Dictionary: Trust
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Sermon
Lori Wagner
... program called “Mindful Self-Compassion” says that when we experience difficulties in our past, when we feel alone and powerless, most of all when we are frightened to move forward, we do one of three things: we fight (devolve into self-critique or critique/mistrust of the world around us), we flee the danger (we abandon ourselves altogether and give up on life), or we freeze (we get stuck ruminating over our plight unable to move backwards or forwards). Usually, we react with some form of all of these ...

Mark 7:1-8, 14-15, 21-23
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... comes from our fear of others, whom we believe do not fit into our “code of rules,” our “code of conduct,” our “code of sameness,” our code of “protection.” Bias and exclusion are our own greatest forms of hiddenness, fear, mistrust, and self-isolation. Today in our scriptures, Jesus deals with fellow Pharisees, whom he realizes have shut themselves off from the people they are supposed to help, guide, and teach. Instead of forging relationships with the people around them and teaching them ...

1 Corinthians 12:12-31a
Sermon
Mary Austin
... story of Timothy’s daughter. She had been adopted by another family previously, had a couple of rough years with that family and then the adoption was dissolved. She never quite became part of the first family, which left her with a deep sense of mistrust. At the age of eight, she was adopted by Timothy and his family. Whenever the first adoptive family went to Disney World, they took their biological children, but left this little girl behind. She was left feeling like she had always done something wrong ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... do we spend so much time looking for our security and our answers and our resurrections among our buildings, and numbers, and traditions, and history? Why do we look for the living power of Jesus in our past when he’s right here in our present? Why do we mistrust our future when we already know that Jesus is already there? Why do we worship a historical figure, a storybook figure, a dead-and-gone figure of Jesus, when we know in our hearts that Jesus is not dead nor gone, but here and alive? And in that ...

John 13:31-35
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... the cornerstone that is Jesus. As soon as love becomes peripheral and something else works its way into our foundation, our edifices begin to crumble and separate. Communities start building walls instead of bridges, barriers instead of entryways. Love seals. Mistrust divides. Love is Jesus’ secret ingredient. His “secret sauce.” No matter how hard loving is, it’s the goal that all Christians pursue in order to build the kind of community Jesus intended. Wherever division exists, seal it with love ...

Luke 17:11-19
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... chosen” group of people, they believe that God’s healing is a given. After all, they are who they are. The Samaritan however, when healed, although restored mind, body, and spirit, will remain outcast from Galilee. He will remain a Samaritan, disliked, mistrusted, avoided, and snubbed by the conventional Jewish community. But not from God. Humbled, his gratitude that God behaves differently than anyone he’s ever known, will spill from his lips in praise and laud. In his healing, he knows that God has ...

Luke 20:27-38
Sermon
Lori Wagner
Human beings have a hard time imagining anything outside of our realm of experience. Not only that but in our current culture, respect for authority has dwindled. Mistrust abounds not only of each other but of anything that smacks of authority or even more so of the unknown. We live day to day a comfortable and comforting existence in which we can be sure of certain things. Or can we? Take this pew for instance. We know for ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... easier to see the world in terms of “wild beasts” rather than fellow humans who are our brothers and sisters in Christ, beloved by God. A community of practice cultivates “soul whisperers,” those who learn how to patiently endure the anger, mistrust, and opposition of others and respond with compassion, understanding, empathy, acceptance, and love. Difficult? You bet! And yet, this is our commission. And the way we learn to grow in our discipleship and in our love of Christ. These kinds of qualities ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... contemporaries in language and references they could understand, in order to tell the stories of Jesus’ encounters, life, promise, and identity. We can hear Jesus’ lament in this passage about his love and care for Jerusalem, and we can sense his knowing mistrust of Herod, the crafty fox, who would destroy his unknowing and ignorant beloveds. Jesus asserts in the scripture that although he has wanted badly to protect and teach them, his colleagues and those in power in Jerusalem will not listen to him ...

John 21:1-19
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... Z, existing in that murky place between casual and committed has felt like a comfortable answer to the complexities of forging a permanent, challenging, possibly inhibiting relationship.[1] For others, lack of commitment arises out of a feeling of instability, mistrust, and an inability to leave one’s comfortable past behind in order to embark on a shared future. In an uncertain world, “safety” dominates in our priorities.[2] Yet, without trust, risk, vulnerability, and commitment to a common future ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... process of reconciliation involves addressing the roots of the conflict and then listening, taking responsibility, apologizing, making amends, and working to rebuild trust.[2] Reconciliation is a way of healing with love what anger, pain, rejection, and mistrust has divided. Reconciliation makes whole what has been spliced and diced. Reconciliation introduces integrity and restores harmony and unity even among those who appear radically different. Massey’s art, made up of “rejected trash” proves that ...

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