Dictionary: Trust
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1. Assume the Safest Position
Illustration
J. W. Roberts
The Scottish theologian George Adam Smith was climbing the Weisshorn above the Zermatt Valley in Switzerland with two guides on a stormy day. They had made the ascent on the sheltered side. Reaching the top, and exhilarated by the thought of the view before him, Smith sprang to the top of a peak—and was almost blown away by the gale. The guide caught hold of him and pulled him down saying, "On your knees, sir! You are safe here only on your knees."

Job 32:1--37:24
Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... painful consequence of sinful humans living in a broken world. The phrase which men have praised in song (and, I might add, women as well!) reminds us of the praise psalms and their frequent exaltation of God. The assertion that all mankind has seen it seems to assume a sort of natural theology akin to that of Psalms 8 and 104. But it may also refer to God’s deeds of salvation and judgment that are equally awesome (Pss. 105–107). God’s power, as displayed in his deeds of creation and salvation, is so ...

Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... evidence in a case. Here Job uses the term to describe his own presentation of the facts of his circumstance, which he assumes cannot be denied. Job is ready to fill his mouth with arguments, to answer any criticisms of his case that might ... the appropriate response to each (Job 27:10; Prov. 17:17). Why does the Almighty not set . . . ? It may be that Job is assuming that God “stores up” or records human choices of wrong actions. Thus these “times” (moments of decision) might serve as the basis of ...

Job 38:1--41:34
Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... Job’s own non-response was in the preceding verses. We will have to wait until the epilogue for the final resolution of this question. The Limits of Human Power Following the renewed challenge, the final examination continues with a rather sarcastic offer to allow Job to assume the responsibility for establishing justice in the world. 40:9–10 Do you have an arm like God’s? God’s mighty “arm” is the means of unleashing his power into the world (Exod. 15:16; Deut. 4:34; 9:29; Job 35:9; Ps. 44:3 ...

Luke 20:27-40
Sermon
Theodore F. Schneider
... question is not Plato's question: "If a man died, is he still alive?" The question is Job's question: "If a man die, shall he rise again?" The answer is Jesus' answer: "The path of glory leads from the grave." And They Assumed Too Little The Sadducees assumed far too little about the power, the grace, and the faithfulness of God. In reply, Jesus refers neither to his coming ordeal and resurrection, nor to the miracles performed that dealt with the issues of life and death. Instead, he carries the Sadducees ...

1 Corinthians 7:1-40
Understanding Series
Marion L. Soards
... to Paul’s words, which literally say, “A wife is bound as long as her husband lives; but if he may sleep [a euphemism for dies], she is free to be married to the one she wishes—only in the Lord.” Paul’s admonition at this point assumes the word of the Lord and offers a common-sense reasoning to a related situation. 7:40 What Paul says here comes as no surprise: He prefers the condition of singleness because it offers the potential for the believer to devote full energy and attention to the mission ...

Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... surrounded by family with the noun qen, “nest” (NIV house). The word elsewhere describes nests of birds, but it can also metaphorically describe close-knit family. Prolonged life, my days as numerous as the grains of sand, is a sign of divine blessing. Job had assumed he would live far beyond the norm. My roots will reach to the water. Like the fruitful tree described in Psalm 1, Job will send his “roots” down deep to the source of life-giving “water.” As an additional sign of divine care Job ...

Ezekiel 43:13-27, Ezekiel 44:1-31, Ezekiel 45:1-12, Ezekiel 45:13--46:24
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... the reign of Darius in the Persian period. In such a setting, the prince would be obligated to enforce the Persian standards. 45:18 In the first month. The “seventh month” in Lev. 16:29 may be the same as the “first month” in Ezek. 45:18, assuming either that the editors were numbering from the fall, when the Jewish New Year is celebrated, or that their source was doing so. The calendar in Lev., on the other hand, counts from the first month in the spring. Ezekiel gives the dates for Passover (45:21 ...

Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... ; Pss. 23:4; 44:19; 107:10, 14; and Job 3:5; 10:21, 22; 12:22; 16:16; 24:17; 28:3; 34:22; 38:17. Also see the discussion on 3:4–5 in §7 and on 10:20–22 in §34. 12:23 The NIV translation disperses assumes that this verb (Heb. nkhh, “lead”) is parallel to the negative term destroys (Heb. ʾbd) in the preceding line. Clines, Job 1–20, pp. 281, 303, suggests a chiastic arrangement to this verse with nkhh offering a positive divine action. His translation is “he disperses nations, and he leads them ...

1 Corinthians 14:26-40
Understanding Series
Marion L. Soards
... resulted from pagan ecstasy being imported into the context of Christian worship. If Paul is writing to address such a specific problem, then his advice applies only to this situation and is not meant to be followed elsewhere. There are other statements in Paul’s correspondences that assume first-hand knowledge of a situation and require later readers to infer and even to speculate to understand (see 5:1–5, 9–11; 15:29 in this letter, or 2 Cor. 2:5–11; 11:12–15; 12:7–8; Gal. 5:11–12; Phil. 3 ...

Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... activity (ANET, pp. 369–71). 22:18 The phrase counsel of the wicked is the same as that employed in Ps. 1:1 to describe the righteous one “who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked” (Heb. beʿatsat reshaʿim, in both cases). Both verses assume that the duty of the righteous is to avoid association with those self-focused persons who deny the power of God in their lives. 22:20 Destruction by fire, in Job and elsewhere in Scripture, often indicates divine presence (e.g., Exod. 3:2; 13:21; 19:18 ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... , and we can miss much of the richness of life, because we forget too soon. But there's another lesson we need to learn. When we assume too much, gratitude takes a back seat in our lives. There's a story about a man who decided to sell his farm. He listed it ... a farm like that all my life." We can become so familiar with things that we don't see them for what they are we can assume too much, and miss the richness of life. We can get so used to the familiar things of life that we never really see them as ...

Matthew 10:1-42, Matthew 9:18-26
Sermon
Stephen M. Crotts
... says that Jesus went to touch a child who had just died, and the disciples went with him, Matthew included. They went to share in the ministry. Here again is where we run afoul of the discipleship process in today's Christianity. People don't want to assume responsibility today. We'd rather pass it off on someone else. We are afraid to get involved in ministry like evangelism or preaching or comfort calls. So we set up barriers like "Ministry is not authentic unless a Reverend does it" or "I can't! I haven ...

Understanding Series
David J. Williams
... belonged only to God (cf. 14:14f.; Luke 4:8; 8:41; Rev. 19:10; 22:8f.). They seem to have talked for a while before entering the house. In this way, perhaps, Peter learned how much they knew of the story of Jesus, for he was able to assume a certain knowledge of the events of Jesus’ life when he addressed the whole group. Moreover, what Cornelius had to tell him, coupled with his own recent experience, must have helped Peter to see what was the last step required by his dream, namely, that he should cast ...

Understanding Series
Gordon D. Fee
... fact, Paul does not suggest at any point that Timothy is to set the church in order, as for the first time. In each case the activities seem already to be present. What Paul is doing, rather, is correcting abuses of various kinds. For example, it may be assumed that men pray, and do so with raised hands (v. 8). The instruction here is that they do so with “holy” hands, not “soiled” by anger or argument. If that be so, then what might be the place of this first paragraph in the argument? The frequent ...

Understanding Series
Gordon D. Fee
... (hence the GNB’s “revealed truth”). 3:10 With this sentence we come to something new, but not surprising, in light of the situation in Ephesus. The deacons are first to be tested, before they serve. Although one cannot be sure, this may be assumed to be true of the overseers as well. There is an “also” at the beginning of Paul’s sentence, untranslated in the NIV, which probably refers back to the overseers (cf. NEB, “no less than bishops”). It may, however, simply refer to verse 9; that ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... Yahweh’s action. This verb in the last line is the only finite verb in the verse; it is again qatal (“perfect”), so that the verse once more speaks of the catastrophe as if it has already happened. In verse 11, the NIV’s gloss again plausibly assumes that in Nahum’s context Nineveh is a city from which someone has come forth, and presumably it is the Assyrian king who has done so. This might then be a reference to Sennacherib’s expedition to Judah in Hezekiah’s reign (cf. Isa. 36–37), or to ...

