Dictionary: Trust
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Sermon
James Merritt
... , but for those who do wrong. Do you want to be free from fear of the one in authority? Then do what is right and he will commend you. For he is God’s servant to do you good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword for nothing. ... , but for those who do wrong. Do you want to be free from fear of the one in authority? Then do what is right and he will commend you.” (Romans 13:3, NIV) We are told in verse 4 the government is to punish the wicked. “For he is God’s servant to do you ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... outside of prison to be extreme in their joy. He urged all those who followed and confessed Jesus as the Christ to rejoice and celebrate in the good around them, not the bad: whatever is “just, whatever is pure, whatever is pleasing, whatever is commendable” (vs.8), Paul says, “think on THESE THINGS.” Focus on the good, not the bad. Even while he was imprisoned and enchained, Paul saw something different than the craziness around him. He saw Jesus in the form of “whatever is true, whatever is ...

2 Corinthians 11:1-15, 2 Corinthians 11:16-33, 2 Corinthians 12:1-10
Understanding Series
James M. Scott
... as “apostles,” had made a strong impression on the church at Corinth with their subversive teachings and robust appeal. Their boasting provoked Paul to engage in similar boasting, even though he recognized it to be utterly foolish. He had already resorted to self-commendation earlier in the letter (cf. 1:12–14; 6:3–10). Now, however, in this extended and, in part bitterly ironic “Fool’s Speech” (11:21b–12:13), Paul boasts in an attempt both to counter the accusations of his opponents and to ...

Understanding Series
L. Ann Jervis
... , called to be saints” (Rom. 1:7; 1 Cor. 1:2, RSV). Rather than affirming his converts, Paul’s terse address helps to set the tone for his letter. Paul writes not warmly but reproachfully. He clearly cannot commend his converts’ faith. The absence of his usual commendation, combined with the stress in v. 1 on his apostolic credibility, suggests that Paul writes Galatians in an admonitionary tone. The letter’s address to “the churches” suggests that it was intended to be circulated among various ...

Understanding Series
Arthur G. Patzia
... 2:1), he feels that they are very much a part of his pastoral care and concern. Although Paul certainly is genuine in what he says, it does become apparent that his thanksgivings anticipate some of the problems he will deal with later. Thus, for example, he commends them for their “faith,” “hope,” and “love,” (1:5) and yet strongly encourages them to be filled with the knowledge of God’s will and to walk worthy of the Lord (1:9); he praises them for the spread and growth of the gospel in their ...

Colossians 4:7-18
Understanding Series
Arthur G. Patzia
... now be simply endorsing an earlier recommendation by someone else. 4:12–13 Epaphras, another servant of Christ Jesus, has been identified with the Colossian church from the beginning (1:7), and so the inclusion of his name comes as no surprise. Paul’s commendation of this fellow prisoner (Philem. 23) comes out of a long personal relationship that the two have had. Epaphras must have come to Ephesus during Paul’s stay in that city (Acts 19) and been converted under Paul’s preaching. Paul’s stay in ...

John 20:19-23, John 20:24-31
Understanding Series
J. Ramsey Michaels
... ministry in its entirety is characterized as a series of miraculous signs written down in order to foster belief in him as the Christ, the Son of God (in contrast to those who saw his miracles but refused to believe, cf. 12:37). Such an understanding has much to commend it if the end of this chapter is also the end of the book, but in John’s Gospel as it stands, this is not the case. Another chapter follows, with its own appropriate postscript to the book as a whole (21:25). To what miraculous signs, then ...

Understanding Series
F. F. Bruce
... release, or would not have needed to send Timothy” (ad loc.). But he sent Timothy from Ephesus to Corinth in advance of himself (1 Cor. 4:17, 19) when there was no prospect of force majeure to prevent his own going there in due course. Commendation of Epaphroditus Even before Timothy sets out, Paul has another emissary ready to go to Philippi. Epaphroditus, an emissary from the Philippian church to Paul, was now to return home immediately, without waiting to learn how Paul’s case would turn out. 2:25 ...

