Dictionary: Trust
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Sermon Aid
Harold H. Lentz
... Human Needs By Ways Other Than With Money A man was walking along the street of a big city when he was accosted by a beggar. Deciding to help the beggar, the man stopped and reached into his pocket for his wallet. The action encouraged the beggar, who waited expectantly. But then the man realized that in leaving home he had inadvertently forgotten to pick up his wallet and so had no means of giving a gift. "Friend," he said to the beggar, "I'm sorry but I forgot and left my wallet at home. I'm sorry, but ...

Sermon
Harold Warlick
... depicts our religious situation. We decide where God is to be found and if God comes in another form we are in the position of the clown, of looking for God where God does not exist. This was true of those people before that first Christmas who expected the Christ to be born in a mighty display of power and positive experience. They looked for him in the temples and their emotions. Few thought that God's lordship would be expressing itself in the dark corners of the world, among the poor and disinherited ...

Isaiah 62:1-12, Isaiah 61:1-11
Sermon
Harold Warlick
... and the brokenhearted. There has been no divorce between God and God's people. To the contrary, there has been a grand and glorious wedding. The prophet hammers home the reality with powerful imagery. When you are going to be wed, it's only proper to expect some special clothes for the occasion. God plays both father of the groom and mother of the bride. Israel is decked out in a tuxedo of salvation and a wedding dress of righteousness. The needed garments are provided. Israel has been turned into a crown ...

Sermon
Thomas G. Rogers
... was. No, instead of being a king he was led to a cross, and the only kingship he knew was a cruel mocking before his death and a mocking title put up over his agony. And he, of course, is not the Son of Man of Jewish expectation, appearing with marvelous angels surrounding him and exercising an authority to which all are immediately obedient. Jesus is not that. No angels hover around his cross, even though Christian art of the Middle Ages may have imagined them there. All nations are not gathered before him ...

Sermon
Thomas G. Rogers
... includes: "the creed" -- and that changes everything. Attending this thanksgiving worship, Liz, Sam and Joe each discover that there is far more going on than they had realized. The end. That's the story. What did you think? Was it as bad as I led you to expect, or did it actually seem like a fairly nice story to you? I would guess that for many people it probably sounded simply like a story about some pretty nice, fairly generous, "church-going" people. If you had a hard time figuring out what was so non ...

Lamentations 1:1-22
Sermon
Thomas G. Rogers
... begin with, his wife left him for another man. She told Raymond that she needed to be with someone who had more passion in his life. Shortly after his wife had filed for divorce, Raymond learned that he had not received a promotion that he had been expecting. The job was given to someone younger, someone who had spent a fewer number of years with the firm. During this same period of time Raymond also noted that his children seemed more and more distant from him. Their own lives were very full and it seemed ...

Jeremiah 2:1-3:5
Sermon
Richard L. Sheffield
... floor and not the ceiling. That's a good assumption that holds water, at least as long as the law of gravity holds. I can live by that. But what assumption do I live by in my relationships with other people and with God? What do I expect out of life? What do I expect out of my relationship with God? Is that what I get? On Friday night I was the one who had to go up to Little Caesar's on Allentown Road and pick up the pizza. Because I had gone up on Cable Road, I had to turn ...

Sermon
Richard Gribble
... heights of praise and renown. The glory of Israel will be made known to all nations. When Jesus came the law was still the basis of all Hebrew belief. Jesus, however, asks that the people look to new heights in their life. As with yesterday's Gospel Jesus now expects more from the people. The law was good, but now Jesus asks the people, he asks us, to go further. The old law said you could love the people of your country and hate your enemies. The Lord says we need to do better -- we need to love our ...

Sermon
Paul E. Robinson
... days, those weeks, and those periods in our lives when we could easily intone with great feeling, "I can't get no satisfaction"? My big, red, unabridged power-dictionary I quote now and then defines the verb satisfy in this way: to fulfill the desires, expectations, needs, or demands of a person or the mind; to give full contentment to desire, want or need by sufficient or ample provision. We all know that according to this definition we are not always a satisfied people, who have fulfilled all or even most ...

Children's Sermon
Kenneth Mortonson
... dog do a trick, like sitting up, before she is fed. And you know what she does when we put the food down? She eats it right away. And you know what else? She never says, "Thank you." Now, of course, I don't expect her to say thank you, because she is a dog. But I do expect people, like you, who can talk to say thank you when someone gives you something or does something nice for you. When you say thank you to someone you are showing them that you like what they have done for you, that you ...

Children's Sermon
Kenneth Mortonson
... one of you. Plant them at home and see what you get from your seeds. Possible Times To Use This Illustration In The Home: In the springtime or the fall, when seeds are seen in nature. To remind your child that, as members of the family, you all have special expectations of one another. When the child produces what is expected, it shows what kind of family he or she is from. When you want to stress the importance of personal character.

Sermon
R. Robert Cueni
... to have a baby. The Scripture tells us that when he received the information, Zechariah was struck dumb and remained speechless until the child was born nine months later. That reaction should not surprise any of us. We do not appreciate hearing that we are expecting about the time we have the golden wedding anniversary. The Scripture goes on to tell us that Elizabeth is so embarrassed at wearing maternity tops she doesn't leave the house for five months. Once again, that strikes me as a very understandable ...

Sermon
Robert S. Crilley
... of being a creed for Israel, representing a new charter of freedom for the believing community. Centuries later, Martin Luther would insist that they be read as a preparation for the confession of sin, in order to remind us of the Lord's demands and expectations. John Calvin, on the other hand, wanted them affirmed after the declaration of pardon, as liberating directives for the work to which we are all called.3 Regardless of how they are employed, however, it is here -- more so than anywhere else in the ...

Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... expressed in Hebrews 13:20 which describes Jesus as "the great shepherd of the sheep, by the blood of the eternal covenant." Context of John 9 and 10 Some would contend that the events of John 9 finally convinced Jesus that he could not expect to reform the system of Judaism as an institution. The decision of the leaders to excommunicate from the synagogue any who would follow him led Jesus to conclude that some institutional form was needed to gather his followers together in community. They would consider ...

Matthew 7:15-23, Matthew 7:24-29
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... their own experience but drew it from book learning detached from life. Contemplation: Insights and Points to Ponder 1. Lord, Lord. Jesus objects to the kind of religion that relies only on some magical formula. People profess these magical formulas and expect that the results will come despite the absence of sufficient cause. Such formulas do not affect motivation or change behavior. True religion is more than giving verbal assent to some belief statements. Beliefs must be integrated in such a way that ...

Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... institutional expression of the kingdom of heaven, but are not worthy of it because of their impurities. Luke, on the other hand, is much simpler. It deals only with the excuses that persons make and the alternative offering of the kingdom when those most expected to respond do not accept the invitation. He does elaborate more fully on the excuses which persons make. Luke apparently was not aware of the parable of the wedding robe. No parallels to Matthew's parable of the wedding robe exist elsewhere in the ...

Psalm 100:1-5, Ezekiel 34:1-31, Ephesians 1:15-23, Matthew 25:31-46
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... is predominantly right-handed, those seated at the right hand of the king exercised the same power as the king. The word sinister in English comes from the Latin word for left-handed: sinistra. Persons who were left-handed did not act in the accustomed and expected manner. Therefore they were suspect. 6. "I was hungry ..." (v. 35) The I is the emphatic form of the pronoun. It refers to who is Jesus. 7. "The Eternal Fire." (v. 41) The symbol for the place of punishment was Gahenna. It was a valley outside ...

Sermon
Thomas Long
... activity of Pontius Pilate, tramping in and out of his headquarters, pacing back and forth time and again. Such fretfulness is unexpected. He is, after all, the chief judge in this trial; he is the one ostensibly in charge. What we would expect of him is resolute calm, perhaps even bored passivity. We imagine him heavy-lidded and drowsy, interrogating Jesus between barely stifled yawns as he sleepwalks his way through yet another procedural matter. Or maybe we anticipate Pilate scarcely paying attention to ...

Sermon
Robert G. McCreight
... to see the same faces in the choir. The prayers of the minister sound familiar. The hymnbook we hold as we sing shows the same years of use that our faith has had. On the surface of things, we shouldn't expect much from going to worship. But how wrong we can be! For in that moment, when faith has the opportunity to become the primary voice we hear, something can happen in our lives which is like stepping out of a dark room into a bright, sunny day. We can come ...

Sermon
Lee Griess
... live up to God's love and a desire to reform. "Blessed are those who mourn," Jesus said, and part of what he was speaking about is those who feel the pain of a guilty conscience and grieve in the awareness that we have failed to live up to the expectations of God and those around us. Confession is good for the soul -- yes, we know that -- but how can we develop a true sense of heartfelt remorse for our sinfulness and a real desire to change our ways? Most of us are willing to confess our sins as long as ...

Sermon
Marc Kolden
... them about all the dangers and hardships they may have to put up with and ends by saying (in effect), "What do you expect? A disciple is not greater than his teacher. If the world gives me a bad time, it will give you one too" (Matthew ... true. We've heard it before. But, it's easier said than done. So what's the solution? More advice? More instruction? That's what we would expect. But Jesus is not only a teacher. He is the revelation of God, though he doesn't stop being a good teacher when he opens a window ...

Matthew 13:47-52, Matthew 13:44-46, Matthew 13:31-35
Sermon
Roger G. Talbott
... the ones who say, "Well, I had just decided that it probably wasn't going to happen to me," or "that was the last place I expected to meet anyone," or "the thing that surprised me the most was that she isn't my type at all." The scribes of the kingdom have ... letter there, you will see it even under all the junk mail and the bills! You don't know who could be writing. You didn't expect a letter really, but you saw it when it came. When you are poor, it's amazing how you can spot a nickel on the sidewalk ...

Matthew 17:1-13
Sermon
David Belgum
... could mark the time and place of your transfiguration. You have shared the experience with others in all humility, passing it on as a blessing. What is more, transfiguration, metamorphosis, always happens and will continue to happen whenever and wherever people of faith and expectation allow themselves to be exposed to a vision. I'm not saying we can make it happen by our will and effort. Rather we simply rejoice when Jesus invites us to a mountain and blesses us with a surprising vision -- and then shows ...

Mark 8:31-38
Sermon
Elaine M. Ward
... beloved, what matters above all is the attitude we take toward our suffering. Yet how often we feel sorry for ourself or the suffering one. They do not want our pity, however, but our companionship. Perhaps it matters less what we expect from life than what life expects from us. Our answer consists of action and responsibility. Jesus taught them that the Son of Man must undergo great suffering and be rejected -- and be killed -- and rise again. Peter rebuked him, but Jesus to Peter, "Get behind me, Satan ...

Job 12:13-22· Matthew 27:32-44
Sermon
Wallace H. Kirby
... a tour of a horse farm. I had never been on a horse farm and was interested because of all I had read and heard about Kentucky horses. So I arranged my schedule to get there in time for the tour. Everything we saw was just what I'd expected from reading and looking at pictures in National Geographic. The thing that did surprise me was the one building in which four stallions were kept. When the manager told us that those four horses were worth over 22 million dollars, I had to ask him to repeat the figure ...

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