Dictionary: Trust
Showing 2151 to 2175 of 4971 results

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... (Luke 24:29-31a).1 But once they had recognized him, Jesus vanished before their very eyes (Luke 24:31b). The events indicate Jesus was different. After his resurrection, nothing could stop him. He was no longer locked in by the boundaries of space and time. I imagine that there was a kind of glow of radiance, a glow of happiness, all around him (sort of like the way he looked when the transfiguration occurred [Luke 9:29; Matthew 17:2]). Perhaps that is why the two men never recognized him until they were ...

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... prepare ourselves for the new life of the Easter gospel by not placing too much emphasis on ourselves. Merely because we are active in the church or have lived good lives does not entail that we have earned God's love. Far from it. Nor should we imagine that a good tingly feeling about God or a sudden conversion is our ticket into heaven. We ought not to think this way, for salvation hinges on God. There is a positive side to this denial of any human contribution to our salvation, to such a de-emphasizing ...

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... on which to prepare a sermon/homily. To be sure, the miracle of the transfiguration reveals to us God's great power. Who else could do these great and mighty things but God? Indeed the power and glory of God are greater than we can even imagine. What great miracles he is able to do! On the other hand, the fact that God can do such great miracles like the transfiguration can be a little embarrassing for modern Catholics. For with the exception of a few Vatican-documented miracles by modern saints, God ...

Sermon
Ron Lavin
... generations will call me blessed; for he who is mighty has done great things for me, and holy is his name. And his mercy is on those who fear him from generation to generation. He has shown strength with his arm, he has scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts, he has put down the mighty from their thrones, and exalted those of low degree; he has filled the hungry with good things, and the rich he has sent empty away, He has helped his servant Israel, in remembrance of his mercy, as he spoke ...

Sermon
Ron Lavin
... chapter 4 of Luke: ...and they rose up and cast him out of the city, and led him to the brow of the hill on which their city had been built, in order to throw him down the cliff. But passing through their midst, he went on his way. Imagine it: mob violence, murder on their minds, rage feeding rage, the blasphemer who was pushed out the door of the synagogue out to the edge of the cliff suddenly turned and looked at the neighbors - turned gang - and then he walked through the midst of them. That's authority ...

Sermon
Richard Hasler
... sound? Is he not the one who goes around the nation holding free concerts on behalf of the small farmers who have come upon hard times in our day? Maybe you too can capture something of the mood of Micah’s prophecy if you can imagine him singing these words in a wailing cry on behalf of the oppressed of his day. Note some of the specific charges against the large landowners and public officials. He pictured them lying awake at night thinking up schemes to swindle the unsuspecting small farmers. Then ...

Sermon
Richard Hasler
... changes that will enrich our own adventure of faith. In our day when the Christian life often is depicted in soft, sentimental and simplistic terms it is refreshing to reread John Bunyan’s remarkable allegory, Pilgrim’s Progress. In his imaginative story Christian meets friends, such as Faithful and Hopeful, but he also encounters Worldly Wiseman, Hypocrisy and Giant Despair. Christian is never certain what might be around the next corner -- Vanity Fair or the Slough of Despond. He must be adaptable ...

Sermon
Thomas A. Pilgrim
... shows us the great contrasts which were so much a part of that resurrection experience. Those followers of Jesus - and all who loved him faced a sunset on that fateful Fri day. The sun went down on all their hopes and dreams. Jesus captured their imaginations, but the Roman soldiers captured him. Jesus gained their love and devotion, but the forces of hatred divided them. Jesus inspired the best in them, but now they have ex perienced the worst. Jesus had apparently claimed a victory, but now they have seen ...

Sermon Aid
Raymond Gibson
... Our Lord was no severe, austere killjoy. He was a human, a whole human as well as a holy human, and he enjoyed life to the fullest. He shared in the joy and happiness of the wedding because he had been invited — and it takes no large imagination to hear his hearty laughter and to see his warm smile as he wished the bride and groom happiness and health in their new life together. But something else occurred at that long-ago wedding. There, before the wedding company, he performed the first of his miracles ...

Sermon
Robert Beringer
... taught mathematics at the local university. One night he threw a party for some of his colleagues on the faculty. Upstairs his precocious little son, Pentagon, tried to sleep. As the little boy tossed fitfully, he began to dream. In his dream Pentagon imagined that he was suddenly in a world where everything had not only height and breadth, but depth as well. What a difference that made! Houses and trees and especially girls looked so different! Pentagon felt different. Life had a whole new dimension and ...

Sermon
Robert Beringer
... busy ones for Pete Richards as many customers finished their Christmas shopping. He was just about to lock the door of his shop on Christmas Eve when a woman hurried in. With an inexplicable start, Pete realized she looked familiar, yet he could not imagine having seen her before. Her hair was golden and her eyes were blue. Without speaking, she drew a package from her purse and asked, "Did this necklace come from your shop?" "Yes," said Pete, "they came from this shop." "Then I must return them, because ...

Sermon
Robert Beringer
... to forget what Christmas is really about. There are some words spoken long ago by the Prophet Isaiah that can help us grasp afresh the wonder of Jesus Christ coming into our world. Isaiah, when he first spoke these words could never have fully imagined a Messiah like Jesus Christ. But down through the long centuries, God's people have looked back to the names Isaiah chose to describe the hope of Israel - names like Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace - and felt those names ...

Sermon
Robert Beringer
... in the midst of the world's darkness. Wrote the prophet, "Darkness shall cover the earth, but the Lord will rise upon you and God's glory will be seen upon you." Many people like Herod and his court missed the coming of the Messiah, because they could not imagine the glory of God being revealed in a stable! J. B. Phillips reminded us many years ago in his little book, Your God Is Too Small. So many of us limit our glimpses of God's glory in everyday life because we simply do not expect the living God ...

