Dictionary: Trust
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Psalm 23:1-6
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
The Lord is a Shepherd - watching, tending, worrying, caring for each and every sheep in the flock. And for good reason. Sheep are notoriously stupid, defenseless and foolish creatures. It is only through the vigilance of the shepherd that safety is assured. When the psalmist declares God the Shepherd, the psalmist declares reliance on God, in total confidence and trust, for preserving his well-being. The psalmist carries this image forward in order to emphasize that this Shepherd-God is interested in far ...

Luke 10:25-37
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... him" (v.34) and ministered to all his needs. Like the Samaritans in 2 Chronicles 28, this kind stranger not only sees to the immediate physical wounds of the beaten man, but gives him transport back to a safe haven so that his future care is assured. The story concludes with Jesus once again getting the lawyer to give the correct answer to his own question. As a final instruction Jesus then proclaims "Go and do likewise" (v.37). Hoyer and McDaniel suggest that since the story of Mary and Martha immediately ...

Luke 21:5-19
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... suffer pain and persecution. But they "will gain their souls." Not even the very hairs on their heads, already numbered and accounted for by God, (Matthew 10:30), will perish. While others run the risk of true death by denying Christ during these harrowing times, the faithful followers may rest assured that they will ultimately enjoy salvation. There will be hardship and persecution for disciples of Christ. But they gain their souls. The cost of non-discipleship then is greater: losing their souls.

Matthew 2:13-18, Matthew 2:19-23
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... 's part. The family is now to leave their new home in Egypt and journey back to the land where Herod recently tried to destroy them. It must be with considerable trepidation that Joseph agrees even to step inside his homeland's borders. Despite the angel's assurance that "those who were seeking the child's life are dead," the long-suffering Joseph finally balks at walking right back into the lion's den when he hears that none other than Herod's son, Archelaus, is now ruling. While it may appear that it is ...

1 Peter 1:17-23
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... hold all superiors in an attitude of "fear and trembling." That the appropriate response to the divine, impartial Judge is one of "reverent fear" is not surprising. What is unusual is that even as 1 Peter recognizes the people's alien, outcast nature, this author assures his readers that they, too, may refer to this God as "Father." But the right to invoke that term, to be in such a close relationship with the divine, was gained at tremendous cost. Verses 18-19 recount the outrageous price that has been ...

1 Peter 4:12-14, 5:6-11
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... Scriptures to describe Yahweh's deliverance of Israel. God's "hand" is God's active intervention in human history for the saving sake of God's people. 1 Peter suggests that by humbly putting themselves into "God's hand," the Gentile Christians can rest assured that God will "exalt" them. Humility is transformed into exaltation in the divine hand. That this is an eschatological exaltation is revealed by 1 Peter's phrase "in due time." To make it through to this "due time," the apostolic writer offers a ...

2 Corinthians 13:11-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... the epidemic of quarreling that has been plaguing their community of faith. Obviously, achieving all these objectives would be incredibly difficult for any Christian group. Of course, for the embattled and fractious Corinthians, it would be utterly impossible. As encouragement, then, Paul assures them that "the God of love and peace" will be with them throughout their efforts. While Paul often refers to God as the "God of peace" (cf. Romans 15:33; 16:20; Philippians 4:9), his designation of a "God of love ...

Philippians 4:1-9
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... to be taken from a typical list of virtues that would have been used as a teaching device by first-century moral philosophers. But if Paul borrows his list of preferred characteristics from pagan philosophers, he quickly acknowledges that in Christians, these virtues both originate and are magnified by the assurance of God's ever-present peace.

Luke 6:27-38
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... to offer. In an agricultural marketplace economy, the fairness of weights and measures was a deadly serious matter. While no merchants would dare to be caught doctoring their scales, neither would they "press down" or "shake together" a measurement in order to assure customers a maximum amount for their money. But God does not find even these actions beneficial enough. In God's extravagance, the "good measure" is poured out until it is "running over" _ spilling over the sides of the measuring device and ...

Luke 15:1-3, 11b-32
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... only important fact about this missing younger son _ he is found, and he is alive. Perhaps to ease the older son's anxieties, the father does carefully articulate that it is to the elder that all the remaining goods and properties belong. His words also assure the elder that the special place he holds in his father's heart is yet undisturbed. The story ends here, leaving a host of unanswered questions for the reader. What is most shocking about this parable is how it seems to celebrate grace, even at the ...

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... reference to "the house of the Lord" in far less literal terms than would others. In that reading, this "house" is the heavenly dwelling of Yahweh not any earthly temple or worship site. Dwelling with the Lord is an experience the psalmist anticipates with assurance. But it is nonetheless a situation that waits in the future. The "length of days" that this dwelling will enjoy is better understood as a Semiticism for "days without end" or even "life eternal" two conditions that obviously must wait for one's ...

John 13:31-35
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... , the command to "love one another" (especially as Jesus elaborates that this love should be "as I have loved you") seems to offer a comforting thought to the disciples. Even though Jesus is about to leave them physically, they are left with a firm assurance of his abiding love and a hope that they may retain the sense of closeness of community that they celebrated together on that very night by continuing to "love one another." That Jesus puts great importance on this ability to love is demonstrated by ...

Hebrews 11:1-3, 8-16
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... today's epistle lesson picks up the author's introductory "definition" of faith in verses 1-3 before it skips ahead to the example of Abraham as one who manifests that faith. The definition provided by the writer is two-fold. First, faith is "the assurance of things hoped for." Faith is what gives the believer the conviction that the future will be as God has promised. Indeed, it is faith in God's promises that enables the faithful even to envision that unrealized time we call "the future." Second, faith ...

