Dictionary: Trust
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One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... John joins the other evangelists in drawing texts from Isaiah that must have been commonly used in the early church (Isa. 6:10; 53:1; cf. Matt. 13:14–17). Isaiah too found disbelief in Israel and attributed it to God’s sovereignty over revelation. John, however, has woven this theme into the entirety of the Book of Signs. Hence the unbelievers are unable to believe (John 12:39); God affects their perception (12:40). John, however, does not probe the mystery of the ...

2. Between Belief and Disbelief
Luke 24:13-35
Illustration
Randolph T. Riggs
It should not come as a surprise to us that the disciples struggled to believe in the Resurrection. We understand them, don't we? We want to believe, but we live somewhere in between belief and non-belief. In fact, we may feel more like the family of actress Helen Hayes. Her husband and her son wanted to encourage her desire to try her hand at cooking her first Thanksgiving Dinner. So in the days leading up to Thanksgiving Day, they gave her words of encouragement telling her that they were looking forward ...

Understanding Series
J. Ramsey Michaels
Jesus’ last plea to the crowd was “put your trust in the light” (v. 36), and the first note struck in the narrator’s concluding summary (v. 37) is that they would not believe in him. Jesus’ public ministry is summarized as a series of miraculous signs intended to nourish faith, but the result instead was unbelief. The very purpose of John’s Gospel, as stated in 20:30–31, was to reverse that result, but in order to do so realistically the strength and stubbornness of unbelief had to be presented in the most ...

Sermon
Carlyle Fielding Stewart
... the community in which he always got into trouble. He decided to accept Christ and be saved, resurrected from the dead, but more importantly, he decided to take off his grave clothes by not returning to the place of his discontent. He turned disbelief into belief and transformed not only his situation but his life condition into something positive. Once you've experienced resurrection, you must do all you can to sustain the experience of being alive in Christ, and this means removing the grave clothes. The ...

Sermon
Robert Allen
... at first. When the women ran back to the Upper Room and told the disciples the news of the Resurrection, there was disbelief there as well. Peter and John wanted to find out what had really happened, and they went running to the empty tomb. When ... not believe, because we live as if we do not need God’s help or anyone’s help. One Saturday morning, I saw a look of disbelief on my wife’s face. It was one of those cold, snowy Saturday mornings and I had just told her I would make breakfast by myself ...

Sermon
James Merritt
... to the Word of God. May I tell you the most important question you need to ask yourself is not: Was I saved? but, Am I saved? You see, an apostate is not someone who had salvation and then lost it through disbelief. An apostate is someone who never had salvation and they prove it through disbelief. The real test of trust is not talk, it is obedience. Jesus said, "If you love Me, you will keep My commandments." (Jn. 14:15) What a man really believes he lives, the rest is just talk. These people had proven to ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... as did Mary when the Angel visited her and told her that she was going to bear the son, Jesus – she responded in humility -- "Behold, the handmaiden of the Lord." And it would have been one thing for Zachariah to do that -- but did you note the basis of his disbelief. He asked the question in verse 18: "How shall I know this? For I am an old man and my wife is advanced in years." This was his real difficulty -- how could his wife have a child -- they were far beyond child-bearing age. "This was his real ...

Sermon
Siegfried S. Johnson
... , and wins $4 million. Charley comes to the diner the next morning to give Yvonne the good news. Her tip for serving a cup of coffee is not a mere two bits, but two million dollars. Well, you can imagine Yvonne's reaction to this good news. At first, utter disbelief covers Yvonne's face. "NO. NO. WHY ARE YOU DOING THIS TO ME? IS THIS SOME SORT OF CRUEL JOKE? NO. IT COULDN'T HAPPEN." Then, as Charley insists he is not joking, a tiny flicker of hope registers deep inside Yvonne. She dared just for a moment to ...

