Dictionary: Hope
Showing 1326 to 1350 of 4981 results

Sermon
Richard Gribble
... , but all people who seek freedom. Some seventy years later, another president, Franklin D. Roosevelt, uplifted the American people in the midst of the Great Depression by stating, "There is nothing to fear but fear itself." He went on to articulate his four freedoms: freedom of speech and worship, and freedom from want and fear. He called upon Americans to unite for the common cause and good of all. In the 1960s, Americans continued to be inspired and motivated by the words of great leaders. John F ...

Hebrews 4:1—5:10
Sermon
Lee Ann Dunlap
... , is that the knife which penetrates our soul is the Word-Made-Flesh — sharing our humanity and interceding on our behalf. In the hand of the Great Physician, the scalpel becomes an instrument of healing. From the heart of God, the word of judgment we so often fear, becomes the word of forgiveness and restoration. "For we do not have a great high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weakness, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are — yet was without sin." The beauty of a ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... unusual qualities. First, the iconoclast has to take a different perspective from everyone else. They have to decide see things differently, and to be willing to "reframe" the issues of the day. Second, an iconoclast must successfully squash their natural fear response. In other words, an iconoclast must replace the "flight or flight" instinct with a "let’s see what happens when I do this" commitment. Third, a successful iconoclast (and remember - only the successful are remembered) must have a honed ...

Sermon
Richard Gribble
... today in order to find relevance and meaning! If we do nothing to make Jesus' presence meaningful for our world, then like the grand inquisitor, Christ's rejection will continue. Jesus brought hope; he brought light so that a people in darkness would never be fearful again. It is up to us! John Michael Talbot, the well-known third order Franciscan composer, singer, and author, puts the challenge before us by borrowing from Saint Teresa of Avila. "Christ has no body on earth but yours, no hands, no feet but ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... umber is the color of me. When ever I draw me, I use raw umber. What color should I color now?" But adults seem to be much more concerned than the children. It is as if the validity of treasured childhood memories depends upon these rainbow hues never changing. Our fears of adult life, of the decisions we must make, the roads we must follow or avoid, do not depend on the world remaining the same as we have always known it. Don't wake Jesus up! This is not the way for the church to recover its identity as a ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... God's truth, beauty and goodness. The second item in this job description might be best encapsulated by the text from 1 John 4:18 which claims that "Perfect love casts out fear." Without this love, the fear which chased away those potential disciples traveling along with Jesus in Capernaum was a fear of being associated with the scandalous message Jesus was proclaiming. Without confidence in God's love, King David could not assert his commitment to ruling with justice and righteousness as his constant ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... can we avoid a constant state of foolishness and finally discern "what the will of the Lord is." When we shut up our fears and open up to the Spirit, Ephesians says, we become empowered by that Spirit. Openness to the Spirit means we are open-minded ... about the bottom line, we don't have to hedge our bets, we don't have to ration our compassion. Once we quiet down our fears and frustrations, once we successfully squelch the illusion that we must be in control, God's Spirit will show us just how simple it is ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... hit 50. Boomers like rocker Bruce Springsteen and actor Diane Keaton, director Steven Spielberg, basketball great Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and singer Dolly Parton (to name a few) are squinting into the sun of their golden years with a mixture of joy, fear and modulated anticipation. Boosters, the GI generation born before 1946, have passed this milestone. Busters, born between 1965 and 1983 (the children of Boomers), cannot imagine 50. And to MKs (Millennial Kids), born after 1983, 50 is a number used only ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... faith it takes sweat and patience and strength and spirit. Moses served God and had to spend his final years wandering the wilderness with arguably the most unruly, headstrong people the world has ever known. Jeremiah served God and found himself hated, ridiculed and feared by his fellow countrymen. Mary served God and faced an uncertain future with her husband and family because of her unlikely pregnancy. To serve God means to sacrifice the moment and to put one's future at risk. 3. Obey God Above All. It ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... kingdom, he didn't come with the military might and political power that many expected. Because they could not see a new incarnation of God's love, they let the moment, the kingdom, pass them by. 4. Fear: There are times we know what to do and we know how to do it, but we remain frozen by fear. Fear keeps us immobile while it murders our hopes and nurtures our doubts. The greatness and glory of God does not always descend like a whirlwind. Sometimes greatness passes by with only a tiny whisper. Someone once ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... misunderstood everything and let everybody down. Miss White, God, I am sorry I ran from you. I am still running, running from that knowledge, that eye, that love from which there is no refuge. For you meant only love, and I loved, and I felt only fear and pain. So once in Israel, love came to us incarnate, stood in the doorway, between two worlds, and we were all afraid. (Annie Dillard, "God in the Doorway," Teaching a Stone to Talk: Expeditions and Encounters [New York: Harper & Row, 1982], 137-39; Thanks ...

1337. Taking Risks
Luke 1:26-38
Illustration
... that people had, was dying in a plane crash, and yet statistically, we are more likely to be kicked to death by a horse than to be killed in a plane crash. How many of you have ever been afraid of being kicked to death by a horse? Another fear people have is that of being murdered by someone they don't know like a drive by shooting. Did you realize that you are 8 times more likely to be killed playing a sport than to be killed by a drive by shooting? And yet how many people worry about ...

Mark 1:21-28
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... by quoting its wheezy outcry directed at Jesus, "the Holy One of God." As James would put it later, "Even the demons believed and trembled" (James 2:19). With this outburst the unclean spirit seals its own fate. Invoking the very authority the spirit feared, Jesus orders the demonic spirit out of the man, re-ordering that man's very being with his words. It is noteworthy that this dramatic change in the man's self is not a simple or smooth transition - there is great "convulsing" and "crying out" (verse ...

