Dictionary: Trust
Showing 1276 to 1300 of 4997 results

Mark 8:31--9:1
Sermon
King Duncan
... not want to receive. Suppose someone you love came up to you and said, “Son,” or even worse, “Mom, I’ve just gotten a report from my doctor. I’ve got maybe six more weeks to live.” My first response would be, “Change doctors! Get a second opinion. Surely there’s a way to beat this.” None of us wants to lose someone we love. We want to hold on to every moment. This was especially true of Simon Peter. He loved Jesus. He believed that Jesus was the Messiah, the strong son of God. He believed ...

Sermon
David J. Kalas
... with the news of Jesus’ resurrection, but it is not Jesus himself who waits inside the tomb. Indeed, Matthew’s account seems to indicate that he was gone even before the stone was rolled away (28:1-6). He can be found by those who seek him, to be sure, but not there. He’s not in the tomb. Application I mentioned earlier a friend of mine who forgot what had once been a familiar route, just as I have forgotten how to do certain mathematics. The result for my friend, of course, is that he got lost. The ...

Luke 23:26-43
Sermon
James Merritt
... clearly wasn’t the worst and it was obvious (at least to me) I was easily in the top ten. Only 15 would make the team and I felt sure that I would. After the last night of try-outs I went by Mr. McFarland’s on the way to the shower and he winked at me and grinned ... was because Jesus said that he would. I want to say something to all of us. That is the only way we can know for sure that we are going to heaven. One of two things is true: either that criminal is in heaven or Jesus lied. If Jesus lied, and ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... for a two-week assignment and then return to their homes in Jericho, because it was more of a coastal climate where the fruit and vegetables were abundant. Immediately optimism rises, because this man is a priest. He is a holy man, a righteous man and a religious man. Surely, he will be the first one to help. But, the moment he saw him he passed by on the other side. Why? The priest had a special problem. This man was unconscious and he was naked. Now, if he were a fellow Jew and especially a law-abiding ...

Luke 14:15-24
Sermon
James Merritt
... process that would stretch over months and sometimes even years, because the farmer had to learn everything he could about this land to make sure he could make money off of it. Besides that, the property wasn’t going to get up and walk away. It was already ... of his to call him one hour into the date, so he would have an excuse to leave if the date wasn’t going well. Sure enough, the date was bad from the start. He couldn’t stand her and she couldn’t stand him and they were both miserable. Mercifully ...

Genesis 3:1-24
Sermon
James Merritt
... say that. In fact, in Chapter 2, verse 16, this is what God said, “And the Lord God commanded the man, saying, ‘You may surely eat of every tree of the garden.’” (Genesis 2:16, ESV) God never said to Eve, “You shall not eat of any tree in ... . “But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die.” (Genesis 2:17, ESV) Eve responds, but even she doesn’t get it right either. “And the woman said to the serpent, ‘We may eat ...

2 Corinthians 7:2-16
Sermon
James Merritt
... God. The good news is we found out last week that God has a perfect record. Every time we sincerely confess our sins to God, God surely forgives us. The problem is too many people stop at confession and they think that all they have to do is just confess and all ... are a part of the sin and tells them how to handle the matter and then sends a protégé named Titus to follow up to make sure they had done what he requested. This church serves as a model for how sin is to be dealt with in the right way if we are ...

Sermon
... in his name” (John 20:31). John refers to all of Jesus’ miracles as “signs” signs that Jesus was the Messiah. This particular sign was a spectacular one, for it made Jesus wildly popular with the crowd. They even wanted to make him king. I’m not sure that just getting the crowd to share with one another would make that large of an impression. Of course, none of us knows how he performed this miracle. Or how he changed the water to wine in another of John’s stories. Or how he healed the blind ...

Eulogy
Alfred Lord Tennyson
... every eye was dim, A merry song we sang with him Last year: impetuously we sang: We ceased:a gentler feeling crept Upon us: surely rest is meet: `They rest,’ we said, `their sleep is sweet,’ And silence follow’d, and we wept. Our voices took a higher ... ; Be cheerful-minded, talk and treat Of all things ev’n as he were by; We keep the day. With festal cheer, With books and music, surely we Will drink to him, whate’er he be, And sing the songs he loved to hear. CVIII I will not shut me from my kind, ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... that time. After many weeks of chariot lessons Heston told the director, “I think I can drive the chariot all right but I’m not at all sure I can actually win the race.” The director, responded, “You just stay in the race and I’ll make sure you win.” That’s Christ message to us in every troubled time: “You just stay in the race and I’ll make sure you win.” Don’t let false teachers fill your mind with needless anxiety. No one knows what the future holds, but we know Who holds the future ...