Philippians 4:2-9
Understanding Series
F. F. Bruce
... text of verse 8 (as there is in the familiar KJV rendering: “Whatsoever things are true …”). This suggests that Paul may be quoting some well-known words of ethical admonition. The virtues listed are not specifically Christian; they are excellent and commendable wherever they are found. But in a Christian context such as they are given here they take on the distinctive nuances associated with the mind of Christ. Such things, then—things that are excellent or praiseworthy—are to be pondered and ...

Understanding Series
Iain W. Provan
... for acting in accordance with it (14:6); and the Israelites in general condemned for ignoring it (17:13–14; cf. also 17:34, 37). As recently as 2 Kings 18 Hezekiah has been commended for keeping this law (v. 6), after a description of religious reform that clearly recalls Deuteronomy 12:1–7. There is no reason to think, then, that the loss or concealment of the book is being presented as anything other than a recent event, occurring during the long reign of ...

Matthew 3:1-12, Matthew 3:13-17
Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... my son”), and/or Isaiah 42:1 (“Here is my servant/child”). The most likely candidates are Genesis 22 and Isaiah 42. The latter is especially likely as an intentional Matthean intertext because of a number of alignments that Matthew makes between the words of commendation and the Isaiah passage, which he quotes at length in 12:18–21. There Matthew conforms two verbs (“love” and “well pleased”) to the verbs in 3:17 (also 17:5).[11] If Isaiah 42 is the primary backdrop for God’s words at 3 ...

Matthew 6:1-4, Matthew 6:5-15, Matthew 6:16-18
Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... will not have a future reward; faithful followers of Jesus will. The kingdom itself seems to be the reward in view. 6:7 And when you pray, do not keep on babbling like pagans. In addition to commending the importance of praying with God as one’s only audience (6:6), Matthew includes Jesus’ commendation of praying with an economy of words (6:7). Unlike the pagans, who “babble” in prayer, Jesus emphasizes that good theology leads to prayer that does not need to pile up words to catch God’s ...

Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... with our cultural propensities to glorify risky behavior. Matthew, however, provides no indications that Peter’s behavior is particularly commendable. Peter is neither criticized nor praised for attempting to do what Jesus does. Instead, the focus of his role ... on Jesus’ identity and authority and not so much on Peter’s trust or lack of it. By focusing on Jesus, Matthew commends trust in Jesus’ authority to his reader. In The Reason for God, Timothy Keller notes, The faith that changes the life and ...

Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... as God’s son. The whole of the transfiguration scene has the marks of a theophany, with the bright cloud and the voice of God coming from it signaling a divine appearance. The disciples in the story and Matthew’s audience are prepared for the divine commendation that follows. This is my Son, whom I love . . . Listen to him! The words spoken from the cloud are identical to those spoken by the voice from heaven in 3:17, with the addition here of “Listen to him!” (cf. Deut. 18:15). This echo signifies ...

Luke 6:17-26
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... God,” the implication is that those who are not disciples fall outside the sphere of God’s rule and therefore also of his blessing. If to enter such a state entails poverty, then that poverty is a blessing. Jesus is not saying that being poor is a commendable state in itself. 6:21  Blessed are you who hunger now . . . who weep now. Again the language (and its converse in 6:25) is literal, but as in 6:20, the implication is not that literal hunger and sorrow are good in themselves, but rather that to ...

Revelation 3:1-6
Teach the Text
J. Scott Duvall
... too may have been guilty of accommodation to pagan culture. Outline e. Message to Sardis (3:1–6) i. Command to the angel to write (3:1a) ii. Description of Jesus (3:1b) iii. Accusation related to sin (3:1c) iv. Exhortation and warning (3:2–3) v. Commendation of good works (3:4) vi. Promise to the overcomers (3:5) vii. Admonition to listen (3:6) Interpretive Insights 3:1–3  These are the words of him who holds the seven spirits of God and the seven stars. Jesus speaks as the sovereign Lord who holds ...