Sermon
John E. Harnish
... her best to contain it, tries to turn it into a cough like kids in church when they get the giggles. It begins to bubble up, uncontrollably, like Mary Tyler Moore at the funeral for Chuckles the clown: [2] 1. Sarah's laughter is, first of all, the laughter of disbelief. It's the laughter of "No way! You've gotta be kidding! We're gonna have a what?" It's clear from the text that she laughed and he laughed because they simply didn't believe it. And it is not always easy to believe God's promises. It's ...

Sermon
Maurice A. Fetty
... first amazed and then offended. Then, scoffing, they challenged him to do some of his signs and wonders and healings in Nazareth that he had done elsewhere. But the Gospel says that Jesus could do only a few mighty works there because of their disbelief. The Gospel then adds that he marveled at their disbelief. It was true then; it is true now -- if we are to be healed we have to want to be healed, and we have to have faith so we can be healed. Look again at our story, at the four friends. If the paralytic ...

Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... first account Sarah laughs because of the gift of Isaac (“laughter”). In the second, Ishmael makes fun of (i.e., causes people to laugh at) Isaac. 21:1 This verse is a heading to the notice of Isaac’s birth. Out of grace and despite Sarah’s disbelief (18:12), God fulfilled the promise of a child to Abraham and Sarah. Behind the NIV “be gracious” is Hebrew paqad (“visit,” 1 Sam. 2:21). This term conveys that God directed the course of nature for a specific outcome (50:24–25; Exod. 3:16; 4 ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... failure to fulfill the old covenant apart from their failure to believe in Christ (which he does not formally introduce until 3:21), he probably intended verse 3 as faithlessness to the old covenant. Nevertheless, faithlessness to the old covenant tended to lead to disbelief in Christ; hence it may be well not to make too much of the distinction. Will their lack of faith nullify God’s faithfulness? Not at all! (vv. 3–4). God’s character and behavior are not determined by human failure. If Israel’s ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... (Mark 14:36). Jesus too knew the struggle of faith. Faith does not exist in a vacuum. We may worship God in a sanctuary, but we do not normally find our faith in one. Faith is more often born in a boxing ring of choices—of doubt, disbelief, impossibility, and meaninglessness. To adhere to the promise of God in spite of everything to the contrary is to give glory to God. If Abraham can do nothing to receive God’s promise except to believe, neither can he honor and glorify God except by believing (1 ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... wrath (1:18ff.), but they are now objects of mercy because of their faith in the gospel. For Jews the issue is exactly the opposite: they once were objects of mercy because of their election and knowledge of the law, but they are now objects of wrath because of their disbelief in the gospel. Thus, God comes to his people in only one of two ways, in wrath or mercy. There is no third way. If we will not receive the mercy of God then we must face the wrath of God which would drive us to his mercy (Isa. 63 ...

Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... first account Sarah laughs because of the gift of Isaac (“laughter”). In the second, Ishmael makes fun of (i.e., causes people to laugh at) Isaac. 21:1 This verse is a heading to the notice of Isaac’s birth. Out of grace and despite Sarah’s disbelief (18:12), God fulfilled the promise of a child to Abraham and Sarah. Behind the NIV “be gracious” is Hebrew paqad (“visit,” 1 Sam. 2:21). This term conveys that God directed the course of nature for a specific outcome (50:24–25; Exod. 3:16; 4 ...

1 Kings 17:7-24
Sermon
Carlyle Fielding Stewart
... cared and that all would be well. His cynicism and anger with God for his mother's death was suddenly transformed into a renewed confidence in God. This friend realized that he was not alone and that God still cared for him. A baby's smile changed his disbelief into a feeling that God still loved him. The widow had fallen on hard times. Her son was in a coma and near death. Her husband had died. She may have become cynical and bitter because of hard times. But Elijah restored her faith by reviving her son ...

