Dictionary: Trust
Showing 1276 to 1300 of 2129 results

Sermon
Richard Gribble
... learned wisdom and compassion. Now that man is my master." And he left them to follow the man who walked now in darkness and despair, the one who had chosen compassion over wisdom and knowledge.1 The student had the strength of his convictions and chose to enlighten others, to provide them with what they needed. In essence, the student was unconventional in that he did what no one expected; he rejected the norm and convention of his enlightened status in order to demonstrate compassion to others. Similarly ...

Sermon
David T. Ball
... Yes,” he might be seen as violating Jewish beliefs about the importance of worshiping only one God, for the emperor, too, claimed to be divine. If he were to say, “No,” that might have ended his ministry right there, with a swift arrest and conviction for inciting disobedience of Roman tax laws. So instead, he said, “Render therefore to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s; and to God the things that are God’s” (Matthew 22:21). Wow. Jesus slipped right off that hot seat, leaving everyone either ...

Sermon
David T. Ball
... , they refused outright to get involved. They kept their Roman distance. But this time they had Pilate boxed in. It was only Pilate in the region who had the power to pronounce the death sentence. And he did have a legal basis on which to convict Jesus: if Jesus had claimed to be King of the Jews, this was sedition, and an offense against the Roman people, by disrespecting their emperor. With the crowd about to riot, why spare Jesus and lose all Judea? More afraid than ever, he reentered his headquarters ...

1279. The Bigger Issue: What We Owe to God
Matthew 22:15-22
Illustration
Timothy Weber
... right about Jesus' intentions, then we must not try and develop a full-blown political theology from his words or use them to answer all the practical questions we may bring to the text. From this passage we cannot learn how or when to turn Christian convictions into public policy or how to vote in the next election. The fact of the matter is that Jesus did not say much about such things; and the rest of the New Testament provides different responses believers should have in response to human government. In ...

1280. I Am the King’s Servant, But God’s First
Matthew 22:15-22
Illustration
Michael Manning
... so they could get back to their life of comfort and prestige. With anguish, Moore cries in a gut-wrenching scene that he is not made of the stuff of martyrs. He doesn't know for sure if he is doing the right thing. In the end, Moore is convicted of treason for his refusal to acknowledge that the king was the supreme head of the Church of England, Moore defended his actions by saying, "I am the king's servant, but God's first." He weighed all decisions relative to his commitment and love for God. Even if ...

Sermon
Mary S. Lautensleger
... behold him; I turn to the right, but I cannot see him." Job's heart is faint. Is it too much to expect God to answer us? This is what faith is all about. Faith is believing what we cannot see. "Faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen" (Hebrews 11:1). We can take great comfort in knowing that suffering is not God's will. God may know about our suffering, and God may be present in it, but God is not the cause of it. There are forces in the world, and our ...

Matthew 22:34-40
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your might.” Matthew’s quote of Jesus’ version substitutes “mind” (“dianoia”) for “might” (“dynamis”), an alteration that seems to emphasize the individual’s internal conviction of this love. Heart, soul, mind - all that makes the individual person unique - must be committed to loving God. But this commandment cannot stand alone as the “greatest” because of the very nature of this love. If a genuine love ...

1283. Hope in a Dark Spot
Illustration
Scott Hoezee
In the novel and movie The Shawshank Redemption, a lifelong convict nicknamed Red, keeps telling his fellow prisoner, Andy, to stop talking about hope since in prison, hope is a dangerous thing. It's better to live without hope than to have a hope that will torment you by virtue of it's not being fulfilled. But then at one point ...

1284. Small Acts of Kindness
Matthew 25:14-30
Illustration
Robert W. Bohl
... But there was another child named Maggie who cared for Annie. Maggie talked to her, fed her, even though Annie would throw her food on the floor, cursing and rebelling with every ounce of her being. But Maggie was a Christian and out of her convictions she was determined to love this dirty, unkempt, spiteful, unloving little girl. It wasn't easy, but Maggie also had been abandoned, so she understood Annie's pain. Slowly, Maggie, got through to Annie that she was not the only one was suffering. And gradually ...

1285. Simplify
Mark 1:1-8
Illustration
Dan Matthews
... drove up to visit Mother Theresa and the newly arrived nuns, he was greeted by a pile of trash on the curb. They had torn out the new carpet and the hot water heaters. Mother Theresa thanked the bishop but she never wavered in her conviction. If they are to serve the poor in the richest city in the richest country in the world then they must live simply. They prepared for their work by simplifying their lives. Their spiritual grounding depends upon their simplicity of life. The advent message is prepare ...

1286. A Sense of Urgency
Mk 1:1-8
Illustration
King Duncan
Time is important. And time is in short supply. Dwight L. Moody preached on Zacchaeus with great fire and conviction. The whole story of Zacchaeus just came to life right there on the platform. But he called him, "Zacchus." And on the way home from church his children would chide him. "Pa," they'd say, "it isn't Zacchus. It's Zacchaeus. Zacchaeus." "I don't have time to say ...

1287. Living the Faith – Star of Peace
Mark 1:1-8
Illustration
Joel D. Kline
... not insane; he's putting his faith into practice. And the fact that you consider that to be insane tells me more about you and my government than I care to know!" It's remarkable, isn't it, what can happen when we begin to stake our lives on the conviction that ours is a God who is in the business of making all things new. Even more, it's remarkable what can happen when we respond to God's invitation to join in the task of living and proclaiming life in God's kingdom.

