Dictionary: Trust
Showing 1501 to 1525 of 5000 results

Sermon
Kendall K. McCabe
... : WERE YOU BAPTIZED RIGHT? And underneath is a phone number where both an answer and a remedy presumably may be found. It may seem a ridiculous question to many of us, but the fact that the question is there at all indicates someone takes it seriously. Questions about the form and practice of baptism have caused many divisions in the church through the years. Persons who were baptized in their infancy come requesting baptism by immersion as adults because they feel the first time they weren't "baptized ...

Matthew 10:1-42, Romans 6:1-14, Romans 5:12-21, Jeremiah 20:7-18, Genesis 21:8-21
Sermon Aid
John R. Brokhoff
... : Fear is not easy to overcome. One can reason it through and arrive at the conclusion that there is no good reason to fear. One can argue himself into agreeing that fear is unnecessary. All the thinking and talking about the futility of fear does not take it away. It seems to rest in one's feelings that are deeper than any rational arguments. Thus, faith that deals with basic feelings is the cure for fear. We need to be reminded that the Gospel lesson deals with fear of our enemies who oppose our Christian ...

Sermon
Shirley Gupton Lynn
... hysterical. She sobbed and twisted her apron with her hands, tears almost freezing on her cheeks. In the worst hour of Mrs. Stimpson's life, one well-meaning neighbor stood solemnly at her side saying over and over, "Nell, its God's will. You just have to take it, its God's will." Now, I couldn't believe it was God's will for Mrs. Stimpson to lose everything she held dear in that senseless fire. I could not believe, and I don't to this day, that God deliberately brings disasters upon us. In his little ...

Ephesians 5:22-33
Sermon
Will Willimon
... a culture with a very different orientation than his own. What we have been taught to call cheating, they called cooperation. Which cultural stance is more healthy? One that schools children to be constant competitors, to hold tight to what they have lest someone else tries to take it from them; or a culture which says, "We're all in this together. Let's help each other get through it. Let the weak submit to the expertise of the strong and the strong submit to the needs of the weak."? Well, we're all here ...

Sermon
Richard A. Wing
... God's silence. Babble if you must ... but accept every invitation to desist. If the illness is your own, go for a walk, sit in a chapel, or just hold the loved ones you most cherish. If the illness is another's, listen for the time to hold silence -- to take it to your bosom like a dove. There is a time to assault God, accuse God, but also a time to wait and leave God free ... you did not make yourself, and you cannot raise yourself. But what you cannot do, God can. A member of this congregation came to me ...

Mark 10:17-31
Drama
Robert F. Crowley
... is guaranteed. He is successful at all he does so, of course, he thinks he can nail down this "spiritual thing." He gets his chance when he hears Jesus speak and then talks with him afterward. Jesus shows him the right path, but will Bryan take it? Playing Time: 4 minutes Setting: By the coffee machine in a big corporation Props: Two coffee cups Costumes: Street clothes except for Jesus, who might wear a traditional robe Time: Now Cast: Bryan -- a wealthy young man who has made it by knowing the answers ...

Matthew 9:32-34
Sermon
Billy D. Strayhorn
... should be "Do you have a song? Do you know The Lord's Song." (8) And if you know the Lord's Song, there's no excuse not to sing. You see, there's no mouth so broken, no monotone so horrible, no voice so tremulous, that God can't take it and compose it into a beautiful symphony. We're simply called to Sing The Lord's Song like the mute who was finally given A Chance To Sing. As a matter of fact, that's how we're supposed to respond to Christ. Jesus came singing love. Jesus lived singing ...

1 Samuel 1:1-20
Sermon
Robert Noblett
... . The longer we live, the more fully we become aware of who she was for us, and the more intimately we experience what her love meant to us. Real, deep love is, as you know, very unobtrusive, seemingly easy and obvious, and so present that we take it for granted. Therefore, it is often only in retrospect Ñ or better in memory that we fully realize its power and depth. Yes, indeed, love often makes itself visible in pain. The pain we are now experiencing shows us how deep, full, intimate, and all-pervasive ...