Bulletin Aid
Rolland R. Reece
... God, our Redeemer, we stand in awe of your grace. It is so immense we can not take it all in. We should have known that your grace would be this way. Even a cursory acquaintance with nature overwhelms us. We look upon a rose and shake our heads in disbelief that such beauty adorns our simple garden. When we bring the rose inside our home we witness it transform a table in the corner of a room, into something elegant and regal. We read a book and it take us to places in wisdom and knowledge that we didn't ...

Matthew 10:1-42
Sermon
Carlyle Fielding Stewart
... been the memory of his past, of how he persecuted Christians and instigated the death of Stephen. After doing his great work, this serpent of past sin may have been making its way back into the forefront of his mind, causing consternation, dismay, and disbelief. He had to shake the serpent off. But he had already done this by confession and repentance. Even after we have made our confession and repentance, we must be on guard for those adversarial forces which creep back, threatening to destroy our forward ...

Sermon
Thomas Peterson
... perfectly acceptable. By their strength we are bolstered until we move past the windless sea on which we have been idling and begin to pick up new winds of challenge blowing for us. You did that for me! The most we can manage is to sit back in mute disbelief that somehow someone moved in and took over for us. The magnitude of the favor granted us leaves us without a ready response. It is enough to manage, “Thank you.” By little or big gifts another moved in to stop the long slide of loss. Such times in ...

John 20:1-9, John 20:10-18
Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... doubts that he had when he only heard the stories of Jesus' resurrection. He needed to see the Risen Lord himself before he could really be excited in his faith (John 20:24-29). When the story of the empty tomb is proclaimed, the usual reaction is disbelief, confusion or apathy. In some cases, the hearers decide to keep the news as a secret (Mark 16:8; cf. John 20:10). Or, as in our gospel lesson for today, Jesus' followers fail to understand (John 20:9), react apathetically (John 20:10), or despair (John ...

1 Corinthians 12:12-31
Sermon
Harold Warlick
... people’s religious gifts they could muster. Paul is after more than tolerance. Way deep down, behind the flowing pen of his composition, is a clarion call for respect. Respect is quite different from tolerance. Stephen Carter in his work, The Culture of Disbelief, has noted, “Tolerance without respect means little.”2 If we tolerate someone’s spiritual gift then it is our forbearance, not our recognition of the equality of that other gift, that allows the person possessing it to be a part of the ...

Sermon
Mark Ellingsen
... of us are part of the “secular” realm, not of the “sacred” realm that concerns God. That is the way most Americans see it. Religion is one thing; business is another. Our commitment to the principle of separating church and state has led to a “culture of disbelief,” one in which it is all right to be religious in private, but not publicly when we are on the job.1 But that is not the way that the Bible views the world of business! This morning’s First Lesson makes that clear. Our text, Jeremiah ...

Sermon
Carlyle Fielding Stewart
... he is an outcast of the Roman and Jewish establishments. Could this deformed, disfigured, and despised person be the new Messiah? Being deformed he took on our deformities, our afflictions, and our grief. Being disfigured, he took on our unattractiveness, the horror of our disbelief. Being despised he took on our condition as outcasts and spiritual pariahs, as means of our relief. He was a marred but magnificent Messiah. We don’t want to see him, but we want to touch him. We don’t want to suffer with ...

Matthew 14:13-21
Sermon
King Duncan
... in: Are you sure they can provide an answer for those moments of deepest need? The bank account, the healthy body, the good education are all valuable ” but are they enough? God is able to supply all our needs. Can’t you imagine the expression of disbelief that must have been on the disciples’ faces? They thought they didn’t have enough but Jesus proved they had plenty. Can’t you see them punching each other in the side afterward and saying, "Can you believe what just happened? Can you believe it ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... Destroy this temple, and in three days, I will raise it up." As is often the case in John's gospel, Jesus' reply is not understood. They think Jesus is speaking of the Temple, while he is actually speaking of himself. In shock and disbelief they inform Jesus that it had taken forty-six years to build the Temple. It was not possible to rebuild the Temple in just three days. Following Jesus' death and resurrection, the disciples remembered this incident. Afterward they remembered his words and understood them ...

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