Dictionary: Trust
Showing 2201 to 2225 of 2666 results

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... and who suffered abuse at the temple was found again by Jesus and encouraged (5:14). So now, once this blind man is expelled from the synagogue (9:34), Jesus finds him again and commends his efforts. Since the man witnessed and accepted the signs, belief was an easy thing (9:38). His disposition to the sign was all-important. But for the Pharisees, whose minds were closed, the light could not penetrate. They became blind because they remained in the darkness (9:39). John 8:41 suggests we have personal ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... that Jesus does has one aim: to promote the glory of God (11:40). His audible prayer heard here (11:41–42; cf. 12:27) serves this purpose. Jesus is no miracle worker with simple powerful feats at his disposal. His deeds are signs that promote belief. They reveal something of God’s presence at work, and they illumine Christ as God’s divine agent. Burial cloths further confirm Lazarus’s death (11:44) and provide another parallel to Jesus’s burial (19:39–40; 20:5–7). The unusual reference to a ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... 16:26–27) because Jesus and the Father will be united with us (14:9, 23; 17:21). Proof that the disciples are not yet equipped—and need to be—can be seen in verses 29–33. They think they understand clearly (16:25, 29) and have full belief. But this cannot be theirs until the Spirit is on them. In fact, they will flee when the crisis of the cross is upon them (16:32). But Jesus understands the limitations of his people; when they grieve over their flight, their recollection of these words will bring ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... . In 21:20–23 the discussion of Peter’s martyrdom opens the subject of the beloved disciple’s death. The nature of Jesus’s comment (21:22) and the editorial notes of the writer (21:23) indicate that within the community of believers was a belief that John was going to survive until the second coming of Christ. But he did not. Here is evidence of the dismay that must have gripped the church during the eventual death of the apostles. Jesus’s words are repeated: disciples should continue to follow ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... 17–24 Paul evaluates the claim that the Mosaic law constitutes a fundamental advantage of Jews over Gentiles. First, he cites the claims of his Jewish dialogue partner (2:17–20). (1) He proudly calls himself a Jew, identifying himself with the beliefs, rites, and customs of the adherents of Israel’s Mosaic and prophetic tradition. (2) Jews rely on the law in the sense that it gives them comfort, support, and contentment. (3) Jews boast in God; that is, they are confident their special relationship ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... then, is there in being a Jew, or what value is there in circumcision?” (3:1), Paul has to grant that his dialogue partner has a point (“Much in every way!”)—Jews have indeed an advantage over Gentiles. The reason for this answer is Paul’s belief that the Jews have been given God’s authentic self-revelation (3:2; the phrase “first of all” implies further privileges, which Paul will list in Rom. 9:4–5). The second argument of Paul’s Jewish opponents, in verses 3–4, links the premise of ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... forth in Paul’s preaching (1:21–22). Thus, paradoxically, while the events proclaimed in the gospel may seem to be manifestations of foolishness and weakness when evaluated with the wisdom heretofore known to Jews or Greeks, it is only through belief in the saving wisdom of such apparent foolishness and weakness that any shall be saved (1:21, 24–25). In criticizing the effects of the Corinthian search for wisdom, Paul next urges his readers to consider the circumstances surrounding their conversion ...

1 Corinthians 9:1-27
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
The mention of restraint prompts Paul to recall that some at Corinth have begun to interpret his reserve as an indication that he is not free to act, as they presume an apostle would, without reference to the beliefs of others. The rhetorical questions he poses in response are not so much concerned with his defense as they are with the fact that this false supposition may cause the Corinthians to neglect his advice (9:1–27). So he must reestablish his apostolic authority through reference to his ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... The key factor for him was viewing his apostleship as divinely appointed and not a product of human decision (“sent not with a human commission nor by human authority” [TNIV]). Paul appears to be referring to his conversion experience and his belief that Jesus appeared to him, then, personally. Thus, Paul lists “Jesus Christ” first as the one through whom the commissioning was made, with “God the Father” as the ultimate source of the appointment. Though he acknowledges the greetings of others to ...

Galatians 1:11-24
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... “traditions of my fathers” (1:14), which would have involved intense study of the Scriptures and the teachings of the rabbinical sages. 1:15–17 · Conversion:What becomes clear is Paul’s emphasis on the full agency of God in his conversion. Paul reflects his belief that though his change in life appeared dramatically abrupt to him and to all who heard of it, such was not the case with God, who had prepared this very step as early as his appearance in his mother’s womb (1:15). Paul expresses this ...

Galatians 2:11-21
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... to the decisive act of love and sacrifice at the cross). Concluding this section, Paul appears to reflect a charge his opponents likely used against him. In viewing him as one who has rejected the law of God for a form of antinomianism (the belief that one is governed by no laws), they believe he has nullified the gracious acts of God in revealing himself to Israel through the law (see also Acts 21:20–26). However, as Paul indicates, their conclusion is based on the false assumption that righteousness ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
Confirming the belief that most of the letter was dictated is the notification in verse 11 that Paul writes the remainder of the letter “with my own hand.” In drawing attention to the “large letters” with which he writes, Paul may give us the final clue as to why, upon his initial visit, ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... of his favorite terms—“hope” (see 1 Cor. 13:13; 1 Thess. 1:3; 5:8). The terms “faith,” “love,” and “hope” are dynamic and active for Paul (see also 1 Thess. 1:3). Faith is rooted in Christ; it is not simply a strongly held religious belief. It involves personal trust and acts based on that trust. Love is not an emotional attachment to certain like-minded folk but a commitment to the well-being of all believers and then to the world. Hope is not merely the mental state of hopefulness (as in ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... Old Testament to signify the hope God’s people held for divine salvation and mercy (Isa. 59:11; see also Ps. 25:3; 27:14). The object of this waiting is Jesus, the one risen and slated to return (1 Thess. 4:13–18). Among the Greeks there was no belief in a resurrection. Pliny the Elder even says there are some things the gods cannot do, such as raise the dead (Natural History 2.5.27). But God did indeed raise Christ from the dead, and the risen one will return as the one “who rescues us from the ...

