Dictionary: Trust
Showing 1326 to 1350 of 2666 results

Sermon
King Duncan
... that God created the world and then told it goodbye. God, he surmised, was no longer interested in the affairs of men, much less in control of them. When Jefferson read the Bible, he found doctrines like the deity of Christ that didn't correspond with his beliefs. So what did he do? He simply cut out the passages he didn't agree with. The Jefferson Bible contains the four Gospels, but deletes every reference to Christ's deity. Each Gospel ends at the crucifixion. The reader is left with a Jesus who was a ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... called out for her grandmother. She was convinced that the ghost of her grandmother had come to visit her. Tan writes, "This time I think (grandmother) was telling my mother that her funeral clothes had already been made, and not to worry, that they were fancy beyond belief." (5) I don't think it matters to most of us whether we are buried in fancy clothes or not. But we do believe that we will look good in our resurrection clothes. Because we were not made for the grave. We were made for eternal fellowship ...

2 Timothy 3:10--4:8
Sermon
King Duncan
... ." (2) St. Paul writes, "Continue in what you have learned and firmly believed, knowing from whom you learned it . . ." Evidently those who taught Timothy about faith also lived out their faith. So, St. Paul says, trust your upbringing. You know the impact that belief in our Lord Jesus Christ has on people you love and respect. Make certain you, too, have that kind of commitment. Secondly, says St. Paul, grow in your understanding. He writes, "All scripture is inspired by God and is useful for teaching, for ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... have on occasion predicted the demise of religious faith in the light of the challenges from both science and secularism. But reports of God's death have invariably been greatly exaggerated. Throughout the earth people are asserting their need for religious belief. Even in the Soviet Union, officially atheistic for 80 or more years, churches are opening and people are filling them up. Human beings are essentially religious. And why not? We live in a magnificent universe. Most reasonable people believe that ...

Isaiah 63:7-14
Sermon
King Duncan
... . We're not alone. God has visited our planet. God offers His own Spirit to live in our hearts. And it is free, absolutely free to anyone who will open his or her heart today. 1. Charles Colson, Ch. 14 lesson, Moving Beyond Belief (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1993). 2. Bits And Pieces, 28 December 2000). Cited in "Christmas 2000" by Dr. Robert Kopp, Dec. 24, 2000, p. 7. 3. Unknown devotional 4. Author unknown. The Funnies,http://groups. yahoo. com/group/andychaps_the-funnies. WITandWISDOM(tm), Jan ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... serving as chaplain of the U.S. Senate, made a speech in which he said that modern man suffers from what he calls "Destination Sickness." Destination Sickness is the tendency to focus all one's time and energy in the wrong direction. It is marked by the belief that money and success are the most important things in life. Halverson describes the victim of Destination Sickness like this: "He's the man who has become a whale of a success downtown and a pathetic failure at home. He's the big shot with the boys ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... finally, manna speaks to us of Christ. It gives us a foreshadowing of what Christ is. The Jews, not satisfied with the miracle of the multiplication of the loaves, demanded a greater sign from him as a condition of what they are pleased to call belief, which is really nothing but accepting the testimony of sense. The Jews recalled the story of Moses producing the manna, and implied that the Messiah would be expected to repeat the miracle. Christ accepts the challenge. He tells them that he not only gives ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... loved their traditions. Change was such a threat that in order to prevent it they crucified God's only son. That is what happens when people simply go through the motions-when they're living a second-hand faith. Dr. Ed Bauman in his book Beyond Belief tells a story about Groucho Marx and the Friars Club, which was an exclusive organization for actors and people in show business. Groucho was a member and was attending the annual banquet to hear a famous speaker deliver an address on the subject of "The Show ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... process, leading him to conclude that he is ugly or incredibly stupid or that he has already proved himself to be a hopeless failure in life." The famous psychiatrist Dr. Alfred Adler had an experience when a young boy which illustrates just how powerful such a belief can be upon behavior and ability. He got off to a bad start in arithmetic and his teacher became convinced that he was dumb in mathematics. The teacher then advised the parents of this "fact" and told them not to expect too much of him. They ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... a unique creation of God. Remember His covenant to always be with you and never forsake you. Release your life to Christ. Let him help you clear back the jungle and take hold of your life once again. 1. Emerson Colaw, Beliefs of a United Methodist Christian (Nashville: Tidings, 197 1). 2. Ethel Kenyon, American Weekly. 3. Sanctuary, Lent, 1966. 4. Leslie D. Weatherhead, Discipleship (Nashville: Abingdon-Cokesbury, 1934), pp. 101-102. 5. Ralph W. Sockman, The Higher Happiness (Nashville: Abingdon-Cokesbury ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... all he has been through, Joseph has not lost his confidence in the goodness of the Lord. "It was to save lives that God sent me ahead of you," he says to his brothers. "It was not you who sent me here, but God." Joseph interpreted his life in the belief God was with him. This was what allowed him to be a man of character. This was what allowed him to have a generous and forgiving spirit. He believed that God was leading his life. Even in times of great uncertainty, in times of questioning and in times of ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... . . ." God is the Creator of the Universe, the Author of all Life. Doesn't He have all the answers? So why is He asking all these questions? As Clairmont says, "I think He questions us so we might think--think through our choices, our responsibilities, our beliefs." (4) Isn't this what God is saying to Job? Could you make a better universe than I can? Do you understand the great care and order and complexity that abound in creation? Do you have the power to control wind and waves and stars and planets ...

Philippians 4:2-9
Sermon
King Duncan
... For joy to be real, we need to share it with someone else. When St. Paul says to us, “Rejoice,” he is not talking about a temporary happy fix that is passing. He’s talking about joy that is lasting and all-pervading. It comes from our belief that God is in control of the world, our gratitude for what Christ Jesus has done in our behalf and for our participation in the family of Christ. So no silly devotions or sour faces, please. We are called to rejoice in the Lord. 1.http://www.lovingheartofthecity ...

