Dictionary: Trust
Showing 1226 to 1250 of 1324 results

1226. Your Health Depends On It
Illustration
... person, and it clearly is for ourselves! The act of forgiving someone is linked with lower depression and anxiety levels and better overall health and self-esteem, say psychologists from the National Institute of Healthcare Research, in Rockville, MD, in their book To Forgive is Human. They suspect that forgiveness heals by lowering hostility, a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease, and increasing social support, which has been linked to lower blood pressure, better immunity and a longer life.”

Sermon
George Reed
... been no more surprised that someone was embezzling from the company than we are when we hear those news stories today. The real surprise is the response of the owner. He commended his dishonest manager for his shrewdness. Yes, he had been taken advantage of but, we suspect, he had done the same in his dealings with others. He understood what chutzpah it took to embark on a course of more dishonesty and thievery when one had already been caught in the act. Jesus then went on to make his first point. It was a ...

Sermon
George Reed
... and the rich man could not have missed seeing him. Even today where we go from our homes directly into our garages, get in our cars, and drive away from our homes we would see if someone was lying at the end of our driveway. There is no reason to suspect that this man had darkened glass on his camel. He knew the man was there but he didn’t care because the man was not worth caring about. He may have thought him a nuisance but he didn’t see him as another human being in need. It was not ...

Sermon
Richard Gribble
... ," said the older brother. "Look across the creek at that other farm. That is my neighbor, in fact, my brother's property. Last week there was a meadow between our farms, but then he ran a bulldozer through the river levee and now there is a creek between us. I suspect he did that to spite me, but I will do him one better. You see that big pile of lumber. I want you to build a fence, an eight-foot-high fence, between us so that I never have to look at his place again. Can you handle such a ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... man who has spent his life in service to God. What kind of answers can he give people who want to know about the Lord? "There is a God, and I'm not Him." Is that all? If we were to ask Job what he knows about the Lord, I suspect this would be his answer also: "I know there is a God, and I'm not Him." Listen to how Job responds to God in this, our final message: Then Job replied to the LORD: "I know that you can do all things; no plan of yours can be thwarted ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... closer to the young man, this young woman panicked and blurted out, “We’ve come to hello you.” And then she walked off very quickly, probably with a bright red face. (1) Well, I’ve probably “helloed” a few people over the course of my life. I suspect that many of us know what it’s like to practice an introduction in our heads and then get flustered and have it come out of our mouths and not make any sense. But some people have the opposite problem. Their self-introduction is so amazing that ...

Genesis 2:15-17, Genesis 3:1-7
Sermon
King Duncan
... and holiness of God. And we do the same thing when we focus on the things we are denied rather than the many ways in which God has blessed us. Understanding the goodness of God makes the difference between believing in God and trusting in God. I suspect all of us believe in God. The problem is that many of us really don’t trust God. What’s the difference? Trust means giving up control of your life to God. Trust means obeying God’s limits, even when you don’t understand them. Trust means knowing ...

Sermon
Dean Feldmeyer
... of Judea. Edom was conquered by the Jewish Macabees in about 140 BCE and all its inhabitants forced to convert to Judaism. Palestinian Jews, however, never quite accepted them as equals and their loyalty to the temple and Judaism in general was always suspect. Herod died in 4 BCE. By all accounts his death was an excruciating one, James A. Michner, in his novel, The Source, theorized and many scholars agree that Herod suffered from chronic kidney disease and Fournier’s gangrene brought about from a form ...

Matthew 1:1-17
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... s lineage is of particular interest, because within it, the writer includes five women: Tamar, Rahab, Ruth, Bathsheba, and Mary. We know as scholars that Jewish genealogies never included women. The genealogy of a woman was told through her male ancestors. We strongly suspect that Luke’s genealogy is a genealogy of Mary’s lineage, told through her male ancestors, thereby naming Jesus as the “supposed” son of Joseph, and in the lineage of a son of Adam, son of God. Because Joseph is not Jesus’ true ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... she aware he can do the kind of miracle he does? Is she supportive of him as the messiah? Or is she asking her son for help with the wedding, as a mother would request a son to do, expecting him to go in search of additional wine. One might suspect the former; surely at least the latter. The interplay between Mary and Jesus is interesting in that he at first seems to indicate to her that she should not ask him to do “such a thing” since his time has not yet come to be recognized! Perhaps Mary is quite ...

Matthew 9:27-34, Matthew 9:35-38, Matthew 12:15-21, Matthew 12:22-37, Matthew 12:38-45, Matthew 12:46-50
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... , both harmony and dissonance. Beethoven was one of the greatest composers in history. Other composers, like Schubert, wanted to hear Beethoven on their deathbeds. Beethoven’s funeral procession in Vienna in 1827 was estimated variously at 10-20000 people. Sometimes one suspects that the reason why Beethoven was such a great composer was precisely because he was deaf and didn’t have to listen to all the bad music of his day. When Beethoven composed his Fifth Symphony, he deliberately wrote in a surprise ...

Matthew 16:21-28, Matthew 17:14-23, Matthew 20:17-19, Matthew 26:1-5
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... .” [Jesus left the Temple.] As it was in Noah’s day, so will it be when the Son of Man comes. For in those days before the Flood, people were eating, drinking, taking wives, taking husbands, right up to the day Noah went into the ark, and they suspected nothing till the Flood came and swept all away. [Jesus told more parables.] Jesus had now finished all he wanted to say, and he told his disciples, ‘It will be Passover, as you know, in two days’ time, and the Son of Man will be handed over to be ...

John 7:25-44, John 7:45--8:11
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... the “loopholes” in the law, so that we can take what we want. But Jesus saw through all of this right away with the Pharisees and their handling of both divorce and adultery law. This brings us to the law. If a woman (called a sotah or a suspect) was accused by her husband of adultery, and not caught in the act, then the “test of bitter waters” would be applied. The woman would be brought into the Temple Court surrounded by the Sanhedrin and others, as well as some Master Rabbis who may be invited ...

