Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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We Help Others Grow By...
1. Committing to be Prepared (4:12)
The word you see in your Bible that is translated "prepare," can also be seen as "equipping," or "perfecting,", or "responsibility."
When it's used in the Bible, the idea is to "complete, prepare, or restore."
To "bring to an end, or finish."
To "mature" something.
To "make arrangements for in advance."
Take a look at the front portion of verse 12.
v.12 to prepare God’s people for works of service
We help others grow by preparing God's people.
Some of the ways we do this at Concord are through:
1. Bible study
We have classes that meet on Sunday morning to study God's Word together.
Our teachers and leaders work hard throughout the week to prepare in order that you can receive something that will help you in your walk with Christ.
If you come to Bible study in the morning, study your lesson throughout the week, write notes while you discuss, and encourage each other throughout the week.
If you don't attend morning Bible study, let me encourage you to use this hour to learn more about how you can prepare yourself for God's service.
2. Sunday Morning Preaching
Friends, I do my best each week to study, pray over, and provide what I believe God wants Concord to hear each week.
Listen actively as I preach.
Open your Bible.
Follow along.
Make notes in the bulletin.
Call or text me with questions throughout the week.
3. Sunday evening study
We generally are learning a different topic each month or so on Sunday night as it relates to being a disciple of His.
Get prepared by coming, learning, and putting what you've learned into practice.
4. One on one discipleship
Prepare God's people by learning to disciple another person in a life-on-life, or one on one method.
This is where you spent a few hours of your week walking with another believer, encouraging them, and helping them grow in the faith.
5. Weekday ministries
Maybe you are a part of working with Door of Hope, Hope2All, or Hope you can make it to Wednesday night activities.
These are a great way to serve others within and without the church.
Christianity isn't just a Sunday thing, it's who you are.
Believer, it's my responsibility to teach and train you as pastor.
You also have a responsibility.
Yours is to take advantage of the teaching and training that prepares for ministry.
I'm convinced that when there is at least one among us who doesn't take advantage of opportunities to prepare themselves for ministry, something isn't going to get done.
2. Committing to Change (4:13)
Paul says “until we reach maturity…attaining the whole measure of the fullness of Christ.”
Friends, there is NO MATURITY UNLESS THERE IS CHANGE.
There can’t be Christian growth, or maturity, unless that believer changes.
I’m not necessarily talking about changing the version of scripture you are reading.
If you like it, can understand it, and apply it, USE IT.
I’m not necessarily talking about the music you sing or listen to.
If you are glorifying God and His message is being proclaimed, SING IT.
Notice what Paul says in Eph.
4:14
When we are committed to preparing ourselves for kingdom work and then changing along with that, we’ll see ourselves becoming solid in our faith, being able to pick out what is sound and what is not.
Change here in Ephesians 4 isn’t simply change for the sake of change, but instead it’s change TOWARD a goal.
This goal is maturity in Christ.
The NIV and New Living Translation says “Then we will no longer be infants”
The NASB says “As a result”
Christian, would you say you are on a track of maturity?
One that will result in change toward growing in Him?
What does you daily Bible reading look like?
Are you in God’s word?
How do you plan on sharing your faith?
Do you study people, and ask them what they think?
Are you intentional?
What is your plan to change toward maturity?
3. Committing to Discovering and Using Gifts (4:16)
We all know someone who is physically disabled.
Maybe it’s a family member, a friend, a co-worker.
When we meet someone with a disability, often times it’s easy to pick it out.
They are in a wheelchair
They have braces on their legs or arms.
Maybe some sort of prosthesis.
Some people have disabilities that are harder to point out.
Some have mental challenges that make life difficult.
Often times the church is like this.
On the outside everything appears to be normal.
But upon closer inspection, time spent with a local body, the disabilities are seen.
Church, we become disabled as a body of Christ when we fail to act upon this verse.
It says “joined and held together by every supporting ligament.”
Most often we operate on such a low efficiency level in our churches because we’ve failed to grasp the meaning of this verse.
Let me break it down here.
Paul is saying “if you claim to be a part of the body, but aren’t participating, discovering your gifts, using your gifts for His kingdom, you are not mature and part of the reason the church isn’t mature.”
Listen to what one author said of the local church.
“Well over 50% of the average congregation is a ministry wasteland.”
Bill Hull
He said, “people go unchallenged, untrained, unused, and unfulfilled.”
Concord, some of us may feel unfulfilled, but it’s not because we are unchallenged, untrained, or unused.
We are feel unfulfilled when we aren’t actively taking steps toward maturity; listening to those who are teaching and training as verse 11 mentions.
These people are here to do what verse 12 says; to equip the saints for service and build up the body of Christ.
How do you discover your spiritual gifts?
I think we make it more difficult than it needs to be.
Ask yourself 2 questions:
What am I already good at?
What am I interested in doing for the kingdom?
Romans 12 and 1 Cor.
12 are good starting places for this.
Part of discovering and developing spiritual gifts is using and working with the ones God has already given us.
:)
4. Committing to Walking in the Spirit (5:19-21)
In the previous verse, 18, Paul reminds them not to spend their time worrying about getting drunk, but being filled with the Spirit.
This “be filled” is an on-going, moment-by-moment experience.
The context in 18 implies you have a choice.
You can do this or that.
Verses 19-21 show what that looks like.
Speaking
Speak to one another using scripture or songs.
Or, if you want to relate to me, use pop culture song or movie snippets.
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