Dictionary: Trust
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Ephesians 2:4-25
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... human freedom of the will, notwithstanding our oftentimes perversely independent nature. We choose whether or not to accept God's ultimate gift to us. God's intention is to save. But in both here and in 1 John we are reminded that there are consequences. If we reject God's love and deny the light (one of John's favorite recurring images), then judgment is a divine fact and human fate. For John judgment is both a present reality and a future state of being. We are judged by God's righteousness according to ...

Luke 24:35-48
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... as an excuse for denying Christ while he lived on earth, they have now run out of excuses. In this new age which Peter announces, the rules have changed. In verses 17-19 he not only invalidates ignorance but also the birthright of "chosenness" as viable reasons for continuing to reject the Truth. Membership in the new Israel depends upon individual repentance and a purposeful turning toward God.

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... niceties. If, instead of an open door, the disciples get the door slammed in their faces, Jesus counsels a judicious use of time and energy. He advises his missionaries to cajole and convince reluctant listeners, but to shake the dust of a rejecting household off their feet as they leave (an image Jesus knew would be burned in the brains of those inhospitable households). Somewhat uncharacteristically, we are not treated to a long argument from the disciples. For once they apparently took Jesus at his ...

Mark 6:30-44
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... his couch following an afternoon nap and idly meandering about the roofscapes to pass the time (verse 2) markedly contrasts David's role as king to the lives of his soldiers. The soft life behind the lines tempts David to abuse his power as king and reject the front-lines laws of God. Like a common despot David sees Bathsheba, desires her, and so takes her, without any consideration for her commitment to her husband, Uriah's commitment to his king and country, or David's own commitment to his God. If David ...

2 Samuel 12:1-14
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... worded. It correctly collects all of David's unsavory actions under one true sin that David "despised the word of the Lord." Reveling in the power and prestige that God had given him, David forgot his absolute dependence upon God. Furthermore, he willfully rejected God's ethical mandates when they interfered with something he wanted. David's love for God was swept aside by his intoxication with a new love not Bathsheba, but the sweet seduction of self-importance. Verses 10-12 articulate the curses which now ...

Genesis 2:18-24
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... subsequent relationships are radically affected by it. The gospel text continues to include another level of relationship - the connection between adults and children. Jesus' attitude towards the children here is nothing but open, welcoming, responsive and complementary. He rejects the disciples' fussy protectiveness as they attempt to keep the children from "bothering" Jesus, as though he were important and they were not. Jesus turns the tables on such thinking by proclaiming these little children as the ...

Hebrews 4:1-3; 9-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... share in the rest which is part of God's plan. The wandering Hebrews (begun in 3:16ff) is the author's prime example of disobedience. The good news of redemption and promise of rest, proclaimed to that first generation of Israelites, was doubted and rejected by many. As a result an entire generation lost its way and wandered in the wilderness. It was left for the next generation to see and enter into the promised land of Canaan. So, too, each generation must respond with faith in that promise of redemption ...

Luke 6:17-26
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... all!) Luke's reconstruction of Jesus' message is perfectly symmetrical. Each blessing corresponds with a woe in complete opposition to it. Thus the poor stand in contrast to the rich; the hungry to the full; those weeping to those laughing; and the rejected to the accepted. Jesus' statements are in no way what we might today call "preachy." There is no word imploring the potentially "woeful" to repent. There are no suggestions or guidance for those who might even have been "under conviction" and considering ...

1 Corinthians 15:35-38, 42-50
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... situation, the diatribe style enables Paul to pose the most barefaced challenge to a resurrection belief and then refute it with a series of rational arguments (v. 35). This confrontational style shows off Paul's considerable powers of debate, culminating in his brusque rejection of those who would doubt his word. On verse 36 he dismisses them with the brisk "fool!") The first analogy Paul uses to discuss resurrection was a familiar image to the ancient world. Although Jesus also used the seed image, it is ...

1 Corinthians 10:1-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... the new believer trusting and following Christ. For the Hebrews, that trust was tested at the shores of the sea; do they dare follow him as their only path of escape? Christians of Paul's day were also enacting their trust in Christ when they rejected all the other possible pathways to immortality offered by the cultic mystery religion sects and swore allegiance to the singular power of Christ. Thus, as Paul does not yet perceive baptism as symbolizing the death and rebirth of the baptized, but only as a ...

Hebrews 11:1-3, 8-19
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... hardly one of awe and thanksgiving. Sarah breaks into hysterical laughter at the mere suggestion of such a ludicrous prediction (Gen. 18:12). It is doubtful that the author of Hebrews would single out Sarah as an example of unswerving faithfulness. While she never rejected the promise, she certainly did not respond to the news with the kind of grateful solemnity the author found so ennobling in others. Positing Abraham as the subject in verse 11 also makes sense in light of the conclusion drawn in verse 12 ...

Luke 16:1-13
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... - the so-called "Prodigal Son." Despite their differences and the prickly ethical point of the "steward-story," these two parables do share a common characteristic. In both cases, the to-be-expected, you-know-the-rest-of-the-story conclusion is completely rejected in favor of a new set of rules rooted in Jesus' always surprising kingdom of God. Because we like the image of the effusive and extravagantly forgiving father, the parable of the Prodigal Son has become a perennial favorite. Yet the master ...

2 Timothy 4:6-8, 16-18
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... bears no ill will towards those absenting themselves from his defense, but he also uses this very abandonment as yet another opportunity (like his impending death itself) to demonstrate a true Christlike spirit of forgiveness - by praying for them. A rejected Paul standing before a vindictive tribunal without the companionship of any who have called themselves Christians recalls Jesus' own trial and abandonment. Verse 17 then announces that someone was in fact present with Paul at his time of trial: the ...

