Sermon Tone Analysis

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Luke 1:26-38, 1 John 4:19, John 3:16, Jeremiah 33:3, Matthew 7:7-11, James 4:8, 1 Peter 5:6-7, Romans 8:31
Intro:
People are notorious for being curious at Christmas time.
Some even sneak into closets and into the gift hiding spots.
Curiosity can be good, however.
Being curious is one of the traits that can help people experience the love of God and enjoy a relationship with Him.
Staying curious when we read and hear the history from the Bible, such as the Christmas passages, can open new perspectives and understandings of the Wonder of Christmas.
Let’s read the announcement narrative again and begin to open our “spiritual eyes of curiosity.”
Let’s see how God may want us to experience His love this Christmas from a different point of view.
1.Compelling Curiosity
In todays video, the angel actress was preparing for the Nativity scene.
She modelled some wonderfully curious questions that engage our minds and hearts to the Christmas story we do not normally consider.
How did Mary share the news of her pregnancy with her parents?
How did such this divine message from the angel to this teenage mother-to-be impact the way she related to her God?
How would it change our thinking and feelings to be called “highly favoured” by an angel?
v 28
While this is an announcement to Mary, how do you raise a child to be all the things mentioned in verses 32-33?
What did a command not to be afraid really do to her internal fears that Mary must have been experiencing in those days of pregnancy?
These are all curiosities that we can relate to when we remember the humanity of the people in the story.
This kind of thinking can impact how we relate to God.
God had asked His people to be curious and ask.
2.God made the first move!
One of the observations we can see is that the Wonder of Christmas is expressed through the fact that God has always made the first move.
He made himself known in the O.T.
He told Mary what was about to happen to and in her.
He loving sent us His only Son named Jesus.
The Apostle John wrote about the love of God.
John 3:16 says,
Later John wrote:
The love of God compelled Him to make the first move in manifesting Himself in the form of a baby.
The prophecies called Him Immanuel, which means, “God with us.”
The God who loves us is the God who came in the person of Jesus.
He came because He wanted a relationship with us that would enable us to love Him back.
He desires to be loved by His most precious creation: human beings.
God made the move to choose Mary, in part, because she could be trusted with such a task, but also because of the way Mary must have loved God with all her heart, soul, mind, and strength.
She loved God back with her life.
God’s love was revealed to Mary, in startling moment when the message was conveyed to her by the angel Gabriel.
Mary, who was called “highly favoured”, must have been one who engaged in the prayer.
One of the most natural and normal ways to cultivate that relationship is through communicating with each other.
Part of the nature and character of God is that He longs to be communicated with those whom He loves.
The infinite God wants to hear from the finite creation of humanity.
And if we as humans are to have an authentic, growing relationship with God, we must be able to ask our curious questions about life.
Questions are not off-putting to God.
Rather, calling out to God to solicit a response from Him is what we see God has invited people to do.
Jeremiah 33:3 says:
The previous verse, Is 45.11 said much the same thing.
God desires for people to communicate with Him.
Call on Him with our questions and curiosities through life.
This is where our love is bound to grow as we ask and wait for His response.
When we feel uncertain, perplexed, afraid, annoyed, defeated, discouraged, and unsure about the next steps we are to take in life, we are invited as His creation to call on Him as our Creator.
God wants to hear from us.
We are invited to ask questions and curiosities that are occupying our lives.
God wants us to reach out, connect, convey, and wait to receive from Him.
We see this same part of God’s nature and character being offered in Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount recorded in Matthew chapters 5-7.
Notice what Jesus says.
Jesus is talking to the people about stepping closer into the desired relationship with God the Father that He created people to have and enjoy.
Mary experienced this:
Stepping closer to God through communication is what Jesus’ brother, James, invites people to do in his letter.
Drawing near is a relational step of trust.
As we draw near, we can communicate with God by asking about curious thoughts that have been rolling around in our lives.
Asking and expecting a response is not only normal, but according to Jesus, it will happen!
And the reason is that He is the Good Father; He wants to give us good things.
He wants to provide and connect.
He wants to respond in ways that will be life-giving because He loves us and wants to hear from us as we come nearer to Him in our relationship with Him.
The three verbs that Jesus articulates: “Ask…Seek…Knock…,” those are verbs that talk about being intentional and lead to relational engagement.
The wonder of Christmas is about an intentional first move of love by God with the hope of relational engagement among the people He came to rescue from sin.
These verbs are in a very important tense in the original language.
They are in the present perfect tense.
That means an action happens and keeps on happening.
What Jesus invites His followers to do is pray to God for discernment in a way that starts and doesn’t stop.
Jesus is saying: Ask and keep on asking; seek and keep on seeking; knock and keep on knocking.
As you do this, you are positioning yourself to receive a response.
That response may be “yes.”
It may be “no.”
It may be “not now.”
Regardless, Jesus invites us to more than just an “in the moment” prayer that is nonchalant.
Jesus invites us to be intentional about engaging in a process of understanding, of receiving, and of discernment.
It starts with intentional, active, and consistent prayer, which is a connects us with the heart of God.
When we are burdened with fears and anxieties not unlike those feelings that Mary may have had when encountering the angel of the Lord, we can count on the nature and character of the God who wants to hear from us regarding our anxieties.
He wants to hear from us and wants us to bring our fears to Him because He cares for us and deeply loves us.
Remember, He loved us first.
Now, we get the opportunity to love God back relationally through communicating with Him our fears, curiosities, and anxieties in our lives.
Mary’s statement shows she was willing to do this!
Notice what the Apostle Peter wrote.
Mary was not going to live a perfect sinless life from that point on.
No, she was just committed to what God wanted for her life.
I believe, for example, she failed when she left Jesus in Jerusalem at the age or 12.
She failed again when she and her other children questioned His early ministry.
The love God has for us is strong enough for our failures and fears.
God’s love holds up during our curiosities that we bring to God in prayer.
As the angel articulated to those shepherds, Jesus is the Saviour who was born for “all people.”
That includes the people who would let Him down and cause Him pain through our choices.
We can always come back around and reconnect with repentant hearts and lives that will be received by the God who first loved us and always will.
3.Personal Impact
Whether you are a first-century Jewish teenage girl trying to understand how you just were chosen by God to be the mother of the Messiah or you are a twenty-first-century person trying to figure out life with God in your circumstances, know that God loves you this Christmas.
He is not afraid of the various questions, curiosities or anxieties in our lives.
God knows where we have been, where we are, and where we are headed.
He has a plan for our lives and wants that plan to include heart-to-heart communication with Him as our Creator.
He wants us to call on Him with all our questions and all our doubts.
He will answer, and show us the next steps as we walk faithfully with Him.
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