Sermon Tone Analysis

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Whatever it takes
Have any of you ever prayed a prayer similar to Tommy?
I have.
For many, their story of salvation is similar.
They’ve tried everything they can, tried every thing the world has to offer, and they’ve discovered that they just can’t do it on their own…so they seek God.
Now God can really work with people like that.
They’re so open to change, they’ve already accepted that they need God.
Some of us perhaps had a baby faith, or a high school faith, where we learn how to trust God in the small things in life…and life goes generally well for us.
Until it doesn’t.
Until we either get too comfortable doing life without needing God, or until something so big and impossible comes along that we find ourselves incapable of trusting God.
Over the past couple of weeks we’ve talked about trusting God in change.
We’ve talked about trusting God with our Stuff (the difficulties in life), and last week we talked about rooting out the legalistic junk in our Christian walk.
This week as you can see in the video, we’re talking about who we are in God, that He wants to strip away the things we’ve added which were not of him.
Treading Water with God
I remember back to the second grade when my parents used to take me to the YMCA in Chicago, when we were living in Hinsdale there.
One of the lessons was how to tread water.
Does everyone know what that is?
Later, when I started flying in the Air Force, we were taught again to tread water.
We were taught ways to increase our buoyancy, back in those days I actually needed help increasing buoyancy.
The idea is to use technique and training to decrease your energy output, and conserve that energy so that you can survive as long as possible while waiting to be rescued.
I’ve been on the other side of this also, serving with the Combat Search & Rescue wing here in Alaska.
A man afloat in the water is a complex situation.
Even in a perfect case, which we never see in Alaska…even with a perfect swimmer who is uninjured and in perfect shape, the current whisks people where it wants.
No matter how perfect your technique is treading water, you’re still at the mercy of the currents.
Currents are amazing.
Has anyone ever experienced a rip-tide?
No matter how hard you swim, you cannot beat a rip tide.
The only solution is to swim across it, and get out of it, and then resume your progress towards shore.
Some of us have at times, and some of you may be now even, just treading water, waiting to be rescued.
Do you remember one of the lines that God says in the video clip, “We can never stay still in this life”, “we’re either moving closer or further away from God” It’s true.
Some of us are even fighting against a rip-tide, rather than reaching out to the Savior.
Our savior is like the rescue swimmer dangling from a blackhawk, all we have to do is trust him in His chiseling process, and no matter how hard the rip-tide, or how tired we are of treading water, we just need to take His hand and make his ways, ours.
God doesn’t make junk
Psalms
This week if you are looking for for a passage in the bible to read and study, make your way through the whole of .
Other parts of the prayer follow along with the message today.
But this part is vital, “YOU are fearfully, and wonderfully made” God doesn’t make junk.
There is a lot going on in that prayer.
This week if you are looking for
I’ll give you another example of this from the new testament, in the book of Ephesians, where Paul is writing to the church in Ephusus.
Join me in Ephesians Chapter 2 Verse 10
Ephesians 2:10
In the language that Paul wrote this letter in, the work used for workmanship was “poiema”.
Some of you may recognize that, as our english word, “poem” has it’s roots from this word.
Paul is saying that we are literally God’s Poem.
We’re created to do Good works as Jesus did, in the plans that God has already pre-destined for us to do.
Pretty neat.
All we have to do is stop trying to beat the rip current, stop treading water…and trust God to make a change in our hearts and our lives.
We need to trust in His sanctification.
Woah, big word.
Sanctification.
Term meaning being made holy, or purified, it is used broadly of the whole Christian experience, though most theologians prefer to use it in a restricted sense to distinguish it from related terms, such as regeneration, justification, and glorification.
Walter A. Elwell and Barry J. Beitzel, “Sanctification,” Baker Encyclopedia of the Bible (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1988), 1898.
There are spiritual disciplines that we can use to help us focus the process of sanctification.
But those are for another sermon.
What I want you to be concerned with today, are the extremes in application of these disciplines.
I’m concerned with the extremes of Quietism & Pietism.
Quietism
The term quietism is a system of spiritual minimizing where we acknowledge the fact that we cannot change ourselves, only God can change us…so we do nothing.
It’s similar to another form of minimizing we’ve probably all done.
Have any of you ever made a mistake, and tried to minimize it?
Sure, we all have.
Quietism is extreme passivity.
Quietism will not accomplish the goal of getting closer to God, nor will it allow Him to make us more like His son, Jesus.
In the video, God asked Tommy, “would you rather play “God” or work?”
Quietism talks a big game, but involves no work.
Pietism
Pietism is the polar opposite of quietism.
Those who use this method are aggressive in their search for morality.
People caught up in this sin, are so obsessive about seeking perfection and perfect doctrine, that they end up looking and acting just like pharisees.
Some of the only times in the bible where we see Jesus recorded as being mad, involve the pharisees.
We talked last week about legalism.
The pietist is captured by their dogmatic ways, and similar to those caught in the sins of legalism, they’re so empty inside that they drag others with them.
Quietism & Pietism in the church
We see these attitudes in the church as well.
How many people have seen what happens when a church sinks into legalistic rituals and rigid rules based on poorly quoted bible verses, usually taken completely out of context?
Sure, we all have.
How many have seen what happens when a church chooses to sit back in extreme passivity?
In the church, when we see extremes like this, the source always tracks back to leadership style.
Whether a restrictive and legalistic council or a burned out pastor.
The fruit will start to drop away, and the enemy will start to creep in.
So what do we do?
As I’ve been speaking about these terms, and as you were watching the video, I’m sure many of you are identifying areas of your life where you have either been through, or are going through, or have seen others go through something similar.
Some of you may be able to see where some of these extreme attitudes have affected you, whether from the church or from others in your life feeding you lies about God’s ways.
I speak a lot of about Good News.
Because it is so awesome.
Part of the Good News brought by the example of Jesus Christ, is that these ways, are not God’s ways.
God’s ways are love.
Love
Does anyone else remember the WWJD, what would jesus do, movement a while back?
Like any good movement, we can find ways to pervert it’s meanings…but at the root of the message, the concept of thinking of what Jesus would do in a situation, often helps to combat the temptations of quietism and pietism.
Let me give you an example.
The woman at the well
Turn with me to John chapter 4. Jesus was tired.
His disciples had gone into the city to buy food, but He was tired.
Remember, He was fully man, with all of our fully man frailties and problems.
Just like many of us, work isn’t necessarily over when we’re tired.
For those in ministry, God doesn’t have a “time clock system”.
Jesus was tired, yet he served anyway, with grace and love.
So Jesus is at the well, and he see a woman coming to draw water.
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