Dictionary: Trust
Showing 151 to 175 of 1073 results

Matthew 18:21-35
Sermon
Wayne Brouwer
... others looking on as they practice their piety. It is a group of otherwise undescribed folks who notice how the forgiven debtor treats the man who owes him a little. These people also report the man's actions to the king who had originally laid aside the huge obligation that could never have been paid. In telling this part of the story, Jesus reminds his disciples and us that the goal of any spiritual formation in our lives is not merely to make us feel good, or to give us a sense of accomplishment. This is ...

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... of his Sabbath day actions leaves the lawyers and Pharisees speechless. In the wake of their silence Jesus begins a discourse that will reveal to those present just how different the kingdom of God is from the world of carefully scripted social obligations these diners are used to. While the Pharisees and lawyers present may have been “watching” Jesus, it becomes obvious he was watching them as well. Indeed, Jesus has been monitoring the guests’ quests for the best seats in the house, “the places ...

153. The Ties That Bind
Isaiah 49:15
Illustration
Bruce Shelley
... borne? Though she may forget, I will not forget you!" (Isaiah 49:15) The Bible indicates the covenant is more like the ties of a parent to her child than it is a doctor's appointment. If a child fails to show up for dinner, the parent's obligation, unlike the doctor's, isn't canceled. The parent finds out where the child is and makes sure he's cared for. One member's failure does not destroy the relationship. A covenant puts no conditions on faithfulness. It is the unconditional commitment to love and serve ...

Jeremiah 33:1-26
Sermon
Derl G. Keefer
... body; and while he was paying for his freedom, he was permitted to labor where and for whom he pleased. He discovered that Ohio paid better wages so he decided to travel there for work. When the Emancipation Proclamation be­came law he was freed from any obligation to his master. But this man continued to work until he had enough money to pay the full price of his freedom. He walked the greater portion of the distance back to where his old master lived in Virginia and placed the last dollar, with interest ...

Philippians 3:17 - 4:1
Sermon
Steven E. Albertin
... purposeful life or be happy or be somebody. Why? Because God has already given me that in Jesus Christ! It is a pure gift. What I can never achieve on my own, God freely gives me with no strings attached, no conditions to be filled, or obligations to be met. Immediately there are always those in the class who raise their eyebrows. If they are especially bold, they might even protest. Even lifelong Christians in the class might be uncomfortable with this answer. "But, pastor, I have to do something, don't I ...

1 Kings 21:1-10 (11-14) 15-21a
Sermon
Stephen P. McCutchan
... would have little control over whether the neighbor respected the property or not. Like Naboth, we as a nation and as individuals have to decide whether what we have is a trust or a possession. If what we have received in this life is a possession, then we have no obligation to others or any future generations. We are free to exploit it for what we can get now. But, if all that we have is on loan to us for a higher purpose intended by God for all generations, then our lives are to be lived according to that ...

Matthew 20:1-16
Sermon
James Merritt
... to get. However, all of these workers have one thing in common. The master did not have to hire any of them. He could have gone to another town. He could have gone to a different marketplace. He could have hired totally different workers. He was under no obligation to hire any of these individuals or all of these individuals. He was gracious to invite any of them, to call any of them, or to hire any of them. I remember reading about one of my favorite Presidents, Calvin Coolidge. Coolidge was a man of few ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... about the rumor around town that he’d changed his ways. Hamblen told John Wayne that it was no secret what God had done for him and that God could do it for Wayne, too. Wayne said that sounded like a song and suggested Hamblin put it to music. Hamblen obliged. And his song became an enormous hit. Some of you will remember it. It went like this: “It is no secret what God can do. What He’s done for others, He’ll do for you. “With arms wide open, He’ll pardon you. It is no secret, what God ...

Mark 9:33-37
Sermon
King Duncan
... word “diakonos” suggests one who attends to the needs of others freely and willingly. This is quite in contrast to “doulos” which refers to one who acts in servitude and under obligation and compulsion. This is an important distinction. We are to serve God and others freely and joyfully out of a sense of love and not a sense of obligation. It is interesting how Jesus made his point. He set a child among the disciples (it has been suggested that this might have been Simon Peter’s child). Taking the ...