2 Thessalonians 2:13 – 3:5
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... the characteristically Pauline "so then..." to remind his readers of his preceding counsel, Paul urges the Thessalonians to "stand firm." Though the text is non-specific, it seems reasonable to assume Paul is referring to his warning in 2:2 to reject false teachings. But Paul doesn't just preach a negative message about what the Thessalonians should not do, or should not believe. Instead he counsels them to "stand fast" to "the traditions." According to Charles Wanamaker, "tradition" for Paul could mean ...

Matthew 1:18-25
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... ] to public disgrace." But it is in verse 20 that Matthew reveals what he considers Joseph's most praiseworthy characteristic - obedience to God and acceptance of God's word. Matthew's Gospel is made up of images of both the acceptance and rejection of these predictions. In every case when Matthew places Joseph in a situation that calls for his reaction to a divine prediction, Joseph accepts the word from God unquestionably, no matter what the consequences. In this very first instance, both the prediction ...

Matthew 5:13-20
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... should "shine before others." The Jewish concept of good works, as noted in Matthew 5:38-48 and 25:31-46, are acts of mercy and reconciliation. Acts of mercy and reconciliation put disciples in service to others. There is no self-serving trumpet-blowing here, as rejected in Matthew 6:2. Instead, it is through the service of these "good works" that God "your Father" is glorified. It is noteworthy that 5:16 marks the first time in Matthew's gospel that Jesus refers to God as "Father." It is in acts of service ...

1 Peter 4:12-14, 5:6-11
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... brothers and sisters throughout the world share in this same experience of testing and suffering. The final encouragement to their resistance comes in verse 10. The suffering Christian's experience is only "for a little while." And far from being "rejected," this experience of suffering indicates that they are "called" by God's "eternal glory in Christ." 1 Peter makes the experience of suffering "for a little while" seem insignificant beside the reward that awaits "eternal glory." Finally, in this future ...

Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... were later experiences of "glossolalia" or tongues- speaking that were not so intelligible to the audiences who heard them seems to be indicated by the sneering accusation by some that the disciples were simply drunk. Neither that accusation (v.13) nor Peter's rejection of that conclusion (v.15) seems to coincide with the kind of tongues-speaking described in verse 6. It is possible, then, that here Luke has put together two different occurrences of Spirit-inspired speech in order to give added strength to ...

Matthew 10:24-39
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... , is now the anointed one who sits at God's right hand on that final day of judgment. Our final section again moves away from the eschatological vision and focuses on what may be the most personally painful persecution these disciples may face being rejected and reviled by their own family members. Matthew sharpens the edge to these verses by replacing Luke's abstract language of "division" (Luke 12:49-53) with the slicing image of a sword (v.34), an image that demonstrates how utterly severed family ties ...

Matthew 15:(10-20) 21-28
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... public discourse on the issues of ritual purity and cleanliness. The initial pronouncements Jesus makes to the crowd in verse 11 are further developed and expanded by him in verses 17-20. Jesus' proclamation about "what defiles" should not be taken as a rejection of all the laws of kashrut or an outright denial of the continued power of Jewish law. While later generations of Christians found in Jesus' words support for acceptance of the church's then Gentile majority, there is nothing in this text to ...

Matthew 18:15-20
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... then certainly seems to indicate that Christians are to shun those who refuse to practice repentance of their sins when properly confronted by the community. Yet it is also true that Jesus himself spent much of his ministry associating with those despised and rejected as unclean by Jewish law, specifically Gentiles and tax collectors. It becomes part of the church's call to continue Jesus' mission of outreach to these and all outcasts. Verse 17 could then be both a pronouncement of judgment by the church ...

Matthew 25:31-46
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
The judgment scene depicted in today's gospel text is one of several crowded into Jesus' final discourse series. In 23:29-39, the "scribes and Pharisees" are denounced for their rejection of the Messiah and their ultimate punishment (a hell sentence) foretold. This judgment text is followed by the examples of the faithful and unfaithful servants (24:45-51) and the parable of the talents (25:14-30). In both cases, those who break faith with their "trusts" are punished when ...

1 Corinthians 12:1-11
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... is in part a reaction against these worthless idols, constructed by human hands and out of human ideals, that some group has arisen that "curses Jesus." If this is a Gnostic offshoot, emphasizing the spiritual nature of the all-powerful risen Lord, they may well have rejected any need for or recognition of the human side of the man Jesus. But those who say, "Let Jesus be cursed," Paul insists, are not truly in the Spirit. The Spirit does not tear up the historical roots of faith. The Spirit does not set out ...

Luke 4:14-21
Sweet
Leonard Sweet
... , birth narratives, childhood stories, baptismal epiphanies and a record of temptations overcome. Jesus is "filled with the power of the Spirit" because he received the anointing of the Spirit at his baptism. His encounter with the devil and successful rejection of the devil's temptations further testify to the presence of the Spirit within Jesus. Jesus' "return" to Galilee should be thought of primarily as a return from those events. However, Jesus himself refers to a previous ministry in Capernaum ...

Jeremiah 1:4-10
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... feels himself inadequate to the task puts him in good company. From the days of Moses, those whom the Lord had genuinely designated as divine spokespersons had felt ill-equipped to serve _ and often for better reasons than Jeremiah could muster. Yahweh utterly rejects Jeremiah's hesitancy and instead, goes on to recount how completely the Lord will use him. God insists Jeremiah will "go to all to whom I send you, and you shall speak whatever I command you" (v.7). Some translations define Jeremiah's role ...

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