2 Timothy 3:14-4:5
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... upbringing would have involved instruction in the Torah from an early age. The sacred writings, Paul asserts, are what "instruct you" or are what will "make you wise." This use of Scripture probably reflects the Septuagint's Psalm 19:7, which assures readers that Scripture is "making wise the simple." Furthermore, this concept of wisdom contrasts pointedly with verses 9 and 13 which had testified to the "mindlessness" or "folly" of the "impostors"/ "false teachers." In verse 16, Paul declares that all ...

2 Thessalonians 2:1-5, 13-17
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... these new Christians with all the strength their faith will ever need. The tradition Paul speaks of here is nothing less than the life, death, resurrection and ascension into glory of Jesus Christ. It is the power of this tradition that lends assurance to Paul's concluding prayer for the Thessalonians. The "love," "grace," "encouragement," "hope" and "strength" needed for each Christian to engage in "every good work and word" all stem from the firm-handed grip Paul and his fellow Christians have upon that ...

Genesis 9:8-17
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... at hand: repent, and believe in the gospel." The text from 1 Peter brings together elements from both the Genesis and Mark passages for this week. Always holding out hope for those who trust in God, Peter boldly encapsulates the salvation of all in verse 18, assuring his readers that Christ "died for sins once for all, the righteous and the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God ..." (verse 18). If the text from Genesis suggests that the door of salvation is open to all creation, Peter now advances this ...

Mark 8:31-38
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... . When we seek to safeguard our own faint hearts from relinquishing control of our lives, we are in effect distrusting God. Unlike Abraham, we hesitate to turn our lives in new directions based on nothing but faith. We always want blessed assurances, failsafe guarantees, escape hatches and rear exits. Yet it was only as Abraham trusted that his faith grew ever stronger, ultimately being "Reckoned to him as righteousness" (verses 22 through 23). Paul closes his argument by bringing its relevancy into his ...

Acts 4:32-35
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... graced" community. Reflecting the dual nature of grace, this John insists that there must be a sincere commitment to a righteous life, although he admits that such righteousness is impossible for us to successfully maintain. John softens this directive by also assuring his readers that as faithful followers of the Christ they may be confident of ultimate victory in this struggle towards a just life. The graced community struggles, but does so with secure knowledge of the outcome. The text for today focuses ...

1 John 4:7-12
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... Jesus' sacrificial love, even unto death. What may appear to be an extravagance of selflessness is actually low rent. Jesus promises those committed to embodying his love in their own lives that nothing will be beyond their ability to love. Verses 7-8 assure struggling Christians that as long as they abide in Christ and allow God to practice skillful pruning there is nothing beyond the strength of their love. Philip demonstrates the extensive reach of our ability to love when we are abiding in Christ, led ...

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... power to actually harm. The action of the seraphim then has far-reaching ramifications. As Isaiah's lips are purified by the burning coal, his heart and his mind are also made pure. The prophet's thoughts and actions will now be clean in the Lord's sight. With that assurance Isaiah now eagerly offers his services to this magnificent "Lord of hosts." No matter the "host of Lords" (Bishop Roy Sano) who rule on earth, Isaiah's mission is to speak for the supreme ruler of the universe.

1 Samuel 16:1-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... of these differences is Samuel. Samuel is already a respected seer among the twelve tribes when the people's clamoring for a ruler goaded God into approving them a king. The Lord speaks privately with Samuel, revealing to him where this ruler will hail from and assuring the prophet that this man will be easily recognizable. Samuel evidently has little to complain about in God's choice. We are told that the new king's father is Kish, a respected wealthy member of the powerful tribe of Benjamin (1 Sam. 9:1 ...

James 1:17-27
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... stretched. The Gentile woman and this deaf-mute resident of a pagan city are both fully ministered to by Jesus. Mark's focus on Jesus' mission is now moving afield, beyond the Jews and into the larger world. From the Book of Proverbs comes the assurance that if we pray for wisdom, our God, the giver of all good things, will surely grant us that understanding. Proverbs 2:1-8 paints a most desirable picture of wisdom, making its possession among the greatest treasures available to humanity. James 1:5 also ...

Genesis 2:18-24
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... dependent connection between these human creatures that are God's handiwork. Verse 18 begins this story with God recognizing the fundamental incompleteness of a creation populated only by the singular man. Whereas the first creation story is noted for its assurance that after each step was completed "it was good, God's first pronouncement in this rendition is that something is "not good." The problem with this paradise is its emptiness - the man God created needs companionship. Note that God intends ...

Genesis 15:1-12, 17-18
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... customs of his day, he will be obliged to designate a servant from his household to act as heir if he and Sarai have no child of their own. Instead of chastising him for his doubts, the Lord leads Abram outside for a little "show-and-tell" instruction. God's assurance to Abram is not only that he will have a blood heir, but that by God's infinite power, Abram's descendants will be as studded and strewn as the starry sky. Daring Abram to count the number of stars in the heavens if he wishes to know the ...

John 20:1-18
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
All the resurrection texts are assuringly familiar, yet always startlingly fresh. A straightforward revelation - that Jesus had indeed risen from the grave - brings higher levels of insight and deeper layers of meaning with every passing year. Like the act of resurrection itself, reading and re-reading the Scriptures is always transforming, renewing, astonishing. While the Gospels ...

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