Dictionary: Trust
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1 Timothy 6:10
Sermon
Russell Conwell
... "particular friends." I didn't tell him I could see it; I was not going to tell that old Arab that I could see it. For it was that mean old Arab's way of going around such a thing, like a lawyer, and saying indirectly what he did not dare say directly, that there was a certain young man that day traveling down the Tigris River that might better be at home in America. I didn't tell him I could see it. I told him his story reminded me of one, and I told it to him quick. I told ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... tell you that out of these stones God can raise up children for Abraham." In other words, don't you dare say, "This does not apply to me; I am a church member...have been all my life; I'm OK, John." Don't dare say, "I'm saved; I was born again on July 18, 1985 at a city-wide crusade; I'm 'washed ... in the blood of the Lamb,' so John's words don't worry me." Don't dare say, "I read my Bible and pray everyday; I'm at church every time the doors are open - John is not talking to me ...

Sermon
David E. Leininger
... of these stones God can raise up children for Abraham" (Luke 3:8). In other words, don't you dare say, "This does not apply to me; I am a church member ... have been all my life; I'm okay, John." Don't dare say, "I'm saved; I was born again on July 18, 1985, at a city-wide crusade; I'm ‘washed ... in the blood of the Lamb,' so John's words don't worry me." Don't dare say, "I read my Bible and pray every day; I'm at church every time the doors are open — John is not talking ...

Sermon
Robert G. Tuttle
... things possible! Look at the healing powers of Jesus: The people knew he could do it. He did it. He still can. Let us listen to the words of Alice in Wonderland: "There’s no use trying," says Alice, "one simply cannot believe impossible things." "I dare say," answered the Queen, "you haven’t had much practice. When I was your age, I always did it for half an hour every day. Why, sometimes, I believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast." The greatness of Einstein lay in this fact, that he ...

2 Peter 3:8-15
Sermon
Scott Suskovic
... follow in order to get to God and get what you deserve. In Christianity, there is no path to God. There is a person who dared to teach, live, die, and rise again to convince a skeptical world that God's grace is enough. And yet, I dare say, even we Christians have a difficult time accepting grace. We are willing to say that God forgives, but reluctantly — after making the sinner squirm. That's why the story of the prodigal son is so amazing. When the son finally comes to his senses, after squandering the ...

Matthew 6:5-15, Matthew 6:16-18
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... again, Jesus challenges us to pray a prayer that asks God to bestow upon us the very deeds we bestow upon others! Can you go up to the gates of heaven and say to God, Lord, please deal with me as I have dealt with others! This takes courage I dare say none of us have. This takes guts. This line should drive fear and trembling into everyone’s heart, for none of us want God to deal with us the way we have dealt with others sometime in our lives. Lord have mercy! And thankfully, that’s not the last line ...

Ezekiel 34:1-31
Sermon
Robert S. Crilley
... we are caught off-guard -- not so much by the message itself as by the manner in which it is delivered and the direction from which it arrives. Consider, for example, the book of Ezekiel, from which our scripture lesson for this morning is taken. I dare say, like that man in the balcony, Ezekiel, too, was viewed by many of his contemporaries as a religious eccentric, perhaps playing a few shuffles shy of a full deck. Prophetic, to be sure, but also a bit peculiar. Over the course of his ministry, he reveals ...

Sermon
Brett Blair
... gets to the heart of the issue. I really think that the one talent man did nothing with his talent because he thought to himself: Well, my one little talent won’t make any difference anyway. There are a lot of people who feel that way today. I dare say if you took a poll of why people don’t vote, that would be the answer given most: Well, my one little vote won’t make any difference. Sir Michael Costa, the celebrated conductor of the 19th century, was holding a rehearsal. As the mighty chorus rang out ...

Sermon
David Busic
... should we live, in the meantime, in the in between time of the first and second advents of Jesus? There are things to be done. And I would suggest that we take the admonishment that Jesus has said to us seriously. Relevant to our words from Isaiah, I dare say that we must look ourselves straight in the eye, as individuals and as the Church, and ask whether we are, in any way, fulfilling God’s expectation that God’s people be peacemakers. (See Matthew 5:9). What do we do in the meantime? What do we do ...

Sermon
Robert S. Crilley
... . Or as Paul Scherer once expressed it: Never is life so insecure as when we try to take hold of it; never is it safer than when we lay it in the Creator's hands.2 Move through life like an anxious proprietor, and I dare say it will elude you at every turn, growing more unmanageable by the hour. But behave as a guest, believing that there is yet One who prepares the way before us, and the wondrous possibilities stirring within each waking moment will suddenly appear, shouting, "Surprise! Surprise!" And ...

Sermon
Robert S. Crilley
... that he would be provided with words, which may be the reason he rarely seemed to be at a loss for them any time thereafter. Indeed, his final address to the Israelites, from which our scripture lesson is taken, rambles on for some 30 chapters! But I dare say, even if Moses were a polished orator, this message would have been a rather difficult one to deliver. If you will, it is the retirement sermon of a pastor who has devoted the last third of his life to a single parish of people -- encouraging them when ...

Romans 16:25-27
Sermon
Donald Charles Lacy
... long as we are willing to admit to what we are doing. Whoever became any less by testing revelation in a way that can cause us to refine our faith? Such struggles under the lordship of Christ are therapeutic and can be delightfully helpful. The weaknesses and, I dare say, the sins of all humanity allow us to stand just so much in the ongoing and colossal conflicts of the world. If God gave us more than we could bear, he would be untrue to his word to us. Therefore, his refusal to make manifest to us people ...