Matthew 21:33-46
Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... rule men's souls, but I rule their destinies." The Beatles, Britain's pop singing group of the '60s and '70s, preened, "We're more popular than God!" In case you haven't heard, modern humanist scholars have now determined, "The world is nobody's, so I'll take it!" Yes, Jesus said, history is like that. The creation tries to wrestle itself away from the creator. Did you hear about the visitor to the insane asylum? He walked in the front door and immediately met a man with his hand in his coat who claimed to ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... valleys because we have to pass through it alone. It would be an insult to our hurting hearts - the hurting hearts of those of us who have lost loved ones during this past year - to talk about death casually, or to assume that we can take it lightly. The New Testament didn’t do that. It called death “the last enemy.” But the New Testament did something else about death. It proclaimed death as “the thick darkness where God is.” It did that, not by talking about immortality and the possible survival ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... had been unfaithful to his wife, walked all over her, used her, went his perverted, selfish way, but kept coming back, asking his wife to accept him, and promising to be faithful. It was that story repeated over and over again, until the woman could take it no more. She committed suicide. That woman had a friend in our church who had experienced much the same thing with her husband. The church member told m the story of her friend’s suicide. As she wept, she confessed: “This has been my temptation. You ...

Luke 2:1-7, Luke 2:8-20
Drama
Edward G. Hunter
... . I owned it, and only a few animals were there. At least it could give them some shelter. Get them out of the cold. "Wait a moment," I called to him, "I have a stable, a little way from the caravansary. It is the best I can offer." "We will take it!" the young man said without hesitation. He asked what it might cost, and I told him no one could charge for a stable. My wife took them to the cave; she wanted to make sure the young girl would be as comfortable as possible. She told me she volunteered to ...

Sermon
Leonard H. Budd
... - no, you can’t possibly imagine the horror of that word. You, in the 2,000-year future, have idealized the word. It is something religious and distant. But I have seen it with my own eyes, and heard it with my own ears, and nothing could take it from my mind. Crucifixion. Death horribly doled out. Death by total pain. Death by small doses. Death by naked shame. Death that never, never brings release. Would I turn to a raving animal before the bar was lifted? A thief in Rome’s world has no rights ...

Matthew 6:1-4
Sermon
King Duncan
... and toddlers expect, even demand, to be the center of attention. In fact, someone has written an amusing list that they have titled the "Toddler Rules of Ownership": 1. If I like it, it's mine. 2. If it's in my hands, it's mine. 3. If I can take it from you, it's mine. 4. If I had it a little while ago, it's mine. 5. If it's mine, it must never appear to be yours in any way. 6. If I'm doing or building something, all the pieces are mine. 7. If it looks just ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... to God. I know that goes against the grain of everything you will hear out in the world. The world says, "Pull out, get even, fight back, you've come a long, baby, don't give in." You ought to stand up and say, "I'm not going to take it any longer!" I want to emphasize. I am not talking here about physical abuse or even horrible verbal abuse. But I am talking situations where you just have difficult problems. God's counsel is always—hang in there, keep praying and let Him have an opportunity to work on ...

Colossians 2:6-15 (16-19)
Sermon
Clayton A. Lord
... been rules set down to serve as boundaries for all of our human interaction. Rules govern how we behave at work, at school, in our homes, and even at church. The rules allow us to live together in an orderly society. If you want to take it a step farther, just look at the Old Testament and you will see a myriad of laws (rules) that regulated every aspect of life for the Israelites. The laws regulated relationships between husbands and wives, merchants and consumers, masters and slaves, and everything else ...

