Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Laughing Gas Reveals the Heart
Have you ever been with someone after they have been given laughing gas at the dentist?
You can never be sure of what they are going to say which makes it extremely entertaining.
There is no filter or restraint, so what they are thinking just comes straight out.
· One girl woke up and felt like “a unicorn just took me on a ride to a magical palace, to the land of the blueberries”.
· Another girl woke up thinking she was sore because she crashed her NASCAR car during a race.
· In a YouTube video, 2 older brothers convince their sister that there is an ongoing Zombie apocalypse and then begin to ask questions like, “Should we save the family dog or the cat?” Her answer, “The cat, you idiot!
The dog’s the worst, he’s already dying.”
We often hide the thoughts and passions of our heart, but the Lord sees them.
He addresses the issue in the Sermon on the Mount.
When we talk about the heart we can mean many different things: the heart as mind, the heart as our true self, the heart as our thoughts and desires, the heart as emotion, and many, many more meanings.
Motivations of the Heart
As we continue to look at the words of Christ He builds on the fact that He is the fulfillment of the Law and that believers should be righteous out of a motivation of love for God and others.
In the next verses He is going to give examples of what true motivation looks like.
We are going to deal briefly with all 7 – murder, adultery, divorce, oaths, revenge, and loving others.
We learned last week that Jesus came to fulfill the Law, not do away with it.
Because of His position and sacrifice the sacrificial system and the priesthood of the OT were no longer necessary.
However, the moral law, the ethical teaching, and the prophetic voice of the OT were just as valid as ever.
In fact, Jesus would take it next level and deal with the issues of the heart.
He would point out that God is not interested in just doing the right thing, God is interested in WHY we do the right things.
Dealing with the Heart
So, as I mentioned, Jesus is going to point out several examples of what He means.
What we find is that Jesus does not contradict the Law; instead, He points out the distortions of the Law where the Scribes and Pharisees were guilty.
It is pretty easy to notice that these statements echo the 10 Commandments:
Preventing a Murderous Heart
The first example that Jesus uses focuses on the commandment against murder.
That Was When
Can you imagine living in a society where everything is okay, short of murder?
The religious leaders of Israel had apparently gotten to the place where angry thoughts, insulting words, and evil looks were ok – just as long as you didn’t murder someone, it was okay.
But, This is Now
Jesus goes to the root of the problem – anger, insults, and unforgiveness.
The fruit of the tree (murder) is a result of the roots.
Stop the sin at the point of the root!
Preventing an Adulterous Heart
Jesus moves on from the 6th commandment to the 7th commandment – “you shall not commit adultery”.
These are all some of the hard sayings of the Bible.
What makes them harder is the interpretation of the statements.
This is a good example.
Should we cut off our arms and gouge out our eyes?
No! Jesus is clearly speaking figuratively here and in other places as well.
We must be concerned with the intent of His statements.
This issue came up when the early English editions of the NT came out.
Shortly after the publication of William Tyndale’s English New Testament, the attempt to restrict its circulation was defended on the ground that the simple reader might mistakenly take such language literally and “pluck out his eyes, and so the whole realm will be full of blind men, to the great decay of the nation and the manifest loss of the King’s grace; and thus by reading of the Holy Scriptures will the whole realm come into confusion.”
So a preaching friar is said to have declared in a Cambridge sermon; but he met his match in Hugh Latimer, who, in a sermon preached the following Sunday, said that simple people were well able to distinguish between literal and figurative terms.
“For example,” Latimer went on, “if we paint a fox preaching in a friar’s hood, nobody imagines that a fox is meant, but that craft and hypocrisy are described, which so often are found disguised in that garb.”[1]
So, we must read these things with a thoughtful mind.
Let’s consider some history.
That Was When
Once again, the rabbis were attempting to limit the scope of the commandment you shall not commit adultery.[2]
The 10th commandment deals with coveting but apparently the religious leaders had allowed for all types of sexual immorality short of intercourse with another man’s wife.
According to their interpretation of the law, they could do anything short of sleeping with another man’s wife and still be sexually pure.
Jesus showed his disciples that their righteousness needed to go beyond the righteousness of the Pharisees.
According to Jesus, Now…
Jesus points out that the root of the issue goes much deeper and needs to be dealt with before the ugly fruit of adultery takes place.
Michael Green writes this:
Here again it is not merely the act that is condemned, but the attitude from which it comes.
Deliberately to foster lust, by erotic books, plays, films, magazines and websites, is to fly in the face of this commandment.
For who is to know when the bridle of decency or convention will snap under the strain, and the racehorse of our passions break loose?
‘Man looks upon the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart.’[3]
I’ve heard it said, and maybe you have as well, sex is like a fire.
When the fire is in the fireplace, it is good and warms a home; but when it is outside of the fireplace, it will burn the home down.
Be careful when dealing with fire!
Avoiding Divorce at All Costs (Almost)
Divorce was a hot button issue back then just as it is today.
Again, a very difficult topic and one that has affected many in our society and in the church.
Divorce Was Common in the Time of Jesus
In the Greek and Roman world, a divorce could be formalized in either written or oral notification.
The 1st Century poet Martial spoke of women who had been divorced 10 times.
All the man had to do was find something “indecent” in his wife (basically the equivalent of burning the toast).
The Jews interpretation of “something indecent” fluctuated between two extremes – the school of Shammai and the school of Hillel.
The 1stwas very restrictive on the definition, the 2nd was very open.
Obviously, the school of Hillel was the most popular.
Jesus Emphasizes the Importance of Marriage
Jesus provides sexual immorality as the only instance in which divorce is permitted.
Of course, the reason that God instituted marriage is the ideal.
God intended marriage to be exclusive and lifelong.
I have counseled many struggling marriages with the hopes of restoring the marriage.
In many instances these marriages survived and flourished.
Unfortunately, some did not survive.
I believe that as Jesus said, infidelity is justification for divorce.
I also believe that physical and emotional abuse are justifiable reasons for divorce.
It is simply a reality that many Christians have been divorced and remarried.
I do not believe that what Jesus is saying is that failure cannot be forgiven, or that a new marriage cannot be happy and fruitful.
I believe that the woman at the well would say the same thing.
Be a Man or Woman of Your Word
Jesus takes up the issue of oaths.
Kids learn very early on in the playground the value of taking an oath.
They pinky swear for a solemn oath or cross their fingers when they want to break an oath.
Unfortunately, this becomes more complex as they grow up but just as real.
What a topic to discuss right before an election!
In the Days of Jesus
The OT insisted that oaths be kept.
By the time of Jesus, the Jews had created lots of ways to “cross their fingers behind their backs”.
Any oath which succeeded in avoiding the name of God was not absolutely binding; one could swear by one’s head, by Jerusalem, by heaven, by earth, and so on.
God was not thought of as a partner in such a transaction, so to break faith was not serious.[4]
Again, Jesus is After the Root Issue
True righteousness, according to Jesus is to be trustworthy and true.
I’ve heard people take this to extremes and refuse to give testimony in the courts, refuse to take an oath of office in the military, or make any commitments.
Even Jesus gave testimony in the courts and God frequently bound Himself by oath.
Verse 37 says, “all you need to say is simply ‘Yes’ or ‘No’.
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