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
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Fear
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Sadness
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Anger
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PO - People run the world over, seek out spirituality in many places, and often return home to discover peace.
INTRO - Jesus is sufficient for all my needs.
When I stopped running from and then ran to Him, I discovered this to be true.
Jesus is there for you.
Christians and churches think, work, do, and try all sorts of things to “be the church.”
Yet, so many fail, fall, and fade into history.
TRANS - The Bible is our authority for everything we do.
When we say “yes” to that, then turn to doing things the same old failed way, we miss the point of the Living Word.
Today, Jesus reminds us how a living thing should both thrive and reproduce, else it is useless.
Let’s sit in with the people of the 1st century and hear again the words of Jesus.
PRAY
What does it say?
What does it mean?
Human Jesus
What does Jesus’ hunger teach us about His humanity?
Jesus spent the night with friends.
(Sun - Mon)
Why was he hungry this Monday?
Did they stay up all night talking?
Did he get up early to pray?
Do you see Jesus’ humanity in this?
He was ready to eat!
ILL - Our cat Bobo loves to eat.l Dry food or canned.
And, while finicky about people food, there are two things that always bring him around: yogurt and shrimp.
He knows these two smells and will always show up from hiding, and with loving passion, gently touch you with his paw and give you the BIG eyes that only a mean person could resist.
Yes, he knows he really likes to eat.
Well, Jesus knew he was hungry.
He knew the pleasure of feeding a hungry stomach.
Do you recall Jesus’ hunger after fasting?
Can you see the “why” in this?
Why Jesus became like us for us.
See, the Bible is clear that Jesus became a human, a person, with all the needs that accompany a mortal body.
Because of this, Jesus truly understands, completely gets being human.
Jesus is able to feel, understand, and sympathize with each of us.
Prophet Jesus
How did Jesus’ symbolic treatment of the fig tree resemble that of the OT prophets?
We know the prophets made use of teaching opportunities such as:
Isaiah’s sign against Egypt and Cush
Jeremiah’s ruined loin cloth; or the story of the broken flash
And, Ezekiel’s symbolic discussion of Jerusalem’s seige
Frequently they’d use the fig tree in one of their lessons:
Frequently the fig tree was used referencing judgement:
In this context, it symbolizes the then current Isreal and their approaching fate.
Jesus’ words anticipate his approaching time at the temple.
Just as the leaves hid the fact that the tree bears no fruit, so the magnificence of the Temple and its ceremony hid the fact that Isreal is not righteous before God.
They have the appearance of Godliness, but he is far from them.
ILL - We are familiar with similar practices today, famous TV ministries busted for thievery, some big churches with little heart, and many a false teacher as the Bible makes clear.
For us, we must beware not to get caught in the trap of “doing” instead of “being” God’s people, the church.
It’s like the chicken or the egg question: which came first.
Well, Christians, if they read their Bible, should know the answer to that one: the chicken because God made the animals, the trees, and us to reproduce and fill the earth.
Now, the similarity is that we must remember we are created to worship.
That’s first; a group formed FBC Minneola long before buildings, programs, and stuff.
Worship, being a church, and then all else.
It’s why we re-booted Sunday School, so we remember to do the important.
It’s why we spent so much energy on developing our missions statement; to rediscover our values and reason for existing.
We must bear fruit, or like the once great Temple and all the services, FBC Minneola will wither and die.
Teacher Jesus
When did fig trees produce fruit?
Jesus made this statement at a time of year when fig trees were about six weeks from producing edible figs.
These would be the early figs rip in late May whereas the main crop came ready in August-October.
When trees have no early figs, leaves and no fruit, the tree bears no figs in either season, early or late.
Everyone knew it was not the season, as such, Jesus made the point that the tree was a poser, pretender, acting like it may have fruit.
This tree had no intention to produce fruit.
It looked like a fig tree, but it really never intends to produce any fruit, so Jesus “makes an example” of the tree.
Side Note - Rather like all the churches closing their doors today?
Don’t you think?
Why should God do anything for them?
Most all of their members expect the church to “do” for them.
Jesus does not reward selfish, lazy, ungrateful, or disobedient churches.
He only uses them as examples for other churches like a warning or reminder to be “doers of the Word.”
Jesus used this to enact his authority and to provide a teaching to his disciples; he cursed, as an exceptionally holy man was known to do, he cursed the tree to destroy it.
Why did Jesus curse the tree for not having fruit if it was not its season to do so?
Let’s get this in perspective.
BAK - The fig tree was a common sight and people knew how it bore fruit.
Leaves appeared in March and the early green knops, or paggim, remaining on the tree from the late season came to develop after the leaves grew.
This tree had leaves, but no knops; it looked like is should have something.
Even the not fully developed knops were edible, yet not so tasty.
Jesus saw the figs, expected to find something, yet this one had nothing.
Also, keep in perspective that Jesus is not using bad language, nor is there any indication of him acting irate.
What we have is a story of Jesus, not about a barren fig tree, but an acted out parable that explains the cleansing of the temple that comes between the two parts of this lesson.
How does the cursing of the fig tree—and the observation of the withered tree in Mark 11:20–21—relate to Jesus’ cleansing of the temple?
What Jesus does to the tree should not be identified as an act of anger or rage.
Matter of fact, when we get to the temple cleansing we observe Jesus “looking around” indicating that his actions were carefully planned as a prophetic act just like this fig tree showing us that Jesus is providing a well thought out teaching principle not an act of rage.
The tree represents Isreal and is judged by its Messiah.
Although it appears religious with activity just as the fig tree appears to be alive with leaves, both Isreal and the tree are fruitless.
ILL - Back when I taught at the college, I had a student in one of my computer classes who knew she was not going to “get it.”
Only 50% of my initial students survived the classes.
It was not easy work.
The learning curve was steep and this lady was ready go give up.
During a class break, I asked her to remain behind.
She broke down and told me she was quitting the class.
I asked her to give to give me a chance to help, she really didn’t expect to stay in the class, yet reluctantly agreed.
I took another approach with the lady.
Instead of opening book, we opened the inside of a whole bunch of computers.
We began taking them apart slowly and then I showed her how to put them together again.
Along the way, we talked about each part and how it was tied to the hardware level software; that’s where she was having the most trouble.
You see, the lady needed something she could see to hang what were simply a bunch of facts in her mind, she needed something to help her make sense of what I was teaching.
In this way, the lady got it.
She didn’t quit the class and eventually passed.
I was extremely proud of her; even more proud of her than the others who got “A’s.”
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