Dictionary: Face
Synonyms: countenance, physiognomy, profile, features, expression, facial expression, look, appearance, air, manner, bearing, guise, cast, aspect, impression, grimace, scowl, wry face, wince, frown, glower, smirk, pout, moue, side, flank, vertical, surface, plane, facet, wall, elevation, dial, display, (outward) appearance, nature, image, front, show, act, false front, facade, exterior, mask, masquerade, pretence, charade, pose, illusion, smokescreen, veneer, camouflage, respect, honour, esteem, regard, admiration, approbation, acclaim, approval, favour, appreciation, popularity, estimation, veneration, awe, reverence, deference, recognition, prestige, standing, status, dignity, glory, kudos, cachet, effrontery, audacity, nerve, gall, brazenness, brashness, shamelessness, look out on, front on to, look towards, be facing, have/afford/command a view of, look over/across, open out over, look on to, overlook, give on to, give over, be opposite (to), accept, come to accept, become reconciled to, reconcile oneself to, reach an acceptance (of), get used to, become accustomed to, adjust to, accommodate oneself to, acclimatize oneself to, be confronted by, be faced with, encounter, experience, come into contact with, run into, come across, meet, come up against, be forced to contend with, beset, worry, distress, cause trouble to, trouble, bother, confront, burden, brave, face up to, meet head-on, dare, defy, oppose, resist, withstand, cover, clad, skin, overlay, dress, pave, put a facing on, laminate, inlay, plate, coat, line
Showing 2176 to 2200 of 4950 results

Luke 9:28-36 (37-43)
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... his use of the standard Lucan address "Master" for Jesus. It would seem that if Peter had truly recognized the glory present in this situation, he would have addressed Jesus with the more elevated term of "Lord." The final component of this event is the appearance of the cloud and the voice that emanates from it. The description Luke provides here of the cloud, an obvious sign of the divine presence, closely parallels that of Exodus 24:15-18, where the cloud that covers the mountain seems to be identical to ...

John 20:1-18
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... there is no faith (1 Corinthians 15:13). The resurrection record of today's pericope is part of a larger unit (20:1-31) which, after establishing the fact that the tomb is empty (vv.1-10), details the first three of Jesus' stunning post-resurrection appearances: first, to Mary Magdalene, 20:11-18; second, to the disciples, 20:19-23; and third, to Thomas, 20:24-29. While the New Testament does not give us an account of the Resurrection itself, only the effects of the Resurrection, John here supplies as many ...

Acts 16:16-34
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... army, any failure of duty was deemed reason enough to commit one final "honorable" act, suicide. Paul and Silas save the jailer's life by calling out to him and assuring him of their continued presence. The jailer's response to this situation appears abrupt. Although there is no evidence that he has heard the gospel message except, significantly enough, within the context and content of the hymns Paul and Silas had been singing this Roman jailer recognizes a demonstration of profound power and might when he ...

John 16:12-15
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... another promise of still "many things to say" strengthens the disciples' spiritual scaffolding. What Jesus means by "now" is the key to understanding this verse. "Now" does not appear to be based on the passage of chronos time which would suggest that there are chronological "laters" that will better suit Jesus' revelatory purposes. Instead, this "now" appears most like the "now" mentioned in 13:7. "Now" is simply not the right kairic moment. "Later" is determined not only by the passage of chronos time but ...

Luke 14:25-33
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... such conditions, he must be confident of victory, or else he seeks the alternative and "sends a delegation and asks for the terms of peace" (v. 32). At first glance, these parables do not seem to serve well Jesus' insistence upon self-renunciation. Indeed, the reverse appears to be true. These are accounts of self-actualized, self-assertive men who are determined to build or go to war and who are carefully counting the cost before doing so. Yet, the deeper point is made: The man who builds the tower and the ...

Jeremiah 32:1-3a, 6-15
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... from friends and family members. Despite the hunger and hardships placed on everyone by the siege, Jeremiah's status still entitled him to a steady ration of food (37:21) even though he was technically a prisoner. Now we can return to chapter 32. It would appear that the event described in today's text occurred between the first and second sieges of Jerusalem by Nebuchadrezzar's armies about 588/587 B.C. The text is presented in autobiographical style (v. 6, "The word of the LORD came to me") detailing the ...