Matthew 13:1-23, Luke 8:1-15, Mark 4:1-20
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... last week, Jesus uses a lot of farming metaphors. It’s as if the Last Adam had the imagination of the First Adam, a gardener. It could be simply because Jesus grew up in a farming community. Galilee was filled with fertile farmland. But I suspect it’s also because in the parables we heard today, Jesus was speaking to people who were primarily farmers. In Jesus’ first year, he spent the bulk of his time speaking throughout Galilee, a region made up primarily of farmers and artisans, builders and stone ...

Luke 24:36-49, Luke 24:50-53
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... would be the “bridge” between heaven and earth for those whom the world had rejected.^^ Jesus loved the “higher ground.” Jesus WAS the higher ground. Was Bethany a place where fruit-bearing abounded? Or a house of alms for the poor and ailing? I suspect both. Surely God’s abundant mercy and love abounded here in the place Jerusalem wanted nothing to do with. And those who ministered to those sick and dying bore the true fruit and abundance of God’s blessing. It is here near Bethany, on the ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... . Another meaning of the name Noah comes from the verb nuah, meaning to rest, to settle down, to stop wandering around. This root mainly signifies rest or repose, but with overtones of finality, victory, and salvation. But while that may sound interesting, I suspect that the list simply says: these of my people walked with God throughout their lives. These are the Sons (and Daughters) of your faith. Be like them. When John the Baptist came, he delivered a message that said, it’s not merely by your ...

Matthew 6:5-15, Matthew 6:16-18
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... has been placing $100 bills (Bennys) inside of packages of diapers and cereal boxes, clothing and toilet paper. Each of the bills contains a simple signature –“Benny.” The unknown giver has been donating money well over the last few years. It’s suspected, he or she has given at least $55,000 in bills so far. His or her identity is unknown. Other than the nickname, “Benny,” the generous giver remains completely anonymous. And wants to keep it that way. Rather than giving “in the public ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... two men had done it. Not only is it odd that they did it so quickly. But these men did a job normally assigned to women. I assume, it’s because they were perhaps at the time the only ones allowed near the body. We know that the priests suspected, with all of the talk of resurrection (which the Sadducees poo-pooed), that some of Jesus’ disciples might come to try to move the body, and claim he had been resurrected. They wanted to make sure that didn’t happen. They ordered the guards to stay awake. In ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... the heroine of the story. But I think we give “Lot’s wife” (some Jewish traditions name her Edith, so for the sake of giving her a name for the moment, let’s call her Edith)…I think we give Edith here a kind of a bad rap. And I suspect that Edith’s story is a lot more like our stories than we’d like to admit. In fact, I’d say, she needs a bit of our sympathy. Let’s think about her for a moment. Abraham and Lot are pals. But there’s not enough room for them ...

Luke 10:25-37, Genesis 48:1-22
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... across that road that made the chicken want to cross it in the first place! Hey, maybe it was the chicken’s second nature to cross that road. Maybe it gave it no thought. Chickens aren’t the brightest birds in the henhouse. Just to look at them is to suspect that God made them just for food. But if we think in truly human terms for a moment, let’s admit it. None of us most of the time do anything without having a good reason for doing it. Even if we’re being spontaneous –we still have some desire ...

Luke 15:1-32 · Exodux 15:1-27--16:36 · Psalm 23
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... have taken about two weeks on foot. Probably less. And these guys were supposedly fleeing! Right? So, why the heck did it take 40 long years for the Israelites to cross the desert from Egypt into the Promised Land? 40 years! An entire lifetime! I suspect, it had something to do with “going in circles.” The Israelites were betwixt and between, but not because they were lost, but because they lost their self-awareness, lost their sense of accountability, and lost track of their faith in God. You can’t ...

Exodus 32:1-33:6, Luke 19:1-10
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... ’ll be home next week.” Pretty soon the time gets close to passing when surely he or she should have returned, and you are sure he or she has come to no good end. Look…either you’re on your way to file a missing person’s report. Or you suspect, he or she has started a new life with some other secret family. Or you come to terms with his or her absence and begin to take steps in a new direction. You begin grieving the loss and fearing the worst! Anyone see the movie “Cast Away”? He’s holding ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... , was an Anglican priest. The family of Samuel, his wife Susanna, and their eight children lived in the rectory, a kind of “parsonage.” We will never know if the fire was arson. It is said that Samuel was not well liked in Epworth, and most suspected the fire was set. The fire began in the night. As the family awoke, they fled the flames and smoke and staggered outside. Susanna gathered some of the children, and the nanny gathered others. When she went into the room where little one-year-old Charles ...

Matthew 5:13-16, Matthew 5:17-20
Sermon
Dean Feldmeyer
... , had not completely frozen over. If he stepped into one of these he would have to stop and immediately build a fire to stay warm and dry out his feet and legs. To do otherwise was to freeze to death in minutes. He had always made the dog cross any suspect areas first to make sure they were safe but now, refreshed from his meal, his confidence restored, he was in too big of a hurry to send the dog ahead and, predictably, he fell through the snow and ice, into a stream, wetting him from the waist down. The ...

Sermon
Dean Feldmeyer
... .” We watched that whole movie and then in the last thirty seconds of the film there’s a reveal that changes everything. Now we have to watch the whole movie over again because nothing we saw was what we thought it was. Or The Usual Suspects. We watch the whole movie asking the question, “Who is Keyser Soze?” And when his identity is finally revealed we realize that everything we just saw has shifted and now we have to watch the whole movie over again from a completely different perspective. Or ...

Showing results