Dictionary: Trust
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Drama
Dave Marsh
... . Gray down the stairs so she could get her mail. Next, there’s those cute little kids at the park that I bought ice cream for and helped them find their dog Fluffy. Next, there’s the large donation I made to the Foundation for vertically challenged little people of the South Pacific. (starts to get weepy) Excuse me, but this is all so emotional. (pulls out a hanky) Brett: Thank you. Next, there was the baby I delivered in a phone booth amidst a gang war. Next, there’s testifying against Jimmy “The ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... ." Matthew and Mark also contain an account of this strange occurrence, with some minor variations in the telling. It’s one of those rare moments we were just talking about, one of those mountaintop experiences of life, which somehow defy adequate description and challenge us to stretch our concept of reality to the point that we usually wind up asking the question, "Did this really happen?" Events such as the Transfiguration somehow connect us with the mystery of creation and eternity. For Jesus it was a ...

Luke 20:27-40
Sermon
Brett Blair
... Roman issue. Mixed up in all of this was the protection of the old traditions. It is hard for us to understand why people would hate Jesus. We see him as a man who loved and healed and who was, in essence, a pacifist. But Jesus also challenged the old ways. His prediction of the destruction of the Temple and the driving out of the moneychangers cast him as anti establishment. So this conference was called not in an attempt to plot to assassinate Jesu but rather to discredit him. They did not want a martyr ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... Wednesday, the day of transition, and Thursday, the day of fellowship. Jesus’ final week can be divided into three phases. The first two days of the week find the masses in a mood of acceptance and praise. The middle of the week they began to question and challenge. By the end of the week their attitude had completely changed to rejection and crucifixion. Wednesday is the day in between. It is the day I like to refer to as the day of transition. Jesus knew this change was coming. So, on Wednesday he went ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... his mind. To announce God’s reign, he would have to go to the center of earthly power. What caused Jesus to journey to Jerusalem? I First, he knew who he was. Someone once asked Martin Luther what gave him the fortitude he needed to challenge the Roman Catholic hierarchy and unjust principalities. His answer: “I have been baptized.” His identity came through his relationship with God. When we understand our identity and our belonging, it goes a long way to give us courage. In the early 1920’s Philo ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... faith. Three small steps make up our journey of faith. I The first small step is learning to forgive. I want to start here because this is the one that is misunderstood the most. We are told from childhood up that we are always to forgive. Let me gently challenge that piece of advice by reading Jesus’ own words. Listen and see if you can catch it. He said, “If your brother sins rebuke him, and if he repents, forgive him. If he sins against you seven times in a day, and seven times comes back to you and ...

Sermon
James W. Moore
... And why do some of the best prayers seem to go unanswered? Now, all of these difficult questions prompt us to raise yet another crucial question: What can we count on from God? When we face the troubles of the world, the heartaches of life, the tough challenges of this existence… what can we count on from God? This parable in Luke 18 points us toward an answer. At first glance this parable is confusing to a lot of people. It does sound pretty strange when we first hear it. The parable involves two people ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... Roman issue. Mixed up in all of this was the protection of the old traditions. It is hard for us to understand why people would hate Jesus. We see him as a man who loved and healed and who was, in essence, a pacifist. But Jesus also challenged the old ways. His prediction of the destruction of the Temple and the driving out of the moneychangers cast him as anti establishment. So this conference was called not in an attempt to plot to assassinate Jesu but rather to discredit him. They did not want a martyr ...

Sermon
Eric Hudson
... dignity for the victims. At one point, we are told, the donations through the Disasters Emergency Committee were hitting a million pounds an hour. What an achievement! I hope we’ll all be helping unstintingly in this disaster above all disasters. So here’s a challenge: not one that everyone will be able to undertake, but many of us could, if we had a mind to. Will you think about joining me in giving £100 or more to the Disasters Emergency Committee? Do it not because you can afford it, but perhaps ...

Sermon
Dr. Boyd E. Wagner
... and in her devotion. Prayer determines our next move. Sometimes our religion as it begins in discovery and in adventure ends up in a Christ-like character. That’s the intent. It is true, that in our prayers and worship we are not always challenging our smallness and our prejudice. Sometimes we are satisfied with being devoted or being religious. In true religion there is no separation in devotion and service. They are all directed to the same end. Looking at this, there is another thing that we need ...

John 3:1-21
Sermon
David E. Leininger
... , the faith of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, the faith of our fathers for hundreds and hundreds of years. Our task - one handed down from generation to generation since Moses - is to provide guidance for the people in matters pertaining to God, to oversee worship and to challenge any who would seek to lead the nation astray. I came by my position naturally. I was born into one of the most respected families in Jerusalem and so had the benefit of orthodox training from my youth. I was educated in the best of the ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... wrath of Zeus, and was bound with chains to a rock where he was tormented by a vulture who tore at his liver by day, and tormented by the cold each night as the liver healed only to be clawed again in the morning. Zeus would not be challenged. There would be no supermen. "Remember, you are dust, and to dust you shall return." In its own way, Greek mythology told that to the ancients. Scripture says it quite plainly to us. Like Prometheus, we too are bound. The Lenten journey which begins with Ash Wednesday ...