Matthew 2:13-18
Sermon Aid
... in the order of worship: O God, who in Jesus Christ, breaks into our lives in new ways, offering love and fellowship, we remember actions that failed you. We harbor memories which disturb. We say things behind peoples' backs that we wouldn't dare say to their faces. We set high standards for others and ourselves. We find it difficult to accept human frailty ... We are filled with judgment ... We overtax strength and schedules ... We plan more than we ought ... do more than we should ... spend more than ...

Sermon
Robert S. Crilley
... a piece of Scotch tape! They are, no doubt, the most famous last words ever written. However, "well-known" does not always imply "well-thought-of" or even "well-understood." Granted, few portions of Scripture have aroused the curiosity of as many -- I dare say, "a great multitude that no one could count." But then again, simply arousing curiosity, in and of itself, is hardly a ringing endorsement for the book. After all, those who slow down on the highway to gawk at a roadside accident may be interested ...

Sermon
Robert S. Crilley
... it another way, if this were a movie, the closing credits would read: "written, directed, and produced by the Lord, the God of Israel." We might as well admit that by the time everything's said and done, Sisera's troops aren't the only ones panic-stricken -- I dare say, a good many preachers are also! To put it mildly, it's difficult to accept a story like this, because it's difficult to accept the kind of God who would instigate a story like this. But then again, this isn't the first time the Almighty has ...

Sermon
Thomas A. Pilgrim
... to grow. Shepherds still take their sheep there to feed. You can stand down there in those fields and see Bethlehem on a distant hill. In that place, the shepherds were surprised as “the glory of the Lord shone around them.” Most all of us here today —I dare say all of us — need this light of joy to shine on us — and we need to be surprised by it. When our children were small, they would have a long list of things they wanted for Christmas. Down at the bottom of the list, they would write, “Lots ...

Matthew 5:21-37
Sermon
John Jamison
... it meant to be holy; to be one of God’s children. In reality, many of them were corrupt and cruel, using their positions to fill their own pockets and protect their positions. Everyone here in the group today knew that, but no one dared say it. Pharisees and Sadducees were just too powerful. Jesus talked to the group in plain and simple language. Pharisees and Sadducees talked in circles, using fancy words from a language no one even spoke anymore — no one except Pharisees and Sadducees. That’s how ...

Sermon
Peter Rudowski
... big scoreboard in centerfield between the innings. In great big letters comes this great big sign, "Reach out and touch someone." The music blares through the loudspeakers of the stadium. It’s an ad that we all know and that we’ve all experienced. It’s familiar to us. I dare say that if we would close our eyes and if we heard that jingle, each of us would come up with a different picture of what that ad means. Some of us may see a young person with his foot up in the air in a cast, blowing a trumpet ...

John 11:25-26; Ephesians 1:12, 18-19
Sermon
Scott Suskovic
... . We had his funeral. But we didn't list his Eagle Scout badge or mention the little old ladies he helped across the street or recall his generous heart and his deep love, because frankly, it wasn't true. Everyone in that room knew it wasn't true. No one dared say that they wished God would judge him on all the good that he did, because there wasn't much. On that day, there was only one voice to be heard. The voice that spoke at Jason's funeral was the same that spoke at Lazarus' funeral and the same that ...

Sermon
... meets a stranger. As the two men pause to exchange greetings, the one wonders who the other is - not so much his name or the town from which he comes, but is this man perchance a Christian also, a follower of the Way? The Christian man does not dare say, "I'm a Christian; are you one also, perhaps?" For to be a Christian is a crime punishable often by death, and the Christian may be in jeopardy to identify himself. But he hungers for fellowship, his spirit yearns for the touch of a kindred spirit. So, with ...

Sermon
John E. Harnish
... they were not able to haul them in. (My guess is that most churches wouldn't be prepared, either, if they hauled in a great catch.) So many, in fact, that they weren't prepared for it. It was a wonder the nets could contain them….153 in all. I dare say that far too much ink has been spilt and time spent on the spiritual meaning of the number 153 by the same people who want to argue about the numbers in Revelation or age of the earth and the number of days in creation or how many angels can dance ...

Matthew 9:9-13
Sermon
... day the former national moderator of the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. told me that over 90% of her denomination's membership was exactly like she was - white, slightly suburban, and spending a family income of over $15,000 a year. I dare say the description for our Lutheran denomination is closely similar. It's not that being a white, middle-class Protestant is sinful. But the homogeneity among us causes me to wonder whether we are really engaged in the mission of Christ to save sinners. Our ...

Deuteronomy 6:1-25
Sermon
R. E. Lybrand
... . Incidentally, those are the same promises all of us fathers made when our children were baptized. But I wonder how many of us take those vows seriously. I wonder how many of us dads can honestly say we are making an effort to speak for God in our homes. I dare say, too many of us have become spiritually lax and lazy. We buy Bibles to place in prominent places in our homes, but we don't read them to our families. Dad, have your children heard you read to them from the Bible in the past month? Are you being ...

Matthew 5:6 · Luke 14:1-14
Sermon
Wallace H. Kirby
... where there are small children with parents who do not sanction a complete submission to television, the most familiar request is: "Tell us a story." And those stories are remembered for the rest of their lives. There is not a single adult or child, I dare say, who could not tell the story of Little Red Riding Hood, of Goldilocks and her bears, of the three little pigs, the big, bad wolf, and countless other favorite characters. This is true of a congregation or a reader. A congregation almost verbally says ...

1 Corinthians 12:3b-13
Sermon
William G. Carter
... , just a word or two, just something that let God knew I cared. Once in a while, I was put in a position to help in some tangible way." Say what you want, but Paul would call that a gift of the Spirit, a charismatic gift of discernment. If I dare say so, most of us have more of these gifts than we realize or ever develop. We are God's gifted people, and there are varieties of gifts that come from the Holy Spirit. There are varieties of gifts.... But Paul doesn't stop there. He goes on to add, "There ...

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