Habakkuk 2:2-20, Habakkuk 1:12--2:1
Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... exercises sovereignty in the world. What a contrast there is between this God and those so-called gods. Of course the Babylonians believed their gods were in the heavens; they did not reckon that their images were the gods, at least not in theory. But the prophets assume that a deity who can be represented by a humanly-made image nevertheless cannot be much of a deity. It is wise to bow and be silent (has, like the English “hush”) before this real God. The bidding recurs in Zephaniah 1:7 and Zechariah 2 ...

Ezekiel 34:1-31, Ezekiel 35:1-15, Ezekiel 36:1-38, Ezekiel 37:1-14, Ezekiel 37:15-28
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... among its parts are not always easy to unravel. 34:16 The sleek and the strong I will destroy. The NIV, like the NRSV and the NJPS, follows the MT, which reads ʾashmid (“I will destroy”). The LXX, Syr., and Vulg. all read instead “watch over,” assuming an original Heb. ʾeshmor. The two words are nearly identical in Heb. (d and r look a great deal alike), so it is easy to understand a scribe mistaking one for the other. The reading the LXX follows certainly seems a better fit with the context of ...

Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... and southern gates, each identical to the outer eastern gate (vv. 28–37). According to 2 Chronicles 4:9, Solomon’s temple also had two courts, both an inner “courtyard of the priests,” and an outer “large court” for laity. 1 Kings 6–7, in contrast, assumes only one (but, see Ezek. 8:3 and 10:5, which could imply two courts; Herod’s temple had three courts: the innermost Court of the Priests, the Court of Israel, and the outermost Court of the Women). But even if there were two courtyards in ...

1 Corinthians 5:1-13
Understanding Series
Marion L. Soards
... church itself is God’s newly gained “kingdom” (1 Cor. 4:20) in an otherwise fading world (1:18; 7:29–31). For the church in Corinth to tolerate the immoral behavior of this particular man is a tragedy, for in the context of the church he is assumed to be freed from the power of evil and set at liberty in the power of the Spirit (cf. 6:12–20). If the church fails to judge this behavior, if such activity is tolerated and considered evidence of spiritual freedom, the condition of the man is hopeless ...

Psalm 14:1-7, 1 Timothy 1:12-20, Jeremiah 4:5-31, Luke 15:8-10, Luke 15:1-7
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... he did not have the cameras in the trunk. He had seen a group of young men standing nearby but they were now gone. He assumed they had grabbed the camera bag and disappeared while he was getting more things from the room. He told his wife the cameras were ... he had left his bag in a motel room in New Mexico. The maid had found it and turned it in. They put it in storage, assuming he would contact them. A year later they found the bag while cleaning out the storage room. He only had his last name and hometown ...

Jeremiah 30:1--31:40, 2 Timothy 3:10--4:8, Luke 18:1-8, Psalm 119:1-176
Bulletin Aid
William E. Keeney
... business with public officials. We know nothing about the widow's opponent. We do not know if he or she was a person of influence or had already bribed the judge. The opponent is never described or appears to defend the actions against the widow. We are to assume that the widow had a just cause. The righteousness of her grievance has no impact on the judge. He is self-centered and calloused. The logic of her case in no way moves him. He may have considered the claim of the widow too trivial to require his ...

Matthew 25:1-13
Sermon Aid
William E. Keeney
... to them. 5. No Borrowed Oil. The five unprepared maidens wanted the other five to give them some of their oil. They could not do so without running short themselves. One must be careful in pushing details of a parable too hard to fit some notion. If we assume that the oil for the lamps in the parable is symbolic of our works which are the light which shows God's glory, as suggested in Matthew 5:15-16, then the oil for our lamps is our works. The doctrine of supererogation contends that Jesus and certain ...

Matthew 6:1-4, Matthew 6:5-15, Matthew 6:16-18, Matthew 6:19-24
Sermon
John N. Brittain
... the justice system, the search for truth often seems to be obscured by the best game plan or the most corrupt investigators. And on and on it goes. We live in a fast paced world where we often seem to be skimming the surface of things. We assume that this is just the way things are. The words from Matthew 6, traditionally read on Ash Wednesday to begin Lent, reveal some very different assumptions on the part of Jesus of Nazareth. He knew, of course, that life could be lived at a superficial level, concerned ...

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