Dictionary: Trust
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Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... spiritually. It would not be surprising to the reader if Job decides at this point to give up on life and on God, but he does not. Rather, even in his great pain Job persists in looking to God for help. In what appear to be hopeless circumstances, Job keeps hoping in God’s justice. Job will learn and grow much in his faith in God over the course of the rest of the book, so what he says in chapter 16 is sometimes startling to read. Nevertheless, his fervent anticipation of God’s justice is a good pattern ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... against him what is just. Job does not believe that God is morally arbitrary, and he does not want to live in a world in which justice is abandoned. He desires for the righteous God to bring justice to all. In this, Job is an example to us to keep holding to the justice of God even when life seems terribly unjust (cf. the righteous martyrs who plead for the Lord’s justice in Rev. 6:9–11). Job’s integrity has come under withering attack by his friends, but he knows in his heart that he is innocent ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... perfect in knowledge. Thus, Elihu as much as says that because he has received his knowledge from God, he is the voice of God’s knowledge. To disagree with Elihu, then, would be tantamount to disagreeing with God himself. 36:5–7 He does not keep the wicked alive. . . . He does not take his eyes off the righteous. Elihu again reasserts the legitimacy of the retribution formula. According to him, God destroys the wicked (36:6) and exalts the righteous (36:7). In 21:7–16, Job called into question the ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... or bass that can be caught with a hook and line. This fierce sea creature featured in ancient Near Eastern mythological literature is far too strong for any human to defeat. Leviathan is clearly beyond the range of Job’s control. 41:3–5  Will it keep begging you for mercy? In verses 3–5, Yahweh uses humor to reinforce in Job’s mind how ridiculous and futile it would be for any human to suppose that he could tame Leviathan. This powerful creature would scarcely entreat Job to be gentle with it ...

Teach the Text
C. Hassell Bullock
... his will, and this he has imparted to Israel in his covenant. Instruction and guidance are intertwined, a good principle for us to keep in mind. The second mode of prayer employs the verb “remember,” used twice to make a positive request and once to implore God ... I am lost is to feel both anxious and incompetent.”16Many of us deal with issues of pride and insecurity that keep us from admitting our inadequacies and human need. What a contrast to Psalm 25, where David openly acknowledges his need for ...

Teach the Text
C. Hassell Bullock
... 32:9), recognizing the use of horses in the ancient world of the Bible, and also noting that Israel’s use of horses on a large scale did not happen until Solomon’s reign.4Here the psalmist uses a different term, “muzzle” (39:1). The muzzle was used to keep the animal from eating the grain as it was working near it. The mention of another cultural term, “handbreadth,” occurs in 39:5, a term of smaller measurements (also found in Exod. 25:25 and 1 Kings 7:26/2 Chron. 4:5). It was the width of the ...

Teach the Text
C. Hassell Bullock
... illustrated by their violation of the eighth (“you shall not steal,” Exod. 20:15), seventh (“you shall not commit adultery,” Exod. 20:14), and ninth (“you shall not bear false witness against your neighbor,” Exod. 20:16 ESV) commandments. Rather than keeping the commandments, the wicked fall in line with thieves and adulterers (50:18) and “sit and testify against” their brother (50:20). In a general way, the two tablets of the Torah are represented in this psalm. Israel’s relationship to ...

Teach the Text
C. Hassell Bullock
... your book?” The language is metaphorical, speaking of God’s careful attention to his people’s sorrow, so much so that he keeps a record of it and fills a bottle with their tears. See the associate metaphor, “golden bowls,” in Revelation 5:8, which ... ’s summary; see Lev. 26:12–13). This metaphor is a way to describe this idea in a picture that we can understand. God keeps our tears to remind himself of the misery we have endured in life (see also Isa. 49:16). Isaiah’s vision of the day of ...

Teach the Text
Ronald W. Pierce
... basis of God’s name, not their righteousness. Yet God’s answer includes both grace and justice. On the one hand, a partial restoration comes in a relatively short time. On the other hand, persistent sin results in extended punishment. Help your listeners to keep these two aspects of God’s character in balance, knowing that sometimes his response will reflect one of these more than the other. Call them to be people of righteousness who are, at the same time, thankful for his mercy. 3. Times of trouble ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... -righteousness. If we don’t have a good perspective on duty, it’s easy to fall into self-pity and/or self-righteousness. Isn’t it easy, mothers, to slip into a slew of self-pity because of all the demands that are made of you by your children and keeping the home going. You don’t use the same words, but you affirm the thought: “A man’s work is from sun to sun, but a woman’s work is never done.” And fathers don’t escape either. We’re moving toward a damaging self-pity when we begin to ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... thing that gets us through life—not just prayer, a talking relationship with God—but love and compassion as the dynamic force that keeps us going. A song for this Advent season: “Love came down at Christmas, love all lovely, love divine; love was born at Christmas—star ... cope, had turned to alcohol. No wonder back then things began to go from bad to worse for Teddy; no wonder he couldn’t keep up with his school work. Her heart went out to him like it never had before. And she began to see him in a ...

2 Thessalonians 3:6-13
Sermon
King Duncan
... making a difference in the world, it can bring you real satisfaction. If you can see a purpose higher than a pay check, it can improve your attitude toward your work. You are helping produce a product that will improve the quality of people’s lives. You are helping to keep a city running. You are educating young people for the future. I know that it can sometimes seem that we are just a cog in a great machine, but what if your job was not done? Would society be the worse off for it? Most of us can find a ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... off the trading block and is now dwelling in a foreign country? Joseph has two things going for him. First, the Lord is with him. Joseph may not know this—at least not yet, for although the Lord is with Joseph, the Lord does not keep Joseph out of trouble and danger. This is the only chapter in the Joseph story (excluding chaps. 38 and 49, where Joseph is either absent or minimally present), where “Lord” appears, and it appears seven times, all by the narrator. In addition to the divine presence ...