Teach the Text
J. Scott Duvall
... Ignatius warns the church about the dangers of a Judaizing influence, connecting it with the work of “the ruler of this age.”1 Outline f. Message to Philadelphia (3:7–13) i. Command to the angel to write (3:7a) ii. Description of Jesus (3:7b) iii. Commendation of good works and encouragement (3:8–10) iv. Exhortation (3:11) v. Promise to the overcomers (3:12) vi. Admonition to listen (3:13) Interpretive Insights 3:7  These are the words of him who is holy and true, who holds the key of David. What ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... that humans are helplessly corrupt. The Bible does teach that all humans are sinful and guilty before God (Ps. 14:1–3; Rom. 3:10–12), but Bildad has left out of the picture what the Bible teaches about divine grace and forgiveness, and also God’s commendation of those who obey him. Bildad’s theology paints in black and white, not with the full pallet of God’s truth. Because Bildad is so intent on defending the validity of the retribution formula, he has to conclude that Job’s adversity is due to ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... , 5). To Elihu, Job’s situation seems clear enough, and he is agitated that things have reached an impasse rather than a resolution. The repeated emphasis on Elihu’s anger and his youth may well be intended to alert the reader that Elihu, for all his commendable theology and good intentions, does not provide the final answer to Job’s situation. That will await Yahweh’s speeches at the end of the book. 32:6–7 I am young in years, and you are old. With these words, Elihu begins an extended prelude ...

Teach the Text
C. Hassell Bullock
... experience of dwelling in the land of Canaan (see Exod. 20:12). The beautiful rendering of the phrase “enjoy safe pasture” takes the sense of the verb (r‘h, “to pasture”) into account. 37:4  Take delight in the Lord. This is another way to commend trust in the Lord—it is no less than delight. When one’s desires become totally synonymous with the will of God, that person “can desire nothing but God, with whose will his own is thoroughly blended in love.”[3] The desires often alluded to ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... , there is a sense of great expectation when Josiah’s reign begins after he is installed by the people of the land (22:1–2). His father and grandfather were the worst royal tandem ever, and so it is against the odds that Josiah earns the unique commendation of not turning “to the right or to the left” (see Deut. 5:32) as he does what is upright in God’s sight. Like Joash before him, Josiah sponsors renovations of the temple (22:3–10). Just after the halfway point of Josiah’s reign, during ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... :24–35; 7:16–19) is supplemented by ethical instruction on other topics (6:1–19) and framed by introductory and concluding material (5:1–2, 7, 21–23; 6:20–23; 7:1–4). Proverbs 5 differs from chapters 6–7 in its positive commendation of marital fidelity and its delights. A general warning against the “strange” (KJV) or “adulterous” (NIV) woman (5:3–6; see commentary on 2:1–22), which expands on 2:16–19, follows the usual call to attentiveness (5:1–2). Acquiring discretion (5:2 ...

Proberbs 10:1--22:16
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... a bribe or private present that secures an unfair advantage for a person rather than to generosity or giftedness (18:16; cf. 21:14). Verse 17 affirms the persuasive power of a well-crafted argument—at least, prior to cross-examination. Verse 18 commends the alternative of casting lots to settle a dispute, since God, rather than elders, then determines the outcome (16:33; Jon. 1:7). This is preferable to leaving the offended person less approachable than a fortified city (18:19; cf. 18:11). The proverbial ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... , but in this case the manager exacts interest so that he can line his own pockets. On this interpretation the master does not praise the manager for his dishonesty; instead, he commends the manager for renouncing the illegal practice of charging interest. This interpretation is attractive because it removes the problem of the master commending his steward for dishonesty, but it is not the most obvious meaning of the text. There is no indication in the text at all that the manager has decided not to ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... servants.” (And when they don’t, such as the Roman emperors who persecuted Christians, they are still accountable to God.) The praise for good behavior (13:3) is the public commendation of people who made extraordinary contributions to the city (e.g., financing of public works). Such commendations were recommended by the city magistrates and then inscribed in stone (honorary inscriptions). The sanction for bad behavior is punishment, meted out by police officials and other governmental powers. (In Egypt ...

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