Dictionary: Trust
Showing 176 to 200 of 1066 results

Understanding Series
Iain W. Provan
... see the additional note on 1 Kgs. 13:33 for another place where death appears to be a metaphor for exile). Yet even in exile, there is hope. If contact with the great prophets of the past is maintained, through obedience to their teachings (we presume), death may yet be followed by unexpected resurrection (cf. Ezek. 37:1–14), defeat by victory. For God’s love is ultimately strong enough to overcome death. It is no coincidence that the first allusion in Kings to exile as an aspect of Israelite experience ...

Understanding Series
Leslie C. Allen
... 23, it lacks overt significance in Ezra 1–6. The associates of Zerubbabel were members of the laity (S. Japhet, “Sheshbazzar and Zerubbabel: Against the Background of the Historical and Religious Tendencies of Ezra-Nehemiah,” ZAW 94 [1982], pp. 66–98, esp. p. 84), presumably the first lay group mentioned in 2:70, who lived in the vicinity of Jerusalem. The description of Moses as the man of God refers to the divine inspiration of the Pentateuch. 3:3 “The peoples of the lands” (NJPS) is a general ...

Understanding Series
Leslie C. Allen
... played the same sort of game as their colleague Shemaiah. By this means justice would be done—such justice as the widow persistently pleaded for in the parable of Luke 18:1–8. 6:15–16 Nehemiah could now proudly announce the completion of the wall, presumably including the doors (v. 1; 7:1). It was a red-letter day, probably in early October 445. The extensive repair work, probably begun but not completed at an earlier period (Ezra 4:12), had taken only two months (fifty-two days), and so they must ...

Understanding Series
Timothy S. Laniak
... by the edict or by its architect and does not show any affective response. Haman is probably able to restrain his rage (v. 10) only with the thought that his well-crafted edict will unleash a widespread genocide of the Jews that Mordecai himself cannot escape. Presumably, Haman will never have to make his personal animosity public if he just waits for the edict to have its way. Patience, patience . . . Haman comes home drunk (NIV in high spirits, v. 9; see also 1:10; Judg. 16:25; 1 Sam. 25:36; 2 Sam ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... usually imply English future, but I take it that in v. 1, at least, this is an example of the Hb. idiom whereby a finite verb continues a participle but the participial meaning is kept—that is, the passage has present reference (see GK 116x). 17:3b Presumably the idea is “Aram will be reduced to a remnant and will thus experience the same fate as the glory of Israel.” Verses 4–6 then explain the latter. 17:5 The Valley of Rephaim is a fertile plain near Jerusalem. 17:9 NIV transposes clauses and ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... be taken from a warrior or captives be rescued from a righteous one?” The righteous warrior might be Yahweh, or Babylon as the agent of Yahweh’s judgment, or Persia as Babylon’s conqueror. Vv. 24–26 as a whole suggest Babylon. Presumably assuming the last, NIV has made the singular into a plural and followed other traditions (see mg.) in reading “fierce” for “righteous” as in v. 25, rather than reckoning that MT’s “righteous” is the “more difficult reading” (and therefore the more ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... suggest that here it is not because a prophet let a stream of consciousness have its way. It is, rather, because a number of separate prophecies have been accumulated at the end of the book. These different prophecies have overlapping themes, and this has presumably contributed to the arrangement. The prophecies also have a number of points of contact with 56:1–59:8, and this may have contributed to their placement here in the chiasm that comprises chapters 56–66 as a whole. Further, the way they rework ...

Jeremiah 40:1-6
Understanding Series
Tremper Longman III
... way. Nebuzaradan, on commission from Nebuchadnezzar, finds Jeremiah in the courtyard of the guard. He releases him into the care of Gedaliah. This is the story of 39:11–14. To provide a background for the events of 40:1–6, we would need to presume that somehow in the confusion of post-war Jerusalem, soldiers, not knowing that Jeremiah was given a free pass, take him to Ramah (a site identified with er-Ram, about five miles north of Jerusalem, or Ramallah, about 9 miles north), which apparently was a ...

