Sermon Tone Analysis

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Today I am wrapping up a series on what it means to have a faith that is rooted.
As I have mentioned over the past few weeks, our church is in the beginning process of something called the Church Renewal Lab.
It is a two-year process that is intended to sharpen our vision and focus as a church and help identify for us some of the things that need changing in order to move forward together in our vision and mission as a church.
Yet even in a culture where many things seem to be changing, there are always going to be a few things that must remain securely rooted.
And so, it is good for us to pause and consider some of the ways our faith stays rooted and secure in a world that seems to be wrapped up in so much change and transition.
In particular, today I want us to focus on what it means for us to have a faith that is healthy.
Perhaps January is a good time to consider a topic like health.
I have a membership at the YMCA.
At least three times a week I try to get over to the gym and do a workout to stay physically active.
For others of you who are regular gym attenders, maybe you notice this too—January always seems busier at the gym.
All these people who made New Year’s resolutions to get in shape start up a routine at the gym in January.
And by February it starts to taper off and go back to the regular crowd.
But right now, while it is still January, many more people are perhaps focusing some intentional attention on their own health.
what does it look like for you to have a faith that is kept healthy?
And so, this is the question I am coming with to you today.
What does it look like for you to have a faith that is kept healthy?
To have a healthy body I think we know that several things are required.
It involves not only physical exercise, but also a nutritious diet of what you eat, a proper amount of sleep and rest, a nurturing of peace and contentment (because it is shown that excessive anxiety impacts a person’s physical health), regularly seeing your doctor for a routine physical checkup.
And that just names a few; we could probably name more items that go into maintaining a healthy body.
maintaining health is holistic
My point is this: maintaining your physical health is holistic.
When I say it is holistic what I mean is that there are many interconnected parts that all work together to become the whole.
If all I do for my physical health is go see a doctor for my checkup, but never pay any attention to my diet or my physical exercise, then I am not staying healthy.
In at least some measure, all the parts of physical health must be attended in order to be healthy.
I have to pay attention to the whole thing.
Let’s look at a passage today which has something to say about the holistic nature of a healthy faith.
And even though this is a description of living out a healthy faith that has many interconnected parts, those parts all connect together within one theme.
Mark 12:28–34 (NIV)
cannot talk about what it means to be a Christian without also talking about love
love is something which not only keeps our faith rooted and secure, but also provides a path for our faith to remain healthy
It maybe seems so simple that it should go without saying.
Of course you cannot talk about what it means to be a Christian without also talking about love.
The mission statement of this church is summarized with the three words Love, Grow, Serve.
We intentionally state the word love as the first action word of our mission statement.
And you have probably heard sermons before about love.
Of course you have; so much of the Bible talks about love, how could not have heard sermons before about love.
We talk about what it means for us to be people of love.
We talk about what it means for us to engage the activity of loving.
We talk about what it means for us to be people who are loved by God.
Today in particular let’s consider the way that love is something which not only keeps our faith rooted and secure, but also provides a path for our faith to remain healthy.
Holistic love is like healthcare for our beings.
Let me put just a little bit of a frame of reference around this passage in order for us to understand the way that Jesus is applying this healthy holistic love for our lives.
Notice that the conversation begins with a question.
A teacher of the law asks a question to Jesus.
Mark fills in the detail that this exchange happens in the midst of a debate between Jesus and the Jewish religious leaders.
On the one hand, they are trying to trap Jesus in his words.
But on the other hand, Jesus uses these conversations as an opportunity to reveal the truth of God.
Jesus is questioned about the law
613 commandments (248 positive, 365 prohibitions)
The question itself has to do with the law.
The Jewish people at the time of Jesus lived according to a rather strict legal code of commandments and regulations that come from the books of the Old Testament.
Scholars note that Jewish leaders during that time went to the level of scouring over all the scriptures and listing out every single commandment there is.
The number they came up with is 613.
They said there are 613 separate commandments that every single Jewish person was supposed to remember and perfectly obey.
They broke that list apart into 248 positive commands (something all people should do) and 365 prohibitions (something all people should avoid).
That’s a lot for a person to remember and do, so I suppose it might seem a natural question to ask if there are some commandments more important than others.
how exactly is a person supposed to stay right with God when there seems to be this impossible list of regulations attached?
every commandment is supposed to point us towards loving God and loving others
The thing that makes this a trick question is that any answer which implies excluding even one of these 613 commandments would fall short.
The question itself explains something of the predicament that all Jewish people found themselves to be in during the time of Jesus’ earthly ministry in Israel.
Just how exactly is a person supposed to stay right with God when there seems to be this impossible list of regulations attached?
Jesus answers by pointing out the way in which every single commandment in all of scripture has an arch which all point in the same direction.
Every single commandment and regulation in the Bible is meant to point people toward loving God and loving others.
Jesus doesn’t pick one commandment out as more important than all the rest; Jesus gives an answer to the question which perfectly summarizes exactly what each and every commandment is supposed to point us towards: loving God and loving others.
Jesus is giving a prescription for healthy faith
holistic love is like healthcare for our beings
Let me pull in what we noted back in the introduction.
For many of us who have been Christians for a while the whole topic and idea of love has become something of an obvious Sunday school answer.
Yup, love God and love neighbor; I’ve heard that all my life; I already know that; move on.
But not so fast.
By being a summary of what all the commandments in the Bible point us towards, this is not just another commandment to follow, it is as though Jesus is giving a prescription for healthy faith.
I’ll say it again, holistic love is like healthcare for our beings.
Let me move on to take a look at what I mean by holistic love.
It is a love that has many interconnected parts.
Just like holistic healthcare for our bodies pays attention to our physical needs, our emotional needs, our mental and intellectual needs, and even our spiritual needs (remember, I used to be a chaplain in a hospital), so to Jesus describes the holistic love prescribed by God as being physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual.
The Bible says love the LORD your God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength.
Look at each one of these.
heart — emotional
faith that stays healthy is a faith that feels what God feels
Love with all your heart.
This is reference to our emotions and passions.
A faith that stays healthy is a faith that feels what God feels.
When God’s heart breaks over the sin and evil in the broken world around us, our hearts should break too.
When God feels the injustice that comes before him because of people being abused and mistreated, we should feel the weight of that injustice too.
When God rejoices over the return of one of his prodigal children, then our hearts should rejoice too.
All the commandments of the Bible are meant to help us love God and others with all of our heart—all our emotions.
soul — spiritual
faith that stays healthy is a faith that recognizes we are all created in God’s image
Love with all your soul.
This is a reference to our spiritual beings.
A faith that stays healthy is a faith that recognizes we are all created in God’s image and we—all people—bear that image of our creator.
We are created with a soul that is meant to live with God forever.
Loving God with all our soul means we recognize that there is something so much bigger than just this life in this world.
Loving God with our soul means that we recognize we were created for so much more than this broken and sinful world shows.
Loving do with all our soul means we recognize that every other person we meet carries that same value and priceless worth before God because they all carry that same image of our divine creator too.
All the commandments of the Bible are meant to help us love God and others with all of our soul—all our spirit.
mind — mental/intellectual
faith that stays healthy is a faith that recognizes we can learn and grow in knowledge of God and his world
Love with all your mind.
This is a reference to our intellectual beings.
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