Dictionary: Trust
Showing 1701 to 1725 of 4748 results

Drama
Timothy W. Ayers
... he needs his rest. Sure. Oh, yeah, and you should see what it's like in this house around Christmas. I won't begin to tell you about the list of toys and clothes they have and want and if they don't get them they'll "just die." No doubt about it, I spell stress, K-I-D-S. Male and Female Together: How do I spell stress? Him: W-I-F-E. Her: H-I-M. Together: When I get home in the evening there ... Her: He is. Him: She is. Together: Acting like their day is the worst ...

Sermon
Harold Warlick
... descended immediately upon the room. The have-nots, the unfits, dominated the conversation that evening. But I could tell by the scowls on their faces that the other folks didn't feel much like talking anyway. They were reserving their words for the next day. I doubt that my reputation ever recovered in their eyes. The rest of the summer was an uphill battle. The next day, the poor minister simply put his head on the desk and moaned, "I can't believe they showed up." Nothing like that had ever happened in ...

Sermon
Thomas Peterson
... the cog-wheel of democracy, and justice is God’s other name, love being his first. St. Francis’ prayer for peace comes to mind: Lord, make me an instrument of your peace. Where there is hatred, let me sow love; where there is injury, pardon; where there is doubt, faith; where there is despair, hope; where there is darkness, light; and where there is sadness, joy. I have learned that we do not sow love, pardon, faith, hope, light or joy in a vacuum, as a head-trip or heart-trip. We sow them in everyday ...

Sermon
Thomas Peterson
In our text Jesus makes a comparison between two different things: buildings and a person. The buildings he spoke of were of great importance, representing many resources. No doubt the excess wealth of the city or nation was required to build them. Many workers were conscripted to work on them. And, no matter big or small, they were always much larger, more solid, and of greater economic value than any of the persons who helped in their construction. In ...

Eulogy
Joe Barone
... , God told his people through Isaiah, “For you shall go out in joy, and be led forth in peace; the mountains and the hills before you shall break forth in singing, and all the trees of the field shall clap their hands.” We grieve today, and there’s no doubt we grieve. But we grieve in the face of the promise of a faithful, loving God. One time I heard a person say, “To forgive, first you have to be hurt.” What he was saying is that forgiveness is not easy. Until you’re hurt and hurt deeply, you ...

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... the Holy Spirit made us different from the old selfish sinners we have always been? Besides, where is the Holy Spirit? We have no extraordinary manifestations of the Spirit, no miracles happening, in this church. What are we to make of Jesus' words? No doubt about it, between references to the Holy Spirit and to keeping the commandments, we have a difficult text on our hands. Yet Jesus also points us to some fruitful insights about these matters, to a helpful image for understanding our daily Monday through ...

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... God and him only shall you serve." This third appeal to the Word of God by Jesus was the turning point. The devil, three times defeated, left him. Then angels came and ministered to Jesus. He had conquered. Never again would God's victory over evil be in doubt.4 What does it all mean for us? Of course, the story has meaning for us insofar as it has helped us to consider and become more aware of the temptations we face. We might have overlooked them, more easily fallen prey to them, had we not been reminded ...

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... us right here - plain as day. If Jesus had not ascended into heaven, God would not be with us in all of the good things of life that we experience. At least we could not be certain that he is with us in those events. There would always be that doubt that maybe they were all accidents, not a consequence of God's actions. Perhaps we might be led to conclude that it is only an accident that Betsey and the rest of my family love me (or that the loves in which you are engaged are merely accidents). Yet that ...

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... that Jesus and God the Father were encountering. People were just beginning to believe that Jesus was the Son of God, but it was a very fragile faith - one that could easily be shaken. Perhaps when Jesus was crucified on the cross, everyone would come to doubt his claims to such an extent, believe so firmly that it was all a hoax, that they would never hear the message of the resurrection - the real proof that Jesus was the Son of God. Of course, the resurrection would prove to everyone that Jesus really ...

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... at the Garden of Gethsemane (Matthew 26:37; Mark 14-33). Some believe, at least according to John's own version of the gospel, that John was the beloved disciple to whom Jesus actually entrusted his mother as he was dying (John 19:25-27). No doubt about it, these two sons of Zebedee were truly devoted to Jesus. It is believed that James met a martyr's death after being the early church's first missionary to Spain. And John continued to carry on a ministry with Peter in Jerusalem after Jesus' ascension ...

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... well in a sermon that he preached in 1518 on this very gospel story. About the love that Jesus showed Lazarus, Lazarus' family, and us, Luther said: "Let us therefore learn to know from the gospel how kindly Christ deals with us; then we shall without a doubt love him and avoid sinning and so see everything in a different light." Experiencing the love of Christ like we can in this gospel story of the raising of Lazarus from the dead makes you love Christ all the more. Luther says that it helps us to avoid ...

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... will surely discover yourself in the sinful passivity of the crowd that gathered around Jesus and Pilate. That crowd had a chance to free Jesus. They could have chosen him instead of Barabbas as the man whom they wanted to set free. This was, after all, no doubt the same crowd that just five days earlier, on Palm Sunday, had cheered Jesus wildly as he entered Jerusalem (Matthew 21:8-9.) Yet more recently, many in this crowd had been so convinced that Jesus was a prophet that they had made it impossible for ...

Sermon
Ron Lavin
... out this prayer long before it was written. In this prayer we, too, are challenged to be faithful by being willing to forgive. Lord, make me an instrument of your peace. Where there is hatred, let me sow love. Where there is injury, pardon. Where there is doubting, let me bring your faith. Where there is despair, let me bring your hope. Where there is darkness, your light. Where there is sadness, let me bring your joy. Grant that I might not so much seek to be consoled as to console; To be understood as ...