Sermon
John Jamison
... trash of the city, and resembles Hell itself. "When you bring your gift to the altar, and remember that your brother has something against you, put down the gift, go fix what needs to be fixed, and then present your gift." There. There it is. Can you imagine that? Can you picture in your mind what would happen if everyone here, before we went any further with what we are doing, got up out of their seats, went and mended all their broken relationships? Picture it. Every person in this church who has a grudge ...

Sermon
John Jamison
... that at the moment of his death all 100 of the prisoners would be killed. He wanted to be sure people would cry at his funeral. Herod had the potential for good, but was driven by a nightmarish jealousy. If he saw any threat, real or imagined, he did whatever necessary to destroy it. Now, of course, the baby king was a real threat. These wise foreigners would unwittingly help him carry out the necessary destruction. I have always wondered if those wise men really bought his story. Herod was good, but was ...

Children's Sermon
Wesley T. Runk
... Jesus. One day when Simon was least expecting it, Jesus came and asked Simon to follow him. This was the time he was waiting for and he knew it. He told Jesus that he would be glad to follow him and that he would go wherever he went. Can you imagine how shocked Simon was when he listened to Jesus teach and preach about love and not hate? Jesus told Simon that he must love his enemies and that he must turn his cheek if he were hit on the one side of his face instead of hitting back. Hating a ...

Sermon
Sims Robert
... with sour, somber faces. We walk the road, even though it is difficult, with joy in our hearts and on our faces. The Shepherd King leads us. I want to let you in on a truly remarkable discovery. The Shepherd King not only leads us, he needs us. Can you imagine that? God needs you! The Almighty God, who created the universe and put the stars in their places, needs you. There are so many of his children who are hungry, lost, lonely, thirsty and in need. God turns to you for a hand that will reach out, a voice ...

Sermon
Theodore F. Schneider
... initiated confrontation with Jesus. Never had they been open to conversation. At least, so it seems! Rather incredible, isn't it? They abandoned every principle to destroy this one who clearly had powers none could equal. Nothing would be enough until he was dead. Imagine those who awaited the messiah and who hungered for Israel's vindication shouting, "We have no king but Caesar!" William Barclay notes: "A man comes to a sorry pass when he is afraid of the truth and when he sets his personal prestige and ...

Sermon
Theodore F. Schneider
... and a warm place to sleep. Failing to understand the homeless, either the people or the cause, and surely intimidated by a person-to-person, hands-on relationship with those so different, a great uneasiness developed within the congregation. Every possible disaster was imagined, including the fear of the spread of disease. Some members openly spoke of leaving the congregation. In one such conversation, a member of the council reached for a Bible and softly read to the group the words of Christ: I was hungry ...

Sermon
Theodore F. Schneider
... :27-31). Not only were the people of God to accept poverty, hunger, mourning, alienation and ridicule, but they were to work intentionally to do acts of love and reconciliation for the very ones heaping upon them the injuries and insults! By all standards of our imagination, such an ethic is neither sane nor realistic. Which of us could ever hope to do these things? The answer is clear. It is somewhere between few and none! But hold on! In those early centuries it happened all the time. It had begun on Good ...

Sermon
Theodore F. Schneider
... other side," or "in the new age," we would simply pick up where we had left off in our relationships, responsibilities, and all such. Two things must be observed: 1. Resurrection means that we are "raised again" from the dead. Death is real, not imagined. If we were still living, we would not expect to be "raised." 2. While the Bible is replete in assurances that relationships continue to be functional and faithful in our loving and caring, it is a different body and a different life, as the resurrection ...

John 20:24-31
Sermon
Erskine White
... in the world today? Can we recognize Him in our own hemisphere today, in neighboring nations like Brazil and Guatemala, Haiti and El Salvador? Can we see Him in the masses of peasants in those lands, who grow up in a poverty you and I can scarcely imagine? Half of their children die in infancy. They live in squalid mud huts and draw their water from filthy streams with garbage and raw sewage floating by. In the cities, they beg and panhandle. In the country, they work on land which is owned by the wealthy ...

Sermon
Erskine White
A young man followed Him, with nothing but a linen cloth about his body; and they seized him, but he left the linen cloth and ran away naked. (Mark 14:51-52) To understand what follows, cast loose your imagination for the moment. In this sermon, I am going to pretend that I am a Bible character who lived two thousand years ago, and I am writing a letter to the modern-day Christian church. The letter begins as follows: I. My name is John Mark. I was a witness ...

Mark 15:21-32
Sermon
Erskine White
... we have Jesus speaking to us in His own tongue. This is one of the few things Jesus said which comes to us undiluted and undefiled by centuries of translation: "Eloi, Eloi, la'ma sabach-tha'ni?" These words have always had a powerful hold on the imagination of the faithful, because this is just what the witnesses heard at Calvary. In these words, you can hear the Master's voice, you can feel like you were there when they crucified our Lord. "Eloi Eloi, la'ma sabach-tha'ni?" But more than the authenticity ...

Sermon
Jerry L. Schmalemberger
... deceased man come back to life said. We do know what a young man said when they came for the same purpose to claim Jesus’ body: “Don’t be alarmed!” Wow! Bad enough that William Bartelt of Hamburg got knocked out by a log, and then they found him alive! Imagine those women who saw Jesus killed on a cross and buried in a tomb with a rock in the door. Now the tomb was empty and he was gone. There had not been time to render the last service to the body of Jesus. The Sabbath had intervened and the ...

Showing results