Psalm 141:1-10
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
Desiring not to become like those whom he despises, David seeks God’s protection from himself. He wants God to keep him from practicing wickedness (141:1–5a), to keep the wicked away from him (141:5b–7), and to keep him from the wicked (141:8–10). David uses contrasting imagery to conclude the first and second sections of this psalm: the oil of joy (141:5) and the horror of death (141:7). He completes the psalm by expressing his hope that the wicked would fall into their own ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... (4:14–15): such individuals are obsessed with carrying out wicked and violent actions. It literally makes their day, being as essential to their existence as bread and wine. Verses 18–19 offer an additional reason. The way of the righteous person just keeps getting brighter as one proceeds along it, while the way of the wicked is always utterly dark. (Note the poetic justice in the contrasting uses of “stumble” in 4:12, 16, 19.) A final section, 4:20–27, is dominated by positive imperatives ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... adulterous” woman concludes with a final lesson in chapter 7, which focuses on the temptation. Its structure is quite similar to that of the preceding lesson, consisting of a call to heed (7:1–4), a nearly identical purpose statement functioning as a warning (to “keep you from . . . ,” 7:5; cf. 6:24) and an extended illustration (7:6–23), and an explicit warning (7:24–27; cf. 6:25). Once again, the goal of the instruction is to preserve and enhance life (7:2; cf. 4:4). Accordingly, these wisdom ...

Ecclesiastes 11:7--12:8
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... to eating and drinking is lacking here. The subunit begins by affirming that it is good to be alive (11:7, literally “to see the sun”; cf. 6:5). We should enjoy the light of each day God grants us, not knowing how many we will have and keeping in mind the many dark and meaningless days to follow (11:8). The reference here is to our death, as in 6:4, rather than to difficulties during life, as in Ecclesiastes 5:17. Such unencumbered happiness is clearly more attainable when one is young and vigorous ...

Malachi 3:6-18
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... for himself who will accept his tender care and the rewards of their labors. The greatest reward is to be a member of his “treasured possession” (Hebrew segullah). The word segullah is difficult to translate, since it connotes a people elected and loved by the Lord, who keep his commandments, and who make up a royal priesthood and a holy nation and who will share in a glorious future that God has prepared for his own (cf. Exod. 19:4–5; Deut. 7:6–9; 14:2; 26:17–19; Ps. 135:4). The prophet compares ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... not become grounds for irreverent comments about the gospel (14:16–17), to serve Christ and be acceptable to God (14:18), to act in such a manner that peace is maintained and that the fellowship of believers is being built up (14:19), and to keep the faith they have to themselves “before God” (14:22 NASB, NRSV; i.e., not to force their convictions on the weak, and to eat and drink what they wish in the privacy of their homes). Paul mentions fundamental criteria for Christian behavior: acting out of ...

Sermon
Robert Leslie Holmes
... an admission that we are not good and that we need a Savior. When we admit that, Jesus makes another commitment. He says, "Anyone who comes to me I will never drive away" (John 6:37). Remember the gate has a dual purpose. One purpose is to keep danger outside. The other purpose is to let people inside. Jesus makes a proposition that says we can enter. "Whoever enters by me." That is different from saying, "Those I allow to enter" in that it puts the responsibility on entering on "whoever." This is what it ...

Matthew 2:13-23, Hebrews 2:10-18
Sermon
James L. Killen
... ways in its wrongness -- the very wrongness that causes so much human suffering. We need to know that we can be forgiven so that we can keep on living. We need to be set free from the fear of death and of all the other threats by which the tyrannies of our world ... to make the most of life. But God is also a God who understands when we stumble and is there to help us get up and keep on going. When and where does God do those things? They are nice ideas but they don't help much if they are just abstractions. We ...

Sermon
Charley Reeb
... to retrieve something. She would tell the class to behave while she left the room for a few minutes. Of course, as soon as she was gone the class would go crazy. We would stand on the desks, throw things to each other around the room, and play “keep away” with people’s lunches. But there was always someone in the room who would shout, “Ya’ll better get back in your seats and get quiet because the teacher is going to be back any second.” We usually listened to this wisdom, and we were glad that ...

Sermon
Charley Reeb
... given the power to transform people with God’s love. We have the source of hope and strength. Will we share it? If we had the cure to cancer we would tell everyone. We have the cure for a meaningless life and spiritual death. What’s keeping us from sharing it? I know that the word “witness” conjures up many negative images. I know that many people have given the word “witness” a bad name. We think of people passing out tracts, holding up signs, grabbing people by the lapels, and screaming about ...

Sermon
Charley Reeb
... . After you have made requests to God, then spend time just listening to God. This takes practice but once you get the hang of it, it becomes the most powerful part of prayer. Finally, the K stands for keep a journal. Keep a prayer journal and write down what you are learning in your prayer time. Also, keep scripture passages in your journal to refer to during your prayer time. We need to remember that the same God who created the universe is waiting to hear from us. The same God who parted the Red Sea ...

Sermon
Charley Reeb
... a secret. Maybe the secret has eluded you. You would love to know that secret! You want the secret Paul learned? You really want the secret. Well, the truth is the secret is found in Philippians 4:13. Paul revealed it in this pop verse. He wasn’t trying to keep it hidden. The problem is we just miss it. Here is the verse again. See if you can spot the secret: I can do all things through him who gives me strength. –Philippians 4:13 We always focus on the wrong word in this verse. This is why we miss ...

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