Dictionary: Trust
Showing 1 to 25 of 111 results

Sermon
Leonard Mann
... scene. To many, the old is suspect, and to all, the new is unformed and shapeless. Shrill voices cry, "Down with the establishment," but those voices are not telling us what can be put in the place of it. There is a rising tide of mistrust - mistrust of authority, law, leaders, traditions, and codes of morality. A major motivation is fear, with about half the people afraid things will change and the other half afraid they won’t. But things are going to change; and you can count on that. We have reached ...

2 Corinthians 12:1-10
Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... of envy and jealousy for those who seem to have a better lot in life than we do. The "If only" response to life as it relates to envy and jealousy for those who we think have it better than we always results in suspicion and mistrust -- it even becomes paranoia. One of Aesop's fables makes the point. You may remember the one. Four bulls were great friends. They went everywhere together. They ate together, rested together, stayed together constantly -- so that if any danger were near, they could all face it ...

Matthew 6:25-34
Sermon
King Duncan
... trust during our infancy, says Erikson, the stage is set for a lifelong perception of the world as a good and pleasant place. But if our caregiver wasn’t emotionally adept at expressing warmth and love, then it’s likely we grew up to be mistrustful and insecure. (5) Many of us have a susceptibility to stress and worry built into our very personalities. On top of that, modern life has many built-in stressors. Some of us have very stressful jobs. Some of us have family situations that are stressful ...

Sermon
Frederick C. Edwards
... long for light. There was a man named John, who was sent by God to be a witness to the light who was coming into the world. The light, of course, was Jesus. The light was reconciliation and forgiveness and love to cure the darkness of bitterness and alienation and mistrust. To those who decided to accept the gift he gave the power to live as children of God. We cannot re-live the past. Even if we could we wouldn’t do it any more perfectly than we did the first time. We’d just make a different set of ...

Sermon
Schuyler Rhodes
... , mayors, or even pastors ... we just don't trust them anymore. We are the perfect reflection of the people of Israel as they are described in this passage from Exodus. If we follow anyone, we do it grumbling every step of the way. Leaders are to be mistrusted and their motives are to be questioned. Indeed, some folk make it their business to be certain that no leaders can rise up to move the people. Anyone who tries to step into roles of leadership becomes a target, and if that person has any skeletons in ...

Leviticus 16:1-34, John 20:24-31
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... the pudding! Jesus lives! Their faith in God is renewed. With his touch, Jesus does not imbue Thomas with faith, but renews his faith. Faith he already has. But it has been cloaked in fear, covered in doubt. Jesus removes from Thomas his anxiety, his mistrust, his confusion, and his hesitation. He relieves Thomas of his never-ending vicious circle of uncertainty and leaves him at peace. For peace is what Jesus offers us. Jesus releases us from the captivity of our doubt, frees us from our places of anxiety ...

Matthew 14:22-33
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... the sea and that there’s no way Jesus could humanly be walking toward them on the water. Their first inclination is mistrust. But Peter, always the brave challenger puffs up his chest, stands firmly at the end of the boat, and demands: “Yeah, right. ... it was me? Or why did you doubt that I was with you on the water ensuring your safety? Or why did you doubt yourself and mistrust me when I told you that you could do it? Or why did you challenge me to begin with? Perhaps a number all wrapped up in one ...

Sermon
Wesley T. Runk
... . The passion hatred, which periodically sweeps through people like a storm is almost always misdirected. It is easier to kill the villain than to build bridges of trust and understanding. Ethnic mistrust breeds and thrives on hatred. It is hatred that breeds apartheid, anti-semitism and other forms of ethnic mistrust. Hatred causes strife in places like Yugoslavia, Palestine, South Africa and Los Angeles. The actions of that hatred often create poverty, sin and human misery. What a difference it would make ...

