Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

This automated analysis scores the text on the likely presence of emotional, language, and social tones. There are no right or wrong scores; this is just an indication of tones readers or listeners may pick up from the text.
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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
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Social Tendencies
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Anger
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Announcement
Next Saturday…We are having a mens event that I am particularly excited about…Ax and Knife throwing.
& A BBQ...
So Guys…This event is an event that is designed for you to bring a friend
Its not a front door to the church but its a side door.
Intro
One of the things that you have continually heard me say and preach here is that God wants to extend his life through you
This is core to what the Gospel is.
Jesus came proclaiming the availability of God’s rule and reign right now!
What he is saying is that he wants to extend his kingdom rule through you
And I truly believe this
That Jesus forgives you because of his death on the cross but that is just the start of it!
He wants to make you new
He wants to make you Holy as he is Holy and then he wants to extend that holiness through you to a world that desperately needs it
When I was in Seminary I had a class on the Old Testament Minor Prophets...And we looked at all of them but the one that we really did a deep dive on was the book of Amos.
So if you have never read the book of Amos let me give you the background so you can just understand why his words are just so harsh
About 150 years before Amos was born the northern and Southern kingdoms of Israel split off from one another....
And Amos is a fig farmer and prophet
So his king Jeroboam 2 was a really bad king...
he allowed idol worship
And because of all of this…The king didn't look after or care for the poor and neither did anyone else
So Amos travels to a temple in Bethel and he starts just getting really angry at the people who lived there and the leaders of Israel
He reminds them that they were called to be this great blessing to the world but they never were
He reminds them that they are supposed to be a picture of God’s holiness and God’s holiness through you should have a profound effect on the world!
SO I want to give you a picture of just one of the Judgments that Amos casts onto the people of Bethel:
I mean, Amos is Harsh…He would have for sure been canceled: He calls out these women who are basically getting fat on the backs of poor people and bossing their husbands around…He calls them “you cows of Bashan” These woman crush the needy
How are they crushing the needy?
Well there are starving people and they call for more food and wine
He asks hey what happen you were supposed to be a picture of God’s justice and righteousness on this earth what happened?
These women that Amos is criticizing are going and making offerings to God
They are doing all of the religious things but they are just neglecting people...
The forget that God’s people
and finally we get to the heart of the message of God here
I love how Amos says that God swears by his Holiness that this wont continue…To me it is this reminder that we as a people are supposed to be reflections of God’s holiness
The Holiness of God ought to extend through us to the world.
This is what Amos is lamenting...
That there should be a tangible effect of our own transformation in our communities
There ought to be new levels of compassion and love toward our neighbors
That these people who play like they are really religious…They go and give their offerings…They want God’s holiness for themselves but they don’t care at all about extending it to the rest of the world
So the whole Polemic kind of comes to a crescendo in Chapter 5
And as we look to Amos 5 this morning I just want you to think of how utterly shocking this would have been for the Jews to hear:
Whenever I read this passage as a leader in the church it is honestly a bit jarring
Its like God is saying…when you gather and sing
when you gather and pray
when you gather and give offerings
I’m not listening
I actually despise your church service....why?
Because when God’s people failed to care for the poor and to extend his holiness out towards others!
God’s response is The worship you have for me just turns me off...
What God says to his people is…Instead of pretending to love me but oppress others
Just justice roll on like a river and righteousness like a never failing stream
Justice and righteousness are expressions of holiness
The term (Mishpat) or justice occurs 422 times in the Old Testament
and the word righteousness (tsedaqah) 157 times....They not only refer to God’s character but the way that the world should be...
Cries for justice and righteousness in the Bible are cries that the world is not as it should be
These terms are both terms that are used to talk in the old testament about Jesus when he comes to earth that he will rule with Justice and righteousness
And God clearly wants his people to embody justice and righteousness!
See often times we talk about things like sanctification in the church and we think of them in personal terms...
How God makes us a new creation
How God makes us new
How God makes us into better people morally.
But this is all for the benefit of the rest of the world!
If your sanctification only benefits you then maybe its not sanctification at all!
John Wesley, the founder of methodism rode his horse all over England to preach the gospel.
And what he noticed is that so many people were hurting and suffering.
It started in the coal mines.
Children would work the coal mines because their little hands would be able to reach the coal veins easier than adult hands...
Countless children got sick and died from long hours and miserable work conditions
So Wesley…prompted by these scriptures calling for justice
He spoke out, he went to parliament
He wrote letters
He began campaigns advocating for children and he changed the laws...
Wesley Saw that the system itself was rigged to hurt the kids
In 1774 John Wesley published a Pamphlet called “thoughts on Slavery”
and in it he wrote “all slavery is irreconcilable to justice and to mercy”
In 1787 Wesley wrote in his diary “ God almighty has set before me two objects, the suppression of the slave trade and the reformation of manners”
In 1791 the year that Wesley died he wrote to Wilbur Wilberforce the man who would end the British slave trade: ”Go in the name of God and in the power of his might, till even American Slavery (which Wesley considered the vilest that he ever saw under the sun) shall vanish away before it.”
In 1807 The slave trade in Britain was officially outlawed....One of Wesley’s disciples, Wilbur Wilberforce was there leading the charge...
And it is impotrant to note that hundreds of churches were involved in the struggle...
The churches prayed for an end to slavery, they boycotted products produced by slave holders like Sugar and cotton
The whole point is that we are called to be bearers of God’s justice and righteousness
Sanctification is not just for us to be better people but it is to bring about expressions of God’s justice and righteousness on this earth.
This is what I mean by the way when I share with you my favorite scripture: Romans 8:19
That the world is just waiting for people who are christlike to make an impact on the world!
They are waiting for you to put your holiness into action
One of the reasons why the message of Holiness spread like wildfire is because men and women were committed to transforming their world
Through caring for the oppress
Through bringing justice and righteousness to the powerless
Because Holiness wasn't just about personal piety but it was about remaking this world in God’s image
And this isn't just an old testament deal:
Jesus address this in what I think is one of his most disturbing passages
It is about when Jesus returns to judge the world: It is found in Matthew 25:31-46
The last fill in the blank for today
Jesus will hold us accountable for the way we live out holiness
Its just as true in the book of Amos as it is in this parable of Jesus
The point of this parable is not that your salvation relies on you doing charitable acts...
But that because of your salvation , your transformed by God’s justice and righteousness and now you have a new set of eyes…The point of this parable is that we are going to get judged based on what we do with our salvation
This point that Jesus is trying to make is that we encounter him in the “least of these” and that we are to treat everyone with as much honor and dignity that we would treat Jesus
The point is that you can not be a follower of Jesus and not have compassion on others
Our salvation itself is an act of compassion by God…God had pity on us!
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