Jeremiah 31:27-34
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... to fulfill the words of Jeremiah's own prophetic call in 1:10. Verses 29-30 recount a popular proverb, quoted earlier in Ezekiel 18:2 and alluded to in Lamentations 5:7. While Ezekiel rejected this proverb entirely, Jeremiah appears to accept its truth for the present but posits a different interpretation of it in the future. Verse 29 is a classic description of collective responsibility: The parents eat the sour grapes, but it is the children who suffer. The punishment for the sins of one are experienced ...

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... . The inference that Jesus draws in this case is that God, unlike the friend, does not need to be browbeaten into answering our prayers. "Ask, and it will be given you" (11:9). In today's reading, the point is the same, although the virtue of perseverance appears to be commended. A widow seeks justice from a judge who had "neither feared God nor had respect for people" (v. 2). His self-analysis as a person who had no "respect for people" could either be a reference to his impartiality as a judge or to ...

Matthew 3:13-17
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... John's confession all the more startling. Matthew 3:1-11 carefully presents John the Baptist as a serious, prophetic figure, his life and work foretold by Isaiah, his mission carried out with zeal and authority. When Jesus, a scruffy traveler from Galilee, appears before the impressive John seeking baptism, the Baptizer is transformed from a commanding figure to a humble servant. Indeed John is so awed by Jesus' presence that at first he despairs of even carrying out Jesus' wish. Jesus' response in 3:15 ...

Matthew 5:13-20
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... of nitrate fertilizers by once again returning to the ancient tradition of adding salt to croplands for increased fertility. (Alan Kreider, "Salty Discipleship," The C ther Side, March/ April 1989, 34-37). This use of salt - not as a tangy flavoring or a preservative appears to fit most readily with the rest of Jesus' message. Note that Jesus calls his listeners to be the salt of the earth (Greek ge). Ge is the root of the word "geology." Jesus' allusion, therefore, is to the literal earth - ground, dirt ...

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
Luke provides two versions of Jesus' Ascension. The first, given in Luke 24:51, appears to have occurred on Easter evening. Jesus' Ascension into glory provides a dramatic, uplifting ending to Luke's first ... a moment) Jesus is "lifted up." Events continue to pile on top of one another, for even "while he was going" the two "men in white robes" appear before the astonished disciples and begin chiding them for standing about staring. Perhaps it is the reprimand of the angelic figures that has kept the church ...

Matthew 10:24-39
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... be revealed and disclosed to all. The good news about Jesus, his identity and mission - at first held in confidence by the disciples - will shortly be proclaimed "from the housetops." Thus their fear of revealing Jesus too soon and unwisely is dismissed. Jesus appears to counsel that one type of fear is justified - "fear him who can destroy both soul and body" (v. 28). But he immediately disarms this potential threat with an analogy so ludicrous that no doubt remains about the safety of a loyal disciple ...

Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... neighbor's deed isn't visible until the weeds and wheat are both well developed. In verse 27 the focus of the parable now shifts from the state of the field to the reactions of the householder and his servants. The servants are mystified by the weeds' appearance. At first they surmise that the seed their master had planted was no good. But the householder makes it clear that the weeds are the work of an outside evil force. Immediately, the zealous hands want to rid the field of weeds, excising the evil from ...

Genesis 32:22-31
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... identity to this being - an act that empowers Jacob's opponent while weakening his own position. Once in possession of Jacob's name, the night visitor renames this patriarch Israel - a name that will now symbolize a new nation and a new people. This new identity appears to be given as a kind of prize - a trophy for Jacob's willingness to wrestle with all that comes his way, divine and human. Surely then, this nocturnal opponent has been God, for who else could bestow the name Israel on Jacob? On the other ...

Romans 12:9-21
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... hopes of punishing their enemies. The attitude taught by Jesus and (sporadically) practiced by Christians called for a different set of standards to be followed. Verse 17 picks up the theme from verse 14, giving as a partial reason for this attitude the goal of appearing "noble in the sight of all." While Old Testament texts also warn against doing evil to repay evil, Paul's directive has a difference. Only Paul follows the negative "do not" of verse 17a with positive commands - in verses 17b-18. Part of a ...