Sermon
Billy D. Strayhorn
... finds a way to save the town. In this scene Blanche has given Lucy a present. Lucy says, "Oh, blanche, you didn't have to get me anything." Blanche says, "Oh I didn't get it, not like ‘store bought' get it. I made it." Lucy says thank you and takes it. Blanche goes on, "Just in case you want to start scrapbooking." They look through the gift and come to a very forlorn picture of Lucy, who asks when Blanche took it. Blanche says, "Oh, it was awhile ago. You looked like you had the weight of the world on ...

Sermon
Cynthia Cowen
... . Stop a minute and rest, but keep your hands on the cables." Michael and Jeremy obeyed, sneaking a glance at the rushing water below. "Has anybody ever fallen from here?" Michael asked. "Not that I know of," Sam replied. "Are you ready to start again?" "Okay. Just take it slow," Jeremy pleaded. "Do as I say and you'll be fine," Sam said with a mischievous grin on his face. Then he began to rock the bridge. "Stop that! Stop that! You'll make us fall!" Jeremy cried out in fear. "Hey, it's a swinging bridge ...

Matthew 25:14-30
Sermon
King Duncan
... thousand manufacturers unloaded cheap or surplus merchandise at "unbelievably low prices." The reporter interviewed some of the merchants at the trade show. One merchant told him, "Everything's got a price." Another jokingly said, "I'm the last guy you see before you take it to the dump." Another said, "The less you know the better." Still another told the reporter, "Grunge is in." And finally, another summed up the experience with these words, "Everything can be sold." (1) What we do with what we have been ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... his own bed," we conclude curtly, "let him lie in it." We don't really like this picture of God any more than the Pharisees. Jesus is using a vivid picture to get under the skin of his listeners. We've heard the story so many times, we take it for granted. But think about his audience for a moment. Jesus was telling this parable to the "sinners" and tax collectors. It is interesting that in at least one translation of the Bible the word "sinners" is put in quotation marks. That's because Jesus doesn't look ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
There is no song so broken, no monotone so horrible, no voice so tremulous, that God can't take it and compose it into a beautiful symphony. Have you ever played the game "Gossip" or "Rumors"? After gathering everyone into a circle, one person begins by whispering some message to a neighbor softly and quietly. The neighbor must then pass along that whispered message (or at least the version he ...

Acts 9:1-6 (7-20)
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... apprehended and brought to Jerusalem to stand trial before the high priest and council. As aptly demonstrated at Jesus' trial, Jewish leaders could then hand troublemakers over to the Roman authorities and let the violent justice of the Roman state take its course. Although this text describes the conversion experience that transforms Saul from Jew to Christian, the experience itself relies heavily on his essential Jewishness in order to make sense. Saul's vision begins (as Moses' did) with the appearance ...

Matthew 14:22-36
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... struggling to hatch out from their cocoons. One of the larger insects seemed to be having a particularly hard time getting out. After hours of watching this moth beat desperately with its yet undeveloped wings to break out of the cocoon, Wallace couldn’t take it anymore. Moved by the creature’s life-and-death struggle, Wallace decided to lend a helping hand. Gently, being careful not to injure the insect, Wallace used his sharp knife to cut open the remainder of the cocoon and freed the moth from that ...

Sermon
Tony Everett
... in just one day by listening to parishioners and reading the newspaper. Standing in a long grocery store checkout line, a woman was startled when the man behind her handed her an envelope and inside was a $50 bill attached to a note simply saying, “Take it if you need it. Pass it on.” What was astounding here was not just that the envelope was passed forward, but that many people added more dollars. Another man described a similar situation while he was in a long line of automobiles moving slowly toward ...

1525. A Walk With The Devil
Luke 4:1-13
Illustration
John E. Sumwalt
... I've not seen the last of him. Come to think of it I still have that lottery ticket here in my pocket. I'll put it over here in front of the altar for safe keeping. If any of you would like to have it, you are welcome to take it and scratch it off. Author's Note: I tell this story as part of a sermon on temptation. I buy an actual lottery ticket at a local convenience store, the kind one has to scratch off to win. Then I place it on a stand in front of the altar ...

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