2 Thessalonians 2:13-17
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... ; Isa. 42:1; Matt. 12:18; Rom. 11:28; Eph. 1:4–5; Col. 3:12; 1 Thess. 1:4). The cause of the thanksgiving is this divine selection: “because God chose you as firstfruits to be saved through the sanctifying work of the Spirit and through belief in the truth” (2:13b). Calling them “firstfruits” alludes to the first portion of a harvest or the firstborn of animals, which were consecrated exclusively to God (Exod. 23:19; Num. 15:17–21; Deut. 12:6, 17). The election of God is that they might be saved ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... share his victory. In the meantime we must bear witness to our hope by both word and deed, remembering that our baptism was our pledge to God, to live with good consciences before him.Peter shares with Paul, and early Christians generally, the belief that authority and power in this world are earthly expressions of unseen fallen spiritual entities. Therefore, submission to secular authority as well as submission to all the constraints of earthly existence is a form of bondage to the powers of evil. Having ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... community, those who remain are encouraged by the elder’s affirming their anointing by the Holy One and their abiding in true knowledge. Community defection is the mark of their antichristic actions, but the elder goes on, then, to address their root problems resulting from their inadequate beliefs. 2:21–25 · Those who deny Jesus as the Christ lose the Father: In declaring again why he is writing (1 John 1:4; 2:1, 7–8, 12, 13–14, 21, 26; 5:13; 2 John 5, 12; 3 John 13), the elder affirms what he ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... whether it comes from positional or personal status is impossible to know. Whatever the case, he casts all his influence into the appeal for his audiences to “love one another” as a means of motivating righteous living, right belief, and right relationship with other believers. Therefore, amid the centrifugal forces of worldly temptations, community defections, and false teachings, the appeal to follow the loving commandment of the Lord becomes the centripetal force levied to create relational harmony ...

2219. Religion Changes the Way We See the Facts
Luke 17:11-19
Illustration
Brian Stoffregen
Rabbi Harold Kushner writes in his book, Who Needs God: "Religion is not primarily a set of beliefs, a collection of prayers or a series of rituals. Religion is first and foremost a way of seeing. It can't change the facts about the world we live in, but it can change the way we see those facts, and that in itself can often make a differences."

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... pregnant twice but had carried the babies only 8 to 10 weeks. She was now pregnant with the third, and was devastated by anxiety. She poured out in a torrent of tears her years of guilt over the premarital abortion, and her anguishing hell because of her belief that her loss of two babies was God’s punishment for her earlier sin. The couple made a commitment to Christ, accepted his forgiveness and allowed them to shut the door of that past sin and guilt. Most of our needs are not that dramatic, but rare ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... one day.” The man didn’t have a clue what the Eskimo meant by that until he talked to another man who had lived in the Arctic Circle for about twenty years. “He was a newspaperman who had written a book about the Eskimos and their customs and beliefs. He said the Eskimos believe that when they go to sleep at night they die‑‑that they are literally dead to the world. Then, when they wake up in the morning, they have been resurrected and are living a new life. Therefore, no Eskimo is more than one ...

Sermon
Robert Leslie Holmes
... of the Spirit, which is the word of God" (Ephesians 6:17). Furthermore, we remember the words of Jesus when he said, "Stay awake and pray that you may not come into the time of trial; the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak" (Matthew 26:41). Belief in God. The word of God. Pray to God. These are our weapons when temptation comes our way. We decide whether or not to use them. Here is how it works: Think of the kind of temptation that enters our psyche when our dream promotion is announced at work ...

Sermon
Robert Leslie Holmes
... . This sentence that takes only a jiffy to read takes an eternity to fully comprehend. It is short but not shallow! For a Pharisee, the notion that God's love extended beyond the Jewish race into the whole world turned his whole theological system of belief upside down. The Pharisees were lover-less. For the first time in his life Nicodemus was being confronted with a theology of love that demolished all the fences his sect had taught him throughout his life. A wonderful old Christian song "The Love Of God ...

Sermon
Robert Leslie Holmes
... this moment between the young man and Jesus. They ask Jesus, "Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?" (v. 2). Their question is typical because it was rooted in the logic of their world and, indeed, our world. The common Jewish belief was that suffering and affliction are always the fruit of some great sin. "Whom should we blame?" they wanted to know. With 24 good eyes they could not see! Like inquisitive three year olds, they want to know, "Why? Why? Why?" "Why is he like this ...

Sermon
Robert Leslie Holmes
... 11:26) "She said to him, 'Yes, Lord, I believe that you are the Messiah, the Son of God, the one coming into the world' " (v. 27). This question directed at Martha, the sister of Lazarus, is now directed to each of us. As Jesus expected her to affirm her belief, so he expects the same from us. Do we believe him? Do we know beyond a shadow of doubt that if we should die this very day we will spend eternity not in the grave but with Jesus in heaven? When we truly believe this, everything else in life becomes ...

Showing results