the other party. Complaints exhibiting a spirit of distrust by one party were not permitted. In covenants between a king and subjects, the king was entitled to punish anyone who would question his protectiveness and genuine concern for their well-being. (Of course the expanded parallel of this week's ...

Sermon
Mike Ripski
... ,” who hears the cries of the homeless and responds by loving them at the Union Gospel Mission. Ron accompanies his wife, reluctantly. Slowly and awkwardly, he finds himself drawn to Denver. Slowly and awkwardly, Denver begins to move out of his isolation and distrust of this rich white couple. Denver and Ron become friends. They accompany each other through the experience of Debbie’s cancer and death. I work out at the Bellevue Y each morning. I read while I’m on the stationary bike. A few Saturdays ...

John 17:20-26
Sermon
Donald Charles Lacy
... to save us and point to new avenues of growth on our becoming one. Yes, all that you and I are considering is serious business! Holy Spirit, teach us to love one another in the model given to us. We are not so much afraid, as we are timid and distrustful. Take away our denominations — if he pleases. Allow us to fail if this is the road to full unity. Bring membership losses upon us — if it is a means for your will to be done. Call down fire from heaven — if this is the only phenomenon for your ways to ...

Sermon
John Wayne Clarke
... the IRS." The point, of course, is that certain people and institutions do carry at least the appearance of unbridled power. Those that take our money usually fall within that category. It is not uncommon, even in today's world, for people to distrust and even revile the IRS. That fact makes what happens in our lesson today even more important. Jesus and his association with Zacchaeus marks the last recorded incidence of Jesus' openness to the religious outcasts of his day. He had demonstrated repeatedly ...

Deuteronomy 26:1-11
Sermon
Frank Ramirez
... freed, sent across the desert while all the time observing miracles and wonders, a people who had seen God speak on Mount Sinai, and who had followed their prophet and lawgiver, Moses himself. Or Moses could have reminded them of all their whining, of their distrust, of their determination to return to slavery rather than trust in the God who freed them, of their lack of faith that God would feed them, give them water, sustain them. He could have called them "idol builders" after what they did while he was ...

Sermon
Frank Ramirez
... that good news to the ends of the earth, stopping along the way to the Samaritans of our lives, those people who we might think of as our enemies, but who are really our partners in God's work. Remember that the inhabitants of Jerusalem and Judea were distrustful of the Samaritans, who were actually very much like them. I'm sure the average Roman citizen couldn't tell one of God's people from a Samaritan. Our work begins with those who we feel uncomfortable with and goes on from there. Most of all, Luke ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... recently — gamophobia, the fear of marriage. But back to xenophobia. It’s not a common word, and I can’t remember using it in conversion lately, but it the right word to use in our sermon today. Precisely speaking, xenophobia is “hatred or distrust of foreigners or strangers”. Practically speaking, it is a fear of that which is different from you, the fear and suspicion of differences. It has been the phobia of people from the beginning through the ages, and still is. Xenophobia has plagued the ...

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