Matthew 21:33-46
Sermon
Mark Radecke
... clear: the stakes are the highest imaginable - our Lord speaks here of death and life. The wicked tenant story is a story of the landlord-tenant relationship carried to its logical extreme. For the ultimate end of unchecked animosity, fear, suspicion and mistrust is death: if not actual, physical murder, then certainly character assassination and the killing off of any kind of satisfactory relationship. So long as one party is owner and the other merely occupant, the best anyone can hope for is a distant ...

Sermon
James W. Moore
... take the dollar bill I left here?” “No, I didn’t,” answered the brother. “Surely, you took it,” he said, “There was nobody else in the store.” The brother became angry: “I’m telling you, I did not take the dollar bill.” From that point, mistrust and suspicion grew until finally the two brothers could not work together. They put a partition right down the middle of the building and made it into two stores. In anger, they refused to speak for the next 20 years. One day a stranger pulled ...

Sermon
Leonard Mann
... see" it this way or we "see" it that way. And we are talking about a most important subject when we speak of our images of tomorrow. They can be quite unlike what tomorrow eventually turns out to be. Often we are very unfair to the future. We mistrust it; we mangle it brutally even before it issues from the womb of time. We borrow troubles that haven’t come yet; we wear ourselves away worrying about problems that will never be. How often we have crossed perilous old bridges long before we ever got to them ...

Sermon
James W. Moore
... take the dollar bill I left here?” “No, I didn’t,” answered the brother. “Surely you took it,” he said. “There was nobody else in the store.” The brother became angry: “I’m telling you, I did not take the dollar bill.” From that point, mistrust and suspicion grew until finally the two brothers could not work together. They put a partition right down the middle of the building and made it into two stores. In anger, they refused to speak for the next 20 years. One day a stranger pulled ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... prayer. * Flex the muscles of trust. Trust may not seem glamorous or sexy, but many marriages have found out too late that without trust, there is nothing. Mistrust is a cancer that rots away relationships. Faithfulness in a relationship is measured in more ways than monogamy; trust is the key component of faithfulness while mistrust always plays a part in unfaithfulness. * Bend the knees of prayer. The connection between complete, genuine trust in one another and faithfulness is perhaps what underlies one ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... and I am yours. So be it. And the covenant I am making on Earth, Let it be ratified in heaven. Amen. 8. Thou shalt do what you say you will do. Follow-through is crucial in everything we attempt. Good intentions spoil into bad relationships tainted with mistrust when we fail to keep our word. How much can you be counted on? Are you someone who can be trusted? Can you be counted on? 9. Thou shalt honestly admit your weaknesses. Hiding shortcomings may improve your image, but it doesn't build trust. There is ...

2 Corinthians 5:1-10
Sermon
King Duncan
... this basic foundation of being able to trust trust God, trust others or even trust ourselves. Something about our genetic makeup, or our relations with our parents, or, perhaps, difficult life experiences that we had at an early age left us with a basic sense of mistrust. It’s not that we don’t trust God. We don’t trust life in general. Obviously, this makes any kind of relationship very problematic. How do you develop this sense of trust as an adult? It’s difficult. It’s not something you can ...

Understanding Series
James K. Bruckner
... Moses’ leadership was exemplary. At Rephidim, water from the rock and the Amalekites’ attack complete the structure of the Exodus journeys (see chiastic structure discussed in §18). 17:1–7 The people tested the Lord, raising their grumbling to a new level of mistrust. As at Marah (ch. 15) and the Sin(ai) wilderness (ch. 16), the people grumbled and the Lord responded by instructing Moses and providing for the people. This time, however, the people put the LORD to the test. Essentially, they tried to ...

Genesis 3:1-24
Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... the woman as the one whom God had put with him in the garden. In striving to become like God the man now mistrusted those closest to him, his counterpart and his Maker. Without answering the man, God turned to question the woman about what had happened ... experience in the course of sustaining life is the foretaste of death. That foretaste includes feelings of fear, alienation, and mistrust, all of which the first couple experienced after eating the fruit. Second, God enforced the penalty by expelling Adam and ...

