Sermon Tone Analysis
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{{Introduction}}
I have said it over and over again, we live in a right now society, hurry here hurry there, get it done now.
I remember being told that computers would make our lives easier, but what they have done is speed thing up, squeeze 40 hours into 24, more more more.
We are in such a hurry that we can't even order from the menu, we just make it quick, 'give me a number 4. Faster, faster, faster.
Ok, I'm tired ….. (pause)
Patience is something that faces us all.
The matter of how we handle that patience is the dividing line between being obedient and just fitting into the mold the world.
I'm not sure if this story is true or not but it is reported that a man in Los Angeles, CA was arrested for negligent discharge of a weapon after shooting his toilet bowl with a handgun.
He claims that he just got upset.
He couldn’t take it any longer.
His toddler daughter had flushed a hairbrush earlier in the day and clogged the pipes.
So he shot the offending toilet.
I have no word on the toilet’s condition, but the man’s patience was long gone.
Someone once said that,
Patience is a virtue, Possess it if you can.
Seldom found in a woman, but never in a man.
{{PAUSE}}
Ok, stop laughing.
Because we really do have a problem in this country.
It seems that there is always something to try our patience.
Having to wait is one of those things.
We wait on traffic and we wait in lines.
We wait to hear about a new job.
We wait to complete school or to retire.
We wait to grow up or for maturity in a child.
We wait for a decision to be make.
Everyday presents plenty of occasions for training in patience.
We can resent waiting, accept it or even get good at it!
But one thing is certain – we cannot avoid it.
Perhaps we can hear the Lord speak to us about the possibilities for patience in our own lives today, that is, if we are not in too much of a hurry to get out of here.
Amen.
We have all heard the expression; I need patience – and I need it RIGHT NOW!!!
The story is told that the great New England preacher Phillip Brooks was known for his calmness and poise.
His intimate friends, however, knew that he suffered moments of frustration and irritability.
[sound familiar] One day a friend saw him pacing the floor like a caged lion.
He asked, “What is the trouble Dr. Brooks?” “The trouble is, that I’m in a hurry, but God isn’t.”
Haven’t we all felt that same way many times?
Patience is what James addresses in our text tonight.
Our title today is 'More Patience Please'
Our Scripture for today is taken from James 5:7-11 Reading from the New King James Version of the sacred scroll.
As we dig deeper into this Word, we find James addressing the problems that we all face when problems overwhelm us in all areas of life.
I believe that James is saying that,
I.
When we are tempted to lose patience – Remember it will be Worth the wait!
(vv.
7-8a)
James sets the theme for the whole section with this command he gives right up front.
In fact he states it twice, patient, brethren, until the coming of the Lord, once in v. 7, and again in v. 8.
Look at verse 7, he begins it with this command and the word “therefore” or “so then.”
The people to whom James is writing were experiencing tremendous difficulty and persecution.
During this time in our text, the wicked rich were oppressing and persecuting the Christians.
James says, “be patient.”
Be patient in bearing the offenses and injuries of others.
This appears to be perfect advice for what his audience is going through, doesn’t it?
We know this passage is addressed to believers because James uses the term brethren four times.
The reason is that the king of patience to which James is referring can only be achieved by a person whose life is connected to God.
Listen, we have all experienced the hurt of mistreatment and misunderstanding.
Such hurts come in a variety of forms; intolerable work situations, domestic conflicts, difficult relatives, individuals who take advantage of us, friends (so called) who turn against us, neighbors who believe false things about us and dozens of other hurtful circumstances.
Our natural tendency is to retaliate, to return evil for evil, to get even, or to hold a grudge and become bitter.
But there is a better way to respond to such hurtful circumstances and James as the pastor of the church of Jerusalem reveals this to his congregation.
God is calling Christians to overcome our humanistic reaction and replace it with a supernatural response.
Enduring suffering as a result of sin is nothing extraordinary.
However enduring unfair treatment with patience is particularly noteworthy.
When we respond in such a supernatural way, God is pleased.
Three times James reminds us of the coming of the Lord.
Titus tells us that this is the “blessed hope” of the Christian in Titus 2:13 “13 while we look forward with hope to that wonderful day when the glory of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ, will be revealed.”
James also gives a classic illustration of patience when he says, “see how the farmer waits” – the farmer is patient because the value of the harvest justifies the wait.
When the seed is planted and everything is done in the initial stage, he doesn’t go off and retire.
He is working in another area of the farm.
While we are waiting for the Lord’s coming, We are not exhorted to put on white robes and sit on the roof of the church waiting for Christ return.
We are to be occupied.
We should be working in the church and seeking to win people to Jesus.
Some of the greatest missionaries of history devotedly spread the seed of God’s Word and yet had to wait long periods before seeing the fruit of their efforts.
William Carey, for example, labored 7 years before the first Hindu convert was brought to Christ in Burma.
In West Africa, it was 14 years before one convert was received into the family of God.
In New Zealand, it took 9 years; and it Tahiti, it was 16 years before the first harvest of souls began.
Look the word “patience,” means to endure under.
You don’t really need patience when everything around you is going right.
You need it when life is hard on you.
Suffering and patience seem to go hand in hand.
As a matter of fact, the Bible talks about tribulation working patience in us.
James gives the reader two examples of why we should have patience, first there is the example of the Old Testament prophets in v. 10.
10 My brethren, take the prophets, who spoke in the name of the Lord, as an example of suffering and patience.
The prophets have given an example that you will need patience when you are mistreated.
Secondly, we have the example of the Patriarch Job.
Job was blessed above every other man of his day.
He was prosperous and had a wonderful family.
It seemed he had everything his heart desired.
Then suddenly he lost it all.
Job didn’t understand what was happening or why but he knew his life was in God’s hands.
Even in his confusion he cried out to the Lord.
Job is a wonderful source of encouragement.
When we are Tempted to Lose Patience – Remember it will be Worth the Wait and …
In his wisdom, James continues with these words …
II.
When we are Tempted to Lose Perspective – Strengthen Your Relationship with the Lord (v.
8b)
In the second portion of v. 8, James utters another command, ” ….establish your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is at hand.”
He says that instead of feeling agitated and shaken up by the experience of oppression we are to develop an inner sense of stability.
We are told in v. 8 to “establish” or strengthen our hearts, this is a charge to us as patiently waiting Christians, to firmly establish our hearts in God’s Word and truth and strengthen ourselves against the sin and temptation and trials of the world.
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