1 Thessalonians 2:1-16
Sermon
King Duncan
... Allen Farmer, “I have thought I was bright, skillful, teachable, quick to catch on.” Then he adds, “I would probably also have remembered if [my grandfather] had said, ‘I have the dumbest grandson in the world.’ And my life might have demonstrated my belief.” (4) A simple word of encouragement from his granddad was life-changing for Richard Allen Farmer. Writer Ben Burton tells about a member of his family whom he calls, Blank. Blank--the kid who didn’t fit in. Blank’s not his real name ...

1 Thessalonians 4:13--5:11
Sermon
King Duncan
... people may argue about great issues. But what we may not say is that they don’t matter. Christians are called to wrestle with the significant moral issues of our time and to make our voices heard. Even more importantly, we are to live out our beliefs in our daily lives. What is really disturbing is that today’s Christian man or woman does not seem to be living any differently than his or her neighbors. More people are in worship, yet fewer people seem to be affected by worship. This moral flabbiness ...

Sermon
Edward Inabinet
... God loves a cheerful giver and God is able to provide you with every blessing in abundance, so that you may always have enough of everything and may provide in abundance for every good work." God is not a miser. Look at the bounty of this earth--rich beyond belief. Try to count the fish in the sea or the birds in the air or the stars in the sky, and it will be quickly apparent that God is a generous giver. Cheerful givers are cheerful because they are reflecting the character of God. God is a cheerful giver ...

1 Chronicles 29:1-9
Sermon
Edward Inabinet
... of events meant tragedy for the mice. What seemed so snug and secure suddenly came crashing down around them. It never occurred to them that the field didn''t belong to them. So it is with many of us. We work, play, get married, raise families, all in the belief that this is our world. And we give no thought to the harvest time. This is God''s world. Everything in it belongs to Him. A TOTAL STEWARD ALSO ACKNOWLEDGES HIS ACCOUNTABILITY TO GOD. We see this truth in verses 14 and 15. The other side of God''s ...

Sermon
Darrick Acre
... been a generation that needs to hear and respond to John the Baptist’s call to the wilderness it is ours, isn’t it? Diluted focus: we scurry here and there, conforming to pressures, lacking the purpose to rise above the rat race. Deceived beliefs: the media moguls have done it; convinced us abundant living can be measured by how many presents are under the tree or how big the light display is outside the window. Dangerous choices: we compromise with culture, inflict on ourselves pathetic attempts at ...

Sermon
Darrick Acre
... standing, sexual identity, and racial heritage. Both share an experience of encounter with the Word who became flesh and made His dwelling among us, with the Lord who comes to us. Yet their individual responses are as widely divergent as skepticism from belief, and hesitation from zeal. Between the stories of Nicodemus and the Samaritan woman—right smack dab in the middle—we encounter another character and his response to the Lord who comes. It is John the Baptist, with his scraggly beard and his ...

Drama
Angela Akers
... Heaven."  Grandmother: "So you don''t like my qualifications for sainthood?"  Darcy: "Well, I''d say they''re...a little generous.  I mean, when I think of a saint, I think of someone like Joan of Arc, who burned at the stake for her beliefs."  Grandmother: "You want the `blaze-of-glory'' kind of sainthood?"  Darcy: "Something like that."  Grandmother: "Well, somewhere around here is Marcus Spellers.  He was vice president of the bank.  But most of us didn''t know of his secret life until after he ...

Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... was talking about when He told us that God is Love; and betting your life that he stands by—even now—to strengthen and uphold those who put their trust in Him. For ultimately, that is what faith is all about. The Bible does not speak of belief. It speaks instead of faith. And both the Hebrew and Greek words for faith mean trust. Faith is not merely something you do with your mind. Faith, instead, is the direction your feet start going when you first come to understand, really understand, that God loves ...

Matthew 16:21-28
Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... the question with which I begin this morning. Why the Church? George Arthur Buttrick in his book So We Believe, So We Pray, expresses amazement that the Church found its way into our Apostles Creed. He wrote: “Why should the Church become an article of belief? Faith in God, in Christ, perhaps in the Holy Spirit, we can understand; but faith in the Church seems like leaning on a rickety fence above a precipice.” (New York and Nashville: Abingdon-Cokesbury Press, 1951, p. 72) I. THE CHURCH HAS ALWAYS HAD ...

Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... . The Cross reminds us of the ultimate heartbreak of God. The poet Goethe once said that If I were God, this world of sin and suffering would break my heart. The Gospel says that it did. And that is what the Cross is all about. When we affirm our belief in the forgiveness of sins in the Apostles Creed, we declare our faith in the central miracle of the Christian Faith, namely, that by the grace of God we can be changed and reformed and transformed. No matter how bad our sin may be, God will forgive it and ...

Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... of the body and the life everlasting. At first glance, we are tempted to say: That can’t be right. Resurrection of the body? This body? What on earth does that phrase mean? Some years ago Redbook magazine published an article titled: The Surprising Beliefs of Future Ministers, in which it reported the results of a survey among students then studying in seminary. The problem is that the people making the survey, in spite of their good intentions, did not have a clue to understanding basic theological terms ...

Sermon
Donald B. Strobe
... some years ago conducted an experiment into the phenomenon known as spiritual healing and reported, “Christian healing has passed beyond the stage of experiment, and its value cannot be questioned. Spiritual healing is no longer the hope of the few, but the belief and practice of a large and rapidly increasing number of persons.” Now, in our Scripture lesson we find an example of healing being done by Jesus at a distance. At first the royal official from Capernaum probably began with the notion of ...

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