John 19:28-37, John 19:17-27
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... had also to die. But why couldn't Jesus have died some other way? Would it have made that much difference if Jesus had died of old age, or of leprosy, or of pneumonia, or of cancer? Why did Jesus have to die as a convict, as horrible a death as a crucifixion? Physically, crucifixion is usually a fairly bloodless death. But Jesus' death was far from quick and easy. Under normal circumstances the victim of crucifixion dies of asphyxiation - the body's own weight, abnormally suspended between the outstretched ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... you have come to know Christ more deeply "in the breaking of bread.") But truth must be embodied in two ways. First, as the personal experiences of those who encountered the risen Jesus illustrate, the truth must be embodied within. Without an inner conviction of the truth there can be no continued movement. But truth must also become embodied without. It must reach beyond our minds and hearts and escape our lips. When Jesus leaves the travelers in Emmaus, he does not actually leave them, for he leaves ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... in God in all that I do.' That may be grammatically painful, but it is theologically correct" (48). The author of Hebrews spends an entire chapter citing examples and trying to concretely demonstrate what he means by this "assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen" (Hebrews 11:1ff.). Like God's love, however, the litany of what is faithfulness remains inexhaustible. A few examples remind us that: 1. Faith is a gift - Our faithfulness is a gift by the grace of God. As Martin Luther ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... from our arrogant confidence in the surety of our own futures. Of course we will still be here, plodding along just the same, years from now. Thus we'd better figure out what we will do with all this time. Besides such cock-sureness is our conviction that we can know and control all possible contingencies. In our thorough, systematic, scientific way we analyze and categorize and anesthetize all the data we can gather. Using all our modern tools we build the future in our own image. But an equally large part ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... we no longer see persons, or subjects, only objects, only things, then we have allowed technology to undermine our humanity. "Mythinformation" is a concept scholars like political scientist Langdon Winner are using to describe "the almost religious conviction that a widespread adoption of computers and communication systems along with easy access to electronic information will automatically produce a better world. It is a peculiar form of enthusiasm that characterizes social fashions of the latter decades ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... . Moses was certainly "crazy" when he confronted the all-powerful Pharaoh with the ultimatum, "Let my people go." Militarily Joshua clearly qualified as a Crazy Dog, as did Deborah and, of course, David. After the decline of Israel as a state, the Crazy Dog conviction re-emerged in some of the antics of the prophets - think of Elijah, Jeremiah, or Hosea - and in the bravery of individuals like Esther and Ruth. God's craziness got even more crazy when the time for the Messiah finally arrived. Defying "good ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... 's ultimate meaning and considering the possibility that there is a God, and that this God cares about humanity - or at least about the existence of a rational universe. While he has allowed some of his film personae to express confidence in their convictions (in Sleeper his character announces, "I'm what you call a teleological existential atheist. I believe there's an intelligence to the universe, with the exception of certain parts of New Jersey"), Allen himself has not yet found an answer to soothe the ...

Ephesians 1:11-23
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... becoming outmoded and outclassed by the next generation of technological goodies? Metal people must replace their "gods" on a regular basis - a pathetic comparison with God's gift of eternal life. The predominant human paradigm today is homo technologicus - the conviction that technology and its "toys" will save us. Wayne and Garth personify our culture's proud claim that "Toys 'R' Us," as they embody this nation's "toy faith" and gilded pleasures. As Christians, reborn to inherit the unequalled power ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... Christ Jesus" (Romans 3:24). Note that "as a gift": We do not lose anything of value in becoming disciples; we gain our very lives. What blinds most people to the heart of the good news of the gospel today is a growing conviction that the concept of human sinfulness is some kind of an ancient, outmoded, simplistic myth. Despite abundant evidence to the contrary, we continue to believe that somehow our flaws are only temporary shortcomings and our downfalls are still salvageable through the use of bootstraps ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... of taking a seat? This is the church's problem. It is our problem because the church is becoming just another "dysfunctional family" among all the others. Our dysfunctions affect our attitudes and betray what have become our greatest convictions and compassions. We have become so concerned with preaching our message to the world, finding our own politically correct niche on the liberal-to-conservative, evangelical-to-pentecostal, liturgical-to-nonliturgical spectrum of religious life in America that we ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... stunningly widespread as the polls reveal our apocalyptic anxieties to be, they still reflect that for every naysayer, every doom-and-gloomer, there is another individual who is not so sure. Paradoxically, there is also a great deal of cultural optimism, a conviction that the dawn of a new millennium will bring the light of new insight, productivity and peace. Hillel Schwartz, in his handbook Century's End: An Orientation Manual Toward the Year 2000 (New York: Doubleday, 1990), suggests we take the "h" out ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... is said to be a "double-entendre"; judgments that have ominous consequences are "double-edged"; to be tried for the same crime twice is to experience "double jeopardy." Perhaps it has been the influence of the Age of Reason and the scientific conviction that all inquiries must have one right answer only that has made anything tagged with the label "double" a questionable or downright rotten experience. Postmodern thought is gradually beginning to wean us away from our love affair with either/or, and is ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... , it is Martha's faith that sends her running to meet Jesus before he could even reach the boundaries of Bethany. When push came to shove, when it was a matter of life and death, Martha believed. Yet Martha did not even know the depth of her convictions. Not until she stands before Jesus and hears his messianic confession - "I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die" (v.25) - does Martha realize that ...

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