Luke 1:39-45, Luke 1:46-56
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... to be the great saviors and victors they were meant to be. They undoubtedly dreamt proudly of the men they would become and how they would be revered by their people. In reality, Zechariah would be killed for sedition. His wife, Elizabeth, as Jewish folk tale presumes, may have fled with young John into the desert to the Essenes, in order to escape Herod. Mary and Joseph would flee to Egypt with their son. Only later would they return, and in his 30th year, Jesus would be reunited with his cousin, as the ...

Sermon
Will Willimon
... the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost." Did you say, lost? And the little man puts down his Irish lead crystal wine class next to the gold English bone china and ponders his real situation. Jesus has brought Zacchaeus off his high perch of presumed goodness and put him back down on the only place where he can truly receive Jesus into his house, as one of the lost, the least, the very little. I save, says Jesus, only the lost. In calling him a "Son of Abraham," Jesus in no way ascribes privilege ...

Psalm 82:1-8
Understanding Series
Craig C. Broyles
... which they are to ascribe “glory” (29:1–2, 9) to Yahweh as the divine king enthroned in his heavenly palace/temple (Hb. hêkāl, 29:9–10). In Job 1:6; 2:1 the “sons of God” (NIV, “angels”) “came to present themselves before the LORD,” presumably as servants of the king. A phrase characteristic of Yahweh’s praise is that he is incomparable among the “gods” (Exod. 15:11; Pss. 86:8; 95:3; 96:4; 97:9; 135:5). Deuteronomy 32:8 (in the Dead Sea Scrolls and the LXX, see NIV margin) tells ...

Sermon
Dean Feldmeyer
... pigs so a person could be saved from a self-destructive mental illness. Jesus gave the demons permission to enter the herd of swine and the pigs, immediately, stampeded over the nearby cliff and ran headlong into the sea where they were drowned and, presumably, the demons were drowned as well as their host died and they had no other into which they could escape. Jesus was merciful to the evil ones, giving them that for which they asked and they were, nevertheless, destroyed. Evil is destructive, and nothing ...

Sermon
Douglas J. Deuel
... one of us needs to take inventory and seek to determine: "What do we possess as a result of God's blessing?" For some of us, God's blessings have been so plentiful, it is difficult to delineate them. As a result, we take these blessings for granted. We presume they are a natural by-product of life itself. Often it is only in the face of adversity or some challenging experience in life that we are able to see how blessed we have been. As we take inventory of our lives, we will recognize our blessings and be ...

Sermon
Douglas J. Deuel
... to enable us to overcome the difficulties of life in this world. After kneeling and praying, Peter turned to the body and said, "Tabitha, rise" (Acts 9:40). Tabitha responded by opening her eyes and sitting up. Then she took Peter's hand and stood up. Presumably, during Peter's prayer time he sensed that God would use him to raise up Tabitha. If this encounter would have occurred today, perhaps Peter would have needed to test the waters before acting. He may have wanted to call a meeting of the church's ...

Sermon
Douglas J. Deuel
... not look too promising. There was no synagogue or building in which to meet. A small group of only women had gathered to hear Paul. Yet this grew to be one of the strongest and most generous of all the churches founded by Paul. Lydia, presumably, played an important part in its development and growth. The Community The third thing that we discover in this passage is that, following her conversion, Lydia immediately became a part of the community of faith. She did not have to play a seniority game, gradually ...

Sermon
J. Will Ormond
... in this story except to say that he is in great contrast to the Pharisee. He, too, went to the temple to pray. But his posture and actions showed no arrogance nor pride. Humbly he stood apart from those whom he knew were more righteous than he. He did not presume to look in the direction of God's dwelling place, but stood with downcast eyes. He beat upon his chest as a sign of remorse. He was one of those people whose self-esteem was out of hand in a far different direction than that of the Pharisee. This ...

Drama
Robert F. Crowley
... : What is that that you carry? Is that your hope? \nAGAMUSE: It is.\nALEXANDER: Bring it to me. (AGAMUSE CROSSES TO ALEXANDER) Mud! \nYou have brought me a pot of mud! What trickery is this? \nAGAMUSE: No trickery, honored King. I would not presume. This \nis the sacred mud from the Oracle at Delphi. \nALEXANDER: This is the sacred mud?\nAGAMUSE: None other.\nALEXANDER: Then read to me what the mud is saying.\nAGAMUSE: (STICKING HIS HAND IN THE MUD AND SWIRLING IT AROUND) \nI see something. \nALEXANDER ...

