Dictionary: Trust
Showing 1251 to 1275 of 4553 results

Understanding Series
Christopher J. H. Wright
... Moses was the model and criterion for true prophecy. He had a distinct experience of God’s call, for which he felt great inadequacy. He was sent into a specific situation of need and crisis, within which he had to address the challenging word of God both to God’s own people and to the political authorities. He predicted events beforehand and interpreted them afterwards. He gave to Israel the foundational theological and ethical constitution that undergirded the message of centuries of later prophets. He ...

Deuteronomy 20:1-20
Understanding Series
Christopher J. H. Wright
... principles of Israel’s life under God were: love for Yahweh (6:5) and love for one’s neighbor. This vertical and horizontal duality was fundamental to the covenant dynamic. Love (as covenant loyalty and trust) for God can be seen operative in the opening challenge of 20:1–4, but is there any way that love for neighbor can be operative in the context of war? Two responses may be made to this question. First, love of neighbor clearly does not mean a facile niceness to everybody in all circumstances ...

Understanding Series
Christopher J. H. Wright
... that paved the way for the economic developments of the following centuries (see additional note). Although it would be difficult to see how the modern economic system, so fueled by interest and inflation, could be changed (though Islamic banking poses a notable challenge to the norm), it is still worth asking what the OT ban on interest has to contribute to Christian economic ethics even if it would never be literally reestablished. To answer that question, we need to set the specific law on interest ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... . But these verses directly address “the inhabitant of the land/earth,” individualizing the people as a whole (the word is singular: see NRSV) as the land itself was individualized in verses 1–16. Before this unspecified quasi-individual, with whom the hearer is challenged to identify, there opens up a series of disasters as in a nightmare or a horror film (vv. 17–18a). In Jeremiah 48:43–44 this nightmare threatened Moab, and in Amos 5:19 a similar one threatened Israel. Here it threatens everyone ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... them to put their trust in their God. If they take this chapter on their lips, it constitutes prayers and statements of faith that fulfill Yahweh’s longings and meet Yahweh’s challenges. The background to this is that the trust that people have previously misplaced is now exposed as the prophet had said it would be. Third, the chapter often takes up expressions from earlier chapters but uses them with a different meaning. It thus utilizes the paronomasia that appears elsewhere in ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... s words to pass on, and who speaks with all that master’s authority. “This is what the Sovereign Yahweh says” (7:7) were thus his words of introduction. The commander speaks in the same way, as he begins his unconscious parody of a prophet’s challenge, this is what the great king, the king of Assyria, says. Historically, the parallel works the other way around; a prophet speaks the way a king’s representative speaks, because that is what a prophet is. Now the movement is reversed. His subject is ...

Isaiah 46:1-13
Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... is possible that the use of the gods’ names contains a reminder of the two leaders whose own names incorporated them. But the focus is on the gods themselves. These gods have been a prominent subject in earlier chapters (e.g., ch. 41) as Yahweh has challenged them and their devotees to give some evidence that the gods have the power their devotees attribute to them. Now for the first time they are named, as Babylon itself and Cyrus were named for the first time in the preceding sections. The only reason ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... though by the end the first seems most likely. The question who within the community are people who revere Yahweh hardly implies that the prophet accepts a situation in which some will do that and others do not. It is more likely that it implicitly challenges the whole community to be that kind of people, to take the stance the prophet takes. The center of verse 10 reminds us once again of the descriptions of the community as people in darkness, their lives overwhelmed by calamity. The servant has modeled a ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... and the Poet may rather suggest that these later chapters are the work of a prophet or prophets who are heirs to both these earlier figures. They continue their work, and sometimes preach on texts from them. They discuss how to live with the Ambassador’s challenges (you must do right) and the Poet’s promises (Yahweh will do right). 56:1–3 The first eight verses of chapter 56 present Yahweh’s vision for an open community and put the combined message of chapters 1–55 into a nutshell (see “The One ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... are left with the picture. Even before Herod’s temple or the Dome of the Rock, the combination of the speedy Middle Eastern dawn and the white temple stone would make for a striking contrast between darkness and light in the city. Yahweh here challenges Jerusalem to believe that another, speedier and more marvelous transformation from darkness to light is happening. This one makes it possible and necessary that the city should get up, shine out with light, and stand so as to reflect Yahweh’s light as it ...

Ezekiel 43:13-27, Ezekiel 44:1-31, Ezekiel 45:1-12, Ezekiel 45:13--46:24
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... more likely that both derive from a common tradition. What if the priestly editors of Torah and the Law of the Temple were virtual contemporaries, one group in Palestine and another in Babylon? What if each group was responding independently to the challenge of Darius in the Demotic Chronicle, to assemble the law of the people and the temple, drawing independently on a common deposit of priestly tradition (see the discussion of 43:12, above)? This would readily account for both the numerous parallels and ...

Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... others to imagine that they might succeed and so to walk in their footsteps. Jesus has paved the way of victory over temptation by living as the one true human being in covenant loyalty to God empowered by the Spirit. He invites us to follow him. The challenge is still great, but the way has been charted by the Messiah, who not only walked that path but also walks with us. Allegiance to the one true God is the basis for all covenant loyalty. Quote: The Screwtape Letters, by C. S. Lewis. In this book ...

Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... oppression. For example, a slap on the right cheek implies a slap with an open hand,[4] which would insult a person’s honor and typically be done to someone of lower social position. Jesus’ exhortation to turn the other (left) cheek would, in effect, challenge the initial act of dishonor.5 5:43  You have heard that it was said, “Love your neighbor and hate your enemy.” While the command to love one’s neighbor is clearly from an Old Testament text (Lev. 19:18), its companion, “hate your enemy ...