Matthew 4:1-11
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... come, Jesus stands his ground. He will not be distracted. At last, the devil departs. Jesus is prepared and ready. Jesus’ ministry will be marked by the covenant love that he affirms that day: Love is not power or selfishness. Love is not control or mistrust and does not test God’s or another’s devotion. Love is not a deal made for self-promotion,but a covenant entered into in a spirit of self-sacrifice. Sacrificial love would be the mode of Jesus’ mission, a mission that the Spirit prepared Jesus ...

John 10:22-30
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... for us. And yet no human presence feels reliable enough. Of course we can run into some wonderful, compassionate people. Of course, we can try our best to console and be there for others. But to fill the kinds of holes that fear, mistrust, and grief have wrought, that years of damage and mistrust have formed, only Jesus will do! Only Jesus will do! When all else fails and life gets real, when our friends hurt us and our loved ones desert us, when our spirits sink, and we don’t know where to turn, when we ...

Sermon
James McLemore
... the grades she had obtained in human psychology. She told him that she understood Freud's theory of personality, and that she could identify and describe Erik Erikson's eight-stages of human growth and development: she knew about trust vs. mistrust, autonomy vs. shame and doubt, initiative vs. guilt, industry vs. inferiority, identity vs. role confusion, intimacy vs. isolation, generativity vs. stagnation, and integrity vs. despair. The advisor looked in the young woman's eyes and he saw the intensity of ...

Sermon
William L. Self
... are only a crowd without his leadership. With his leadership, they become a people, a congregation, and he does this because he relates to them as a father, not as sovereign or tyrant -- as a loving father. We do not value leadership highly in our culture. We mistrust it, try to control it, and seek to subvert it. At best we are ambivalent to it. God chooses to provide his leadership to his church through those he has called to be his leaders in each congregation. Paul notes this in Ephesians 4. He provides ...

Sermon
William B. Kincaid, III
... us out of our own places and times of suffering with the assurance that we are never alone. The spirit of the one who knew of the suffering in Egypt and knew suffering in his own life is with us. Out of Egypt, out of pain and suffering, out of mistrust and hostility, we are called. Of course, the only way out of Egypt, the only way out of the despair that grips us, is through the pain, not around it. There are no shortcuts. There is no denying the hurt, but neither is there denying the one who leads us ...

1 Peter 2:13-25, Acts 7:54--8:1a, Acts 6:1-7, John 10:1-21
Sermon Aid
Russell F. Anderson
... institution. 2. Sermon Title: The Legacy Of Leadership. Sermon Angle: The effectiveness of leadership can be discerned from the legacy it leaves behind. Back in the mid-1970s, Richard Nixon, mired in the Watergate scandal, left a legacy of cynicism and mistrust. Other national leaders, concerned only with their selfish interests, have left the same legacy. Stephen, the first Christian martyr, left a legacy of fearless faith and forgiveness. Wouldn't it be wonderful if all church leaders left such a legacy ...

John 18:1-11, Isaiah 52:13--53:12, Genesis 22:1-19, Hosea 6:1--7:16, Hebrews 10:1-18, Hebrews 4:14-5:10, John 19:17-27
Sermon Aid
Russell F. Anderson
... those from whom people hide their faces, those who suffer the isolating disfigurement of leprosy. For a long time, his parishioners were reluctant to accept him. They had seen others come and leave in disgust. Why would this man be any different? The mistrust eased as Father Damien persisted in his effort to minister to their needs but was not completely accepted until the day he truly became one of them. That Sunday morning, he addressed his congregation as "fellow lepers." He would no longer minister to ...

1 Samuel 15:1-35
Sermon
Charles Curley
... , I should have trusted my heart. I believe God has put a good heart in most of us, to help us listen for the word and will of God. Certainly not in all of us. There are enough blatant exceptions - those who seem rotten to the core - to make us mistrustful of one another. Yet in most of us God has put a good heart to begin with; maybe even in Saul, to begin with. Yet fear and anxiety, harsh experience and self-interest, can keep us from trusting our heart and even, in some cases, erode that heart away. Is ...

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