1 Thessalonians 4:13--5:11
Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... distinguish between his teaching and that of Jesus (1 Cor. 7:10–12). If then, he calls this teaching “the Lord’s own word,” we may be sure that Paul had reason to think it was (for Lord, see note on 1:1). The teaching was that we who are still alive, who are left ... unsure as to how the resurrection related to the coming of the Lord. Would it be before or after? If after, then surely those living would have the advantage of witnessing what the dead would not. But “the Lord’s own word” was quite ...

Understanding Series
Donald A. Hagner
... my word of exhortation, a phrase that is widely accepted as a good characterization of the work as a whole. As we have seen, Hebrews is essentially a series of exhortations, a kind of sermon in written form. These exhortations are based, to be sure, on very solid theological argumentation, but the latter always supports a practical concern or application. Our author has himself done in this work what he at one point urges his readers to do: “encourage one another” (10:25). He notes further that he has ...

James 4:13-17, James 5:1-6, James 5:7-12, James 5:13-20
Understanding Series
Peter H. Davids
... verse is a participle, energoumenē (NIV effective). A study of S. S. Laws, James, p. 234; J. H. Ropes, James, p. 309; J. B. Mayor, James, p. 177–79; and J. B. Adamson, James, p. 199, reveals as many attempts to interpret the word as there are commentators. James is surely not referring to how hard one prays (Laws), but more likely to the effectiveness of prayer (Mayor). 5:17–18 Elijah prays in 1 Kings 17:20–22, but that is in a story other than the one cited. Yet by the time of 2 Esdras 7:109, he is ...

Understanding Series
Norman Hillyer
... be honored? Believers have been bought with the price (timē, 1 Cor. 6:20) of the precious (timios) blood of Christ (1 Pet. 1:19). They are his and are due to share both in the family inheritance (1:4) and in the divine family likeness. To be sure, the honor is due not to any individual’s status, worthiness, or achievements, but it is solely the consequence of being made a member of God’s family through Jesus Christ. That is the glorious prospect of you who believe. But to those who do not believe, the ...

Understanding Series
Norman Hillyer
... 12–13 Jude has splashed a series of vivid pictures of the false teachers. They are as dangerous as reefs, as selfish as greedy shepherds, as deceptive as rainless clouds, as dead as barren trees, as polluted as the foaming sea. They are doomed as surely as the fallen angels. Additional Notes 12 These men in the Greek is a single disparaging word, houtoi, these, and is witheringly reiterated six times (vv. 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 19). The same caustic curt reference to enemies of the gospel is frequent in ...

Understanding Series
Norman Hillyer
... s power.” See also Eph. 3:20; 2 Tim. 1:12; Heb. 7:25. From falling translates aptaistos, without stumbling, not tripping over, sure-footed, and occurs in the NT only here. But the thought is frequent in Scripture: cf. “He will not let your foot slip ... the OT (KJV): “he makes my feet like hinds’ feet” (2 Sam. 22:34; Ps. 18:33; Hab. 3:19). The hind is more sure-footed and can climb higher than any other mountain creature, outdoing even her mate, the hart. Presence (katenōpion) occurs only here and ...

Understanding Series
James K. Bruckner
... three more). The introductory “Anyone who strikes” is a common alternate form, stylistically different from, but functionally equivalent to, “If anyone strikes.” Two case contingencies follow the first capital offense, “Anyone who strikes a man and kills him shall surely be put to death”—one for manslaughter (unintentional homicide) and one for premeditated murder. The sentence for the latter was death but the former defendant was allowed to flee to a city of refuge where he would be given ...

John 17:1-5, John 17:6-19, John 17:20-26
Understanding Series
J. Ramsey Michaels
... make you known (v. 26). Though the “Counselor,” or “Spirit of truth,” is not mentioned explicitly in Jesus’ prayer, it is surely the Spirit whom Jesus has in mind. Jesus will continue to make the Father known in the world through the Spirit and, in ... own name. The giving of the Father’s name to Jesus is perhaps analogous to the giving of his glory (cf. v. 24), and is surely included in the all of v. 10. But what specific name is meant? A comparison with Phil. 2:9–11 might suggest that the name ...