Matthew 7:13-14, Matthew 7:15-23, Matthew 7:24-29
Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... teachings provide the solid foundation for Christian faith and practice. As we have heard in chapters 5–7, Jesus’ teachings offer a challenging way of life for the church. It is not an easy way that he calls us to (7:13–14), but it is ... the way that leads to authentic life. A significant challenge in preaching this message involves not only teaching about Jesus’ teachings, but also teaching those whom we lead to obey them. Matthew provides ...

Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... priests, Matthew introduces the central antagonists to Jesus in Jerusalem. While Galilean teachers of the law have been paired with Pharisees during Jesus’ ministry there (e.g., 5:20; 12:38; 15:1), here such teachers join with the temple leaders—the chief priests—to challenge Jesus (see 2:4). The chief priests will also collude with the elders of the people (e.g., 21:23; 26:3; 28:12) and the Pharisees (21:45–46; 27:62) to plot Jesus’ demise. 21:16  From the lips of children and infants. Jesus ...

Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... acknowledge the prophecies of Jesus spoken here that were fulfilled in AD 70. Certainly, Matthew, likely writing after AD 70, wants to highlight Jesus as the Messiah who rightly foretells these events that have already occurred for his audience. Additionally, given how challenging it is to provide a coherent interpretation of this notoriously difficult text, we would do well to make a commitment to reading and teaching it as holistically as possible. It is easy to use verses here and there in the chapter to ...

Mark 2:23-3:6, Mark 2:18-22
Teach the Text
Grant R. Osborne
... Text The opposition to Jesus intensifies with each of the episodes in this section. The central story among the five in 2:1–3:6 tells why the conflict is occurring (2:18–22): in Jesus a new era has arrived, one in which he must challenge the old traditions. Those who cling to the old (symbolized by the issue of fasting) have been superseded, and this new kingdom reality cannot be subsumed under the old ways. This then leads to the final two episodes, which are controversies over Sabbath observance (the ...

Teach the Text
Grant R. Osborne
... . Sadly, many of us want Jesus on our own terms. On this point, Wilbur Rees wrote a powerful poem, “Three Dollars Worth of God.” It is a satire about our tendency to want just enough of God to make us feel good about ourselves, but not enough to challenge our hearts or transform our lives. You can locate the entire poem on the internet and read some or all of it to your listeners. What we see throughout the Gospels is that Jesus did not allow people to follow him on their terms but loved them enough to ...

Teach the Text
R.T. France
... include the relation between good and evil, the relation between God and Satan, and the whole big issue of divine providence. Provide examples of how God uses trials to strengthen our faith, to bring us closer to him, and to enable us to face even greater challenges. A second approach is to explore the theme of Jesus as the new Israel, and also the nature of typological thinking in relation to the Old Testament as it is illustrated here by the use of Moses’s speech in Deuteronomy 6–8. Consider other ...

Teach the Text
R.T. France
... to the word of God. Are there lessons here for all of us in our listening and responding, and also for teachers and pastors in how they present the message? In what circumstances is it right, and even necessary, to provoke hostility by challenging entrenched prejudices? How far is the “rejected prophet syndrome” a model that we should expect to follow? Illustrating the Text Christ’s public teaching in this passage is a powerful opening manifesto setting the tone for his life’s work. Church History ...

Luke 9:51-56, Luke 9:46-50, Luke 9:37-45
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... concern where similar subversive thinking and action are needed? In our society today, who are the first and who are the last? Have we got it right from the perspective of God’s kingdom? “Whoever is not against you is for you” is a particularly challenging principle to apply to modern church life, with its cliques and mutual exclusion. How does it relate to the apparent opposite in 11:23, “Whoever is not with me is against me”? You might point out that both principles are valid depending on the ...

Luke 13:31-35, Luke 13:22-30, Luke 13:18-21
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... you evildoers! Not only is the door narrow and difficult, but also it will not remain open forever. This little parable of the householder and his would-be guests adds a note of urgency to the exhortation of 13:24, and the repeated use of “you” enhances its challenge. But it also spells out the reason why some will be unable to enter. The repeated charge “I don’t know you or where you come from” tells us that the key to salvation is not simply a matter of lifestyle or of keeping the rules, but of ...

Luke 14:25-35, Luke 14:15-24
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... God demands our full commitment; you cannot be a half-hearted disciple. Understanding the Text Jesus’s table talk in the house of a leading Pharisee continues with a parable about a similar banquet, which picks up the theme of 14:12–14, the challenge to invite those who cannot reciprocate. In the parable, however, the host represents God himself, whose open-hearted generosity is the model that we are called to follow. But the parable also highlights the obverse of that free grace, the fate of those who ...

Teach the Text
R.T. France
... that is, when the Word comes so close it shouts our name. It confronts our despair, shapes our future, and offers us Easter hope.1 We, like the two on the Emmaus road, need Christ to remind us of his power in our generation. Theology: The Challenge of Jesus, by N. T. Wright. New Testament scholar N. T. Wright re-creates the Emmaus Road scene for the post-modern reader in a riveting and practical way: Two unbelievers . . . [are] discussing, animatedly, how these things can be. How can the stories by which so ...

Teach the Text
C. Marvin Pate
... the Bible and not God. Theological Reference: Karl Barth. On this matter one could supply a few choice quotes from Barth. G. K. Beale supplies just such a listing in his 2008 book The Erosion of Inerrancy in Evangelicalism: Responding to New Challenges to Biblical Authority, though it must be added that Beale disagrees with Barth. Human Metaphors: It has been said that worshiping the Bible and not God is like loving a marriage license instead of one’s spouse, like loving a birth certificate instead ...

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