Sermon
Maurice A. Fetty
... been sent from Jerusalem as a fact-finding team, accused him of blasphemy, claiming only God had power to forgive sins. More than that, God forgave people only after they had done enough acts of penance to deserve forgiveness. Who did Jesus think he was, anyway? Was he presuming to be God? Jesus replied, "Well, would it be easier to say you are cured. Take up your bed and walk," which is precisely what the ex-paralytic did. The one who had been borne on the stretcher now was bearing it. The Son of Man does ...

Sermon
Robert A. Hausman
... with the word of God. Israel's religious exercises were empty and meaningless, compromised by idolatrous adaptations. The rulers were self-serving, the priests were cynical, and the people indifferent. Israel had to learn that it could not manipulate God, that it could not presume upon God's promises, that it was not immune to God's wrath. Jeremiah was called to preach God's law, and that was doubly difficult since there were false prophets at that time who had more popular texts to preach on. They said ...

Luke 7:36-50, Galatians 2:11-21, 1 Kings 21:1-29, Psalm 5:1-12
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
Forgiving Debts Two of the most difficult practices which emerge in Jesus' ministry are forgiveness and gratitude. A frequent charge against Jesus was that he preempted the prerogative of God when he presumed to forgive sins. It is difficult to know which is harder to do: to forgive another or to forgive oneself. Lavish expressions of gratitude for acts of forgiveness are rare. Persons do not like to admit their indebtedness. If we owe someone gratitude for something that he has done for ...

Luke 10:25-37, Colossians 1:1-14, Amos 7:10-17, Psalm 82:1-8
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... meets the needs of a Jew who was beaten and robbed by thieves. He then puts the question to the lawyer as to who was the neighbor. He lets the lawyer in effect answer his own question. Precis of the Parable Jesus tells the story of a man, presumably a Jew, who traveled from Jerusalem to Jericho. The road winds down through a wilderness area where thieves attacked the man, beat him, robbed him, and left him nearly dead. Two Jewish officials, a priest and a Levite, happened to pass by, saw the man, but moved ...

Psalm 79:1-13, 1 Timothy 2:1-15, Jeremiah 8:4--9:26, Luke 16:1-15
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... with him, he can buy a little time before he turns them over to his master. That will afford him some opportunity to consider his options. 4. "Cannot Be My Manager." (v. 2) The rich man immediately relieves the manager of his position. The manager knows it, but presumably it was not yet made public so no one else is aware of it. This enables the manager to continue to act as though he has authority to revise contracts. 5. "Ashamed to Beg." (v. 3) Begging was the safety net of the time. People who could not ...

John 15:1-17, 1 John 4:7-21, Acts 8:26-40, Psalm 22:1-31
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... jelly. The second year she felt it was too much to harvest and process so she gave many of the grapes away to neighbors and friends. The third year they did not want that many grapes. So in the spring she proceeded to cut back the vines radically, presuming that they would not produce as much. Instead the vines had new growth and the harvest was even more abundant than before. 5. Why Prune? · Not only vines but also other fruit trees need to be pruned. The secret of pruning is to cut back excess growth so ...

Sermon
Robert Beringer
... Christians are so casual about spiritual preparation. Look at how quickly we affirm the need for preparation in every other area of life: Who would even think of trying to become an Olympic athlete without years of hard work and preparation? Who would presume to judge a symphony orchestra without spending years in the study of music? Was it not Thomas Edison who once said, "Genius is 2% inspiration and 98% perspiration"? The same is true for the spiritual journey. If we would experience the Living God ...

Matthew 5:17-20, Matthew 5:13-16
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... placed it on a lampstand so that it would light the whole room, usually only one room for the household. They had to conserve resources so a lamp had to provide maximum usefulness. 10. "Good works." (v. 16) Citizens of the kingdom of heaven are presumed to do good works. They are evidence of the character of the kingdom's members. Good works should be self-evident signs of kingdom citizenship. The beatitudes are not just nice ideals; they should become operational in good works. 11. "Glory." (v. 16) The ...

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