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... cleaning" the Hebrew slaves received as they crossed over the Red Sea on their way to the promised land in the first exodus. The description of John in verse 6 validates this wilderness theme once again. His dress and diet indicate his ascetic nature. John's appearance recalls that of both a Nazarite (Luke 1:15) and of Elijah himself (2 Kings 1:8, Zechariah 13:4). The Baptist's proclamation in verse 7 calls attention, not to John's low or (perhaps better) nonstatus as a wilderness character, but seeks to ...

Mark 1:14-20
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... near." In Mark's gospel, despite the dangers of misinterpreting the presence of the kingdom of God, the kingdom is a reality of the near or immediate future. The kingdom is the content of Jesus' first preached message. Indeed, Jesus' appearance and the appearance of the kingdom are practically one and the same. Throughout Mark, the content of Jesus' preaching is rarely defined. Though his healings, his teachings, his miracles are discussed in depth and detail, Mark usually seems content to simply state that ...

John 17:6-19
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... divisiveness among people. Jesus clearly asks the Holy Father to enable these followers to "be one" (v.11). The unity of spirit that defines Jesus' relationship to the Father is maintained by Jesus' use of the divine name while he was on earth. It may appear unusual that Jesus does not now name the gift of the Holy Spirit as the protecting, unifying presence to act on behalf of the disciples once he is gone. Chapter 14 had certainly already discussed that progression. However, here in direct prayer with the ...

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... "the ends of the earth." But the witness of this Pentecost Day is intended not only for the eras of those diaspora Jews gathering outside the disciples' now chocked-full upper room. In a form that recurs throughout Acts, Luke has a "translator" appear on center stage. The initial proclamation has been made. The crowd is already splintering into those who believe and want to hear more and those who cynically attribute all this jabbering to "new wine." As the crowd gets noisier and more confrontational, none ...

Mark 12:28-34
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... it is not surprising that the religious authorities, the Sadducees, Pharisees and scribes, banded together to try to discredit Jesus when he appeared at the temple a third time. The first three of these confrontations (Mark 11:27-33; 12:13-17; 12:18-27 ... from the kingdom of God" (v.34), it is clear that this "kingdom" reference is not to the eschatological age to come. Instead, it appears to refer more to a condition that exists here and now. The kingdom of God this scribe is ready for seems more like the ...

Mark 12:38-44
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... helper, the scribe, well-off and the widow herself quite destitute. Jesus then accuses these same corrupt and heartless officials of offering up long, impressive prayers, supposedly in the synagogue or temple or some other highly public place, merely for the "sake of appearance." Their prayers are not offered to God's ear but are uttered with great force and flourish in order to further impress those who can't escape hearing them. Jesus sums up the fate of these scribes by announcing that "they will receive ...

Revelation 1:4b-8
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... . While most scholars place it about 94 A.D., there are arguments for placing it in the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s. Certainly the content of Revelation has never been a subject for agreement. The stockpile of bizarre images and cryptic pronouncements appear to be both eschatological and historical, but where Revelation's interpretation of its own age stops and its predictions for the distant future begin is part of its delightful mystery. Few books in the Bible cause such powerful reactions among people as ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... , then as far as we are concerned they have the full right to question our legitimacy” (80). Remember how Jesus began his public ministry? By announcing “the kingdom of God has come near.” In other words, the kingdom has already appeared right in front of you! And what appeared right before those four sweaty, salt-encrusted fishermen? Jesus did. That’s right. The second feature of kingdom living is the awareness that the kingdom of God is not a place. The kingdom of God is a person - the person of ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... s promise. God placed a rainbow in the clouds. Whenever we see the rainbow we can remember God’s promise. There’s something special and hopeful about a rainbow, isn’t there? There are some things about rainbows that you may not know. “Rainbows appear at the end of rainstorms because it is then that you have the two prerequisites for making them: 1) water droplets suspended in the sky and 2) sunlight . . . A rainbow’s visible colors are always arrayed in the same order: red, orange, yellow, green ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... more needs to be said. Easter is an affirmation of Christ’s presence in our lives today. It is so good to know that Christ does live. We share in the joy of Mary Magdalene and Peter and all those disciples and devoted followers to whom the risen Christ appeared when death could no longer contain him. For you see, he lives in our hearts as well. There is a story told by a nun. She says that a few weeks before Easter there was a horrible accident in her community. While burning some branches in his garden ...

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