Sermon
Thomas A. Pilgrim
... and as we think of him on that road, we pray that we would be people who would also receive new sight and new insights. We pray Father, also, that as we offer our thanks may we also leave some other things here. May we leave any hurt feelings, pride, doubt, anger. May we leave here the desire to have our own way. May we take from here a new resolve to seek thy will and way. May we take away from here a fresh vision, some renewed hope, more faith, a deeper kind of love. Bless our sick and those ...

Sermon Aid
Glenn L. Borreson
... prayed, as they reflected on the future before the man and the woman, a few practical souls among them found themselves wondering: can a young man and a young woman find happiness in a place called (your town)? If there were any among the well-wishers who doubted, surely it was not the man and woman themselves. For them it was not even a question. They knew the answer, because in their love they shared the deep truth of a powerful secret. They had discovered, you see, that happiness was not tied to any one ...

Sermon Aid
Charles E. Wolfe
... to love. The love of ____ and ____ for God has not yet been made perfect. Their love for the brothers and sisters is not yet perfect. And their love for each other is not yet perfect. But they have made a start in all three directions. There is, no doubt, still a remaining tinge of fear in all three relationships, but their on going life in the Spirit of God tips the balance more and more on the side of love. At the end, our prayer for them is that they demonstrate that “there is no fear in love, but ...

Sermon
Robert Beringer
... asked that same question during the nightmare of the Babylonian captivity. But now Babylon has fallen, and a return to their homeland is at least a possibility! But without the confident words of faith spoken by Isaiah in our reading for today, it is doubtful whether the downhearted exiles would ever have plucked up enough courage to return. Second Isaiah is addressing people who are so used to bondage, they lack the initiative to venture forth, now that the prison gates are thrown open. But in words that ...

Sermon
John Jamison
... even more righteous than those guys over there!" The Pharisees smiled to each other, "More righteous than us? Who is he kidding?" The crowds looked at the group and chuckled, "More righteous than them? We get the point. Those guys certainly know the law, no doubt about it, but righteous? No way." The people respected the Pharisees as the keepers of the law. They kept it. They kept it tightly. They memorized it, and taught their disciples to memorize it. But follow it? That's another matter. As experts in ...

Matthew 1:18-25
Sermon
John Jamison
... bride" in Samaritan land. Mary Christmas. And take Mary off that donkey. If they were fortunate enough to have one, Joseph would have been riding, and Mary would have been walking along behind. The old culture is amused by our shock, but it is doubtful that we need to worry about it. Donkeys were "rich-folk" transportation, and these were "poor-folk" travelers. Remember later, when Mary and Joseph take their new son to the temple to present the offerings to God, thanking him for the birth? Leviticus states ...

Sermon
John Jamison
... wondered if those wise men really bought his story. Herod was good, but was he that good? We have all been on the receiving end of one of these stories one time or another, and know that some are convincing, and some are not. But knowing Herod, even if they doubted what he said it probably wouldn't have been too smart to say so. Just to be sure they caught on, God filled them in during a dream and they never sent the message to King Herod. They did find the baby, and they bowed down and worshiped him. They ...

Children's Sermon
Wesley T. Runk
... is, but I want to know that these boys and girls are really important. Because people forgot his name there are no stories in the Bible about Jude like there are about Peter and Paul or James and John. Jude is one of those people like you and me. I doubt if anyone will write a book about us so that people will remember us in 2,000 years, but I want you to know that you are important to a lot of people, and especially important to God. Jude was like you and me. No one will write about us ...

Sermon
Theodore F. Schneider
... . It was as if Jesus was "on a roll." Finally, things were coming together. Very soon they would be in Jerusalem! Jesus seizes the moment. He "strikes while the iron is hot," while they were hearing and watching. The things they were hearing, and no doubt were pondering, are several. Each one had its impact. There is the calling of Zacchaeus from the tree. How did Jesus know this was the very right time, the "kairos" for Zacchaeus? There is the conversion of Zacchaeus, no small wonder in itself, given the ...

Sermon
Theodore F. Schneider
... , giving him thanks." Luke's next words add to the impact of the apparent ingratitude of the others. "Now he was a Samaritan." Gratitude is spontaneous. It cannot be manipulated or cajoled. It cannot, apparently, be purchased. Today's gospel rightfully casts serious doubt on the validity of the oft-given counsel, "Count your blessings!" One of the greatest blessings God can give, the healing of leprosy, does not guarantee either a grateful heart or an act of thanksgiving. The rivers of our gratitude are fed ...

Sermon
Theodore F. Schneider
... they awaited a powerful vindication, God sought a merciful reconciliation, the redemption of his people. That was why Jesus kept company with those outside the definitions of the righteous; those who are well need no physician. Thus, the religious, sincere without a doubt, were at cross purposes with the gospel. Just as God loved the hopeless and the helpless, the Pharisees despised them. That's why the parable is told to those who "trusted in themselves that they were righteous and despised others." "I ...

Sermon
Theodore F. Schneider
... faith, through whom the faithful found inspiration and models for faithfulness, and for whom a continuing hymn of thanksgiving was appropriate. The ancient Te Deum Laudamus hymn, dating from this same period, continues to be a much-loved hymn across the church today. Though doubted by many scholars today, tradition has attributed this hymn to Saints Ambrose and Augustine on the occasion of Augustine's baptism in 387 C.E. In fact, some of the lines appear in a hymn of Cyprian dated in 272 C.E.1 Either way ...

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