Understanding Series
F. F. Bruce
... îm].” The Pharisees were particularly scrupulous is observing the Jewish food laws and the rules about tithing. They tithed garden herbs as well as grain, wine, and olives (cf. Matt. 23:23; Luke 11:42), and avoided eating food that was subject to tithing unless they were sure that the tithe had been paid on it. See W. D. Davies, Paul and Rabbinic Judaism; E. P. Sanders, Paul and Palestinian Judaism; and E. Rivkin, A Hidden Revolution. 3:6 In Gal. 1:14 Paul calls himself a zealot (Gk. zēlōtēs) for the ...

Genesis 22:1-19
Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... the threefold pattern and by casting the middle command, “go,” in the same form as when he had ordered Abram to leave his father’s household (lek-leka; 12:1). The phrase “whom you love” further underscores Abraham’s relationship to his son. God made sure that Abraham understood that he could fulfill this command only with Isaac, not with Eliezer (possibly an adopted son, 15:2), or with Ishmael, his son by Hagar. God told him to go to the region of Moriah, and that there he would point out the ...

Understanding Series
Iain W. Provan
... is asked to regard them once more as God’s people and uphold their cause (v. 49, cf. v. 45). They are, after all, the LORD’s inheritance (vv. 51), the people brought out of Egypt, out of that iron-smelting furnace (vv. 51; cf. Deut. 4:20). Surely a second Exodus, from a different land, is not beyond the bounds of possibility! What is striking about these seven petitions is how different they are in atmosphere from the first part of the prayer in verses 23–26. There the stress was upon the necessity of ...

Ezekiel 1:1-28, Ezekiel 2:1-3:15, Ezekiel 3:16-27
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... throne, a figure of flame and light, yet solid as metal. Despite his reticence and humility, Ezekiel knows what he sees: This was the appearance of the likeness of the glory of the LORD (v. 28). Overcome, Ezekiel falls on his face before God. As a priest, Ezekiel surely would have found this vision at once wonderful and troubling. In the priestly texts of the Torah, “the glory of the LORD” is the means of God’s presence in sacred spaces. First on Mount Sinai (Exod. 24:16, 17; 29:43; 40:34, 35; Lev. 9 ...

Ezekiel 20:1-29, Ezekiel 20:30-49
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... father Abraham (Gen. 22). In fact, a cult site devoted to child sacrifice was located outside of Jerusalem in the valley of Ben-hinnom: a grim place called the Topheth (2 Kgs. 23:10; Isa. 30:33; Jer. 7:31–32; 19:6, 11–14). To be sure, the mainstream of biblical religion regards child sacrifice with loathing and horror. Perhaps for this reason Gehenna (that is, the valley of Hinnom) becomes another name for hell (see Matt. 5:22; Mark 9:34, and Jas. 3:6). Isaac, after all, was not slain (though Abraham ...

Ezekiel 26:1-21, Ezekiel 27:1-36, Ezekiel 28:1-19, Ezekiel 28:20-26
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... stands is the prose catalogue of Tyre’s trade (vv. 12–25). Ezekiel’s lament over Tyre begins with Tyre’s claim, “I am perfect in beauty” (v. 3). The great medieval Jewish commentator Rashi saw this claim as the basis for Tyre’s condemnation: surely it is not Tyre, but Jerusalem, that is “perfect in beauty” (Lam. 2:15; Ps. 50:2; see Greenberg, Ezekiel 21–37, p. 548). However, Ezekiel does not accuse Tyre of an unwarranted boast. Indeed, Ezekiel’s description of how perfectly the ship is ...

Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... Day of the Lord in verse 8 sounds echoes with 30:3 and 7:1–12; here, as there, “It is coming! It will surely take place, declares the Sovereign LORD.” Verses 9–10 present yet another parallel with the exodus narrative—the Israelites need not cut firewood ... footnote, “the Sea” would appear to be the Mediterranean, not the Dead Sea). This is an imprecise location, to be sure. What location in Israel isn’t east of the Mediterranean? However, Daniel describes the place of the final enemy’s ...

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