Genesis 45:1-28
Sermon
David E. Leininger
... finish imaginable. Going into the last lap, Richard was running 30 seconds behind the two leaders. All at once the car in second place tried to pass the No. 1 man on the final stretch. This caused the first car to drift inside and force the challenger onto the infield grass, and slightly out of control. The offended driver pulled his car back onto the track, caught up with the leader, and forced him into the outside wall. Both vehicles came to a screeching halt. The two drivers jumped out and quickly got ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... several weeks have brought with them equally stunning clarity about what matters and what does not. Our lists may not match but at least we are working on them, many of us with a level of humility that is entirely new to us. Every time I hear a presidential challenge to return to normal, my heart skips a beat. I do not want to go back to the way things were.(4) She has something there, doesn't she? There are things about us that needed to be changed. Many still do. This weekend President Bush has written ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... should be in force to see that ALL citizens have a chance for their due...a home, family, and an opportunity for a decent life. The task of the church, you and me, is to insist that society address these questions, and further, to challenge our elected officials with our lobbies and our votes and our willingness to participate in the electoral process to see that justice is done. Some years ago, Henry Kissinger, the former Secretary of State, and William Sloane Coffin, at the time the minister of ...

Deuteronomy 6:1-25
Sermon
David E. Leininger
... (although not nearly enough) do help people grow and mature in their faith. The research mentions a half-dozen factors. Listen to them and see if they describe your church. Here they are: 1. Members grow in a congregation that encourages questions, challenges thinking and expects learning. Do we do that here at First Presbyterian? I hope so. My only concern is that phrase "expects learning." I expect you to learn, but do you expect you to learn? 2. The congregation successfully recruits members to ...

1 Kings 2:1-12, 3:1-15
Sermon
David E. Leininger
... the king's court. "Indeed," said wise King Solomon. "That shows she is the TRUE mother-in-law."(2) Uh huh. We could certainly use statesmen with the wisdom of Solomon these days. There are so many seemingly insoluble problems out there. That would be challenge enough, but some of our recent experience beggars the imagination. We went to war to preserve the world's ability to prevent war. We ignored the United Nations in order to make clear to Saddam Hussein that the United Nations cannot be ignored. We are ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... Naaman almost blew it. He almost let his preconceptions pre-empt his healing. Naaman could not imagine God working in any way other than what HE had envisioned. He came close to missing out. Is that a danger for you and me? You know it is. Naaman's attitude challenges our own response to circumstances in our lives. We all have hurts and hopes, and, like Naaman, we all have our ideas as to how God will handle them. The problem might be physical, or it could be something in our home or family or job or church ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... thousands of children born on the day of the six-billionth. They are far more likely to face lives of poverty and illiteracy than tolerance and understanding, especially in developing countries. One-third will not even live beyond age five. The challenge facing the world, Anan said, is to find "the will" to feed, clothe and house every inhabitant of Earth. Amen. News like this lends itself to lots of theologizing. As the Secretary-General suggests, questions about poverty and wealth and our responsibility ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... Everest's summit. Here was a mountain - unreachable, tantalizing, fearsome, deadly - that had defeated 15 previous expeditions. Some of the planet's strongest climbers had perished on its slopes. For many, Everest represented the last of the earth's great challenges. The North Pole had been reached in 1909; the South Pole in 1911. But Everest, often called the Third Pole, had defied all human efforts - reaching its summit seemed beyond mere mortals.(2) Now success. And heightening the impact even further ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... what we hear from some quarters, we are a better society when that variety is constitutionally protected. But each of those expressions have moral standards, and we will be a better people when those shared standards are taken seriously. In his 1961 Inaugural, President Kennedy challenged us to "Ask not what your country can do for you but what you can do for your country." Perhaps the BEST thing we can do is make that personal commitment to lives lives that are pleasing to our Lord, then demonstrating that ...

Matthew 14:13-21
Sermon
David E. Leininger
... feel called to take a risky stance on some issue. What is one person, anyway? When accompanied by Jesus, one person can be a majority. Christ says to all: "Bring them to me" - your hopes, your dreams, your convictions. "Bring them to me" - your burdens, your challenges, your responsibilities. For he who took a paltry lunch bag from a little boy and fed the multitude near Bethsaida can do it again, even with the meager resources in OUR lunch bags. When life gets the best of us, perhaps it is often because we ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... hero is certainly not the object of the church's veneration on this feast day of St. Michael and All Angels. But spiritually, the movie says something important to this cynical, jaded society that continues to shape us and regularly threatens to bring us down. It challenges us to look for the small joys that abound everywhere. It reminds us of the ABUNDANT LIFE that Jesus came to bring us. And it says one more very important thing: "Remember Sparky, no matter what they tell you, there is no such thing as ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... ! Can we equally adjust our thinking as relates to our Christian discipleship? I think we can...if we put our minds to it. Public worship can be a joy as creativity joins music and message to let the soul soar. Bible study can become a delightful challenge as we gather together to grapple with texts that will improve our walk. Christian service, instead of being a nuisance and a chore can be intentionally structured so as to make it fun. Some years ago our Presbytery youth had a project to gather food for ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... young contemporary of Isaiah, Hosea and Amos. He and Isaiah brought God's message to the people of Judah in the South while Hosea and Amos took it north to Israel. It was a period of turmoil and change. Assyria was fast becoming a world power to challenge the hegemony of Egypt. There was one battle after another with the little nations used only as pawns in the wider struggle. Israel and Judah were constantly threatened by one power or another. It was a difficult time. Like Amos, Micah was a product of the ...

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