Sermon
Maurice A. Fetty
... in today's society? Are the lawyer, the priest, and the Levite better models? Whom should we emulate? I. Consider the lawyer. It was his question that precipitated Jesus' story. After all, he was asking afresh, just who is my neighbor? Who am I obligated to help? If the second great commandment says love thy neighbor as thyself, who is to be considered my neighbor? David surely wondered about that as he drove to see his lawyer to prepare his defense. The lawyer of Jesus' day would have been knowledgeable ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... the church. They were to be a light for the Gentiles (v. 47). That one Servant Song should be interpreted thus and another, the last, of the Messiah (see disc. on 8:32–35 and notes) may seem odd, but the Jewish (and Christian) exegete felt no obligation to be consistent in the interpretation of Scripture. It had been necessary, Paul and Barnabas declared, that the word of God should be spoken first to the Jews (v. 46), for the promise had been to them; and in any case, this had been the pattern laid down ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... act of praying or the place in which it is done, in the latter sense sometimes denoting a building (e.g., a synagogue). But Luke’s use of the word here probably means that there was no building, just a regular meeting spot in the open. When Jews were obliged to meet in this way, as far as possible they would do so near a river or the sea to facilitate their ceremonial washings, and so at Philippi, it would seem. Here Paul and his companions found some women—the absence of men may explain the lack of a ...

Galatians 3:15-25, Galatians 3:1-14
Understanding Series
L. Ann Jervis
... (the man who follows the law) will live (by the law) 3:13 cursed is everyone (who is hung from a tree) The semantic effect of the chiastic arrangement of the scriptural quotations is to move from speaking of the law’s curse on those who do not fulfill the obligations of the law (3:10) to the law’s statement that the righteous one is the one who lives by faith (3:11) to the problem that the law requires those who participate in law to live by works of law (3:12) to the solution that Christ provided ...

Galatians 5:1-15, Galatians 5:16-26
Understanding Series
L. Ann Jervis
... use his name within a letter. Usually his name occurs only in the opening and sometimes at the closing of his letters. 5:3 The word declare, marturomai, could also be translated “protest.” Both the rabbis and later Christians regarded circumcision as the step that obliged one to obey the entire law. The rabbis say: “A proselyte who accepts all commandments of the Tora except for one is not accepted; R. Yose son of Rabbi Yehuda says: even (if it concerns) a detail of the niceties of the Scribes.” (t ...

2 Thessalonians 2:13-17
Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... (another so-called wish-prayer, see disc. on 1 Thess. 3:11–13), with Paul praying that God, Father and Son, would encourage and strengthen the Thessalonians. 2:13 To begin with, the wording is almost identical with 1:3 (see comment on that verse), expressing the obligation that the missionaries felt always to thank God for the Thessalonians. The use of the emphatic pronoun (not in 1:3) and the placing of the verb in a more emphatic position than in 1:3 may be a way of underlining just how strongly this ...

2 Thessalonians 3:6-15
Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... to reciprocate with an expression of gratitude, and something of this sort may have lain behind the situation that Paul was addressing. Russell continues: Paul’s converts included the urban poor, and some may have … formed a client relationship and obligation to a benefactor. Once brought into the circle of Christian love, they could have appeared to outsiders to be idle beggars who exploited the generosity of the Christian community without any sense of reciprocal response to their new benefactors. If ...

Understanding Series
Cheryl A. Brown
... aliens, these were bona fide Israelites. The next phrase should be set off by itself (contra NIV), because it is very strong in Hebrew: “But no one took them into his home for the night.” There no one in the city who took seriously his covenant obligations! In a story that has many obvious parallels to Genesis 19, here too we hear echoes . . . echoes of Abraham’s relentlessly haggling with the angel of the Lord, trying to persuade him to not destroy the city if such and such a number of righteous men ...