Isaiah 11:1-10
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... enjoy under the leadership of this child-king (as first noted in Isaiah 9:6). Instead of relying on brute strength and force - as did Assyria - the rule imposed by this new "shoot" of Jesse will be marked by "wisdom," "understanding," "counsel," "knowledge" and a "fear of the Lord" (vv.2-3). All of these traits will be practiced by this new young ruler who will incarnate this prophet's and the Lord's desire to establish true justice. Verses 3-4a declare that wealth and influence will no longer determine ...

1 Peter 1:17-23
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... ." The rigidly hierarchical society of the first century had little trouble joining these two images. It was only right and proper that subordinates hold all superiors in an attitude of "fear and trembling." That the appropriate response to the divine, impartial Judge is one of "reverent fear" is not surprising. What is unusual is that even as 1 Peter recognizes the people's alien, outcast nature, this author assures his readers that they, too, may refer to this God as "Father." But the right to invoke that ...

Matthew 14:22-33
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... chosen ones. But once he is in the midst of his discipleship experience, and beyond the safety of the boat, Peter begins to panic. Instead of seeing Jesus, he suddenly sees only the tumult of water, wind and waves that are all around him. Peter's own fears and doubts begin to pull him down, and he starts to sink. Characteristically, Peter exhibits both foolishness and faith when he responds by crying out, "Lord save me." He doesn't have faith in the ability of Jesus to work through him, but Peter does still ...

Mark 1:21-28
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... by quoting its wheezy outcry directed at Jesus, "the Holy One of God." As James would put it later, "Even the demons believed and trembled" (James 2:19). With this outburst the unclean spirit seals its own fate. Invoking the very authority the spirit feared, Jesus orders the demonic spirit out of the man, re-ordering that man's very being with his words. It is noteworthy that this dramatic change in the man's self is not a simple or smooth transition - there is great "convulsing" and "crying out" (verse ...

Acts 9:1-6 (7-20)
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... worked in her life to guide and shape it, she didn't know it. She had that blindfold thing going. Kevin had a negative experience of church growing up. It was not a grace-filled, forgiving, loving experience. Instead it was an experience of rigidness, threat and fear. Jesus was always like God's policeman, trying to catch you in sin and pass out punishment. So when Jesus began working in his life through a Christian wife and boss, he didn't know it. He had that blindfold thing going. Jeremy had lived a ...

Romans 8:14-17
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... results that are effected by this spirit. The Holy Spirit is certainly not a "spirit of slavery," but new believers may need to be reminded of that fact. To be "led by the Spirit" does not mean believers will be led into a fear-filled, anxiety-inducing relationship where every thought and action is judged by a guard-like Spirit. Quite the contrary. It is freedom, not bondage, that characterizes the relationship between believers and the Spirit. Although being in a chosen relationship to God, as "children ...

Luke 8:26-39
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... request that he leave reveals the most about the situation. Without any further comment to the crowd, without any additional words of preaching or teaching, Jesus turned his back on the Gentiles, "got into his boat and returned." Everyone has the right to choose. They choose fear over faith. Luke ends the story by returning to a private dialogue shared between Jesus and the man he has healed. Now fully in his right mind, in his own mind, the man begs to be made a part of Jesus' team, to "be with him." But ...

Hebrews 12:18-29
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... glories of the old covenant in order to make his comparison. He goes right to the foot of Moses' smoking mountain itself. While Jews counted Sinai's Covenant of Law among the greatest of feats in their salvation history, this author focuses on the "fear and trembling" that accompanied the event. The description of Mt.Sinai during the time God's presence dwelt there is terrifying. As a holy place it cannot be touched by ordinary people. Only Moses had leave to approach and ascend the mountain to receive ...

Matthew 17:1-9
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... voice issuing from a bright cloud (redolent of the Exodus experience in Exodus 24:15-18) terrifies the disciples and drops them to their knees. Matthew alone records this response to the heavenly voice (v. 6) and the comforting action Jesus takes to assuage their fears (v.7). Some scholars have suggested that Matthew's addition is an intentional echo of one of Daniel's visions. A master of literary technique, it is doubtful that Matthew 17:6-7 repeats so many of the particulars from Daniel 10:6-12 merely ...

Matthew 9:35-10:8 (9-23)
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... its own focus and theme. Furthermore, within each of these two halves there is an additional division into two parts. The first half of Psalm 116, verses 1-9, deals with the psalmist's fear of death - a fear eloquently and agonizingly described by this poet in verses 14. But having given voice to the greatest fear, the writer then reveals that Yahweh has reached out with compassion and love to rescue this pitiful human from death's door. All the psalmist's words converge to emphasize the helplessness and ...

Mark 4:35-41
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... to witness the exorcism of an unclean spirit in someone else it is quite another to have a spirit that threatens you personally banished with a word. Jesus' words are thus both chastening and didactic. In scolding the disciples for their fear and faithlessness, Jesus suggests to them what their appropriate response to witnessing this miracle should be confidence and utter faith in Jesus' abilities and powers. Unlike the other miracle stories that focus on the welfare of others, the disciples' response is ...

Sermon
Mike Ripski
... frozen in the tomb of time. And, if our Jesus hasn’t changed, I suspect, neither have we. Our Jesus has become an idol. Remember the commercials for laundry additives and dryer sheets? They promised to prevent static cling – one of humanity’s most feared afflictions. You think you’ve lost a sock only to discover it one night in your pillow case. “Static,” of course, refers to static electricity and how it causes the clothes to stick together. This morning I want to use “static” to refer to ...

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