Understanding Series
Michael S. Moore
... have had on Ruth’s heart. The verb translated stay is the same verb translated “cling” in 1:14 (dabaq). Boaz wants Ruth to cling to him as tightly as she now clings to Naomi. To hyperegalitarians this undoubtedly sounds patronizing, but Boaz is under no obligation to do a thing for this foreign widow. To shepherd Ruth into the fold of his servant girls is an act of grace. Boaz is trying to help Ruth, not manipulate her. His intention is to move Ruth away from the precarious role of “foreign woman ...

Esther 9:20-32
Understanding Series
Timothy S. Laniak
... Abihail, and Mordecai the Jew wrote their letters. Both Esther and Mordecai are recognized in terms of their Jewish identities within the Persian context. Esther is understood as the coauthor of (and the ultimate authority behind) the earlier letter Mordecai had composed obligating the community to continue the holiday (vv. 20–22). Copies of a follow-up letter were sent to confirm the observance of Purim (v. 29). These letters go out as words of goodwill (shalom) and assurance (?emet, v. 30). This pair of ...

Understanding Series
Pamela J. Scalise
... torah). God had granted to Phinehas, a descendant of Aaron, and to his descendants a covenant of lasting priesthood, a covenant of peace, because of his zeal for God’s honor (Num. 25:10–13; cf. Mal. 2:2, 5). But Malachi gives the label “covenant” to the special obligations and provisions for all the priests, who are Levites, as set forth in the law (e.g., Deut. 17:8–13; 18:1–8; Num. 18). The ideal priest revered the Lord and stood in awe of the Lord’s name, for God had kept covenant by giving ...

Understanding Series
Pamela J. Scalise
... Kgs. 14:6; Deut. 24:16). Josiah, however, is the one leader of whom it is written that he “turned to the LORD . . . in accordance with all the Law of Moses” (2 Kgs. 23:25). The few words of Malachi 4:4 call to mind the gift and obligation of the covenant as well as the major figures in the Pentateuch and Former Prophets—Moses, Joshua, David, and Josiah. Malachi 4:4 repeats their valedictory wisdom to the people of God in the fifth century B.C. and beyond. References to covenant law abound in the short ...

Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... oneself under a curse by passing between the pieces did not arise until the first millennium B.C. In the earlier period this rite was to create a new relationship. 15:18–21 A summary statement provides clarity and emphasis. Through this covenant God is obligated to give this land to Abram’s descendants (“seed”). He then defined the boundaries of the land to be from the river of Egypt to the . . . Euphrates. In other texts the southern boundary was the Wadi of Egypt, or the Wadi el Arish (Num. 34 ...

Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... the sheep. That strenuous task required numerous laborers and took several days. Jacob knew that it would be some time before his departure would be detected. In addition, by leaving at the end of the annual contract, he was not under any legal obligations to Laban. Rachel took advantage of her father’s absence to steal the household gods, which were small household statues. These gods were thought to bring good fortune and fertility as well as protection during a journey. The one in possession of the ...

Understanding Series
Christopher J. H. Wright
... requirement on “neighbors” (NIV fellow Israelites) and kinsfolk. Loans to or by foreigners, who had no stake in the land but were probably traders, were treated differently from loans within the landkinship network of Israel. Within the latter context, the covenant obligation was paramount, and so the debt-release law is sanetioned by linking it with the Lord of the covenant, Yahweh: (lit.) “Yahweh’s release has been proclaimed” (v. 2b). This law is thus a perfect example of the combination of the ...

Ezekiel 4:1-5:17, Ezekiel 6:1-14, Ezekiel 7:1-27
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... failing in their charge of teaching Torah (Hos. 4:6; see also Hos. 4:1–2, where the people in ignorance violate the Ten Commandments). In the same way, Ezekiel condemns the priests here in verse 26 (see also 22:26–28). Scripture is very clear regarding the obligation of the priests to teach Torah (e.g., Lev. 10:10–11; Deut. 33:8–10; 2 Kgs. 17:27–28; 2 Chr. 15:3; Ezek. 44:23–24). To know, observe, and teach the law is their fundamental responsibility. Ezekiel’s critique in verse 26, then, is ...

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