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.
A score of 0.5 or higher indicates the tone is likely present.
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Anger
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Pray
Introduction
Let’s play a game…
I’m going to play an intro to a song, and I want you to tell me what it is.
Just shout out when you think you know what it is.
Bonus points for the artist.
[Play song]
This was of course the Rolling Stones with their famous double negative song, ‘I can’t get no satisfaction’.
And I’m not sure if that means that they can’t get any satisfaction or, due to the double negative, they always get satisfaction.
[Show Intro Slide]
The Rolling Stones couldn’t get satisfaction... and for many people neither can they.
It seems that the more we try to get satisfied the more we want.
And the more want, the more we get, and the more we get, the less satisfied we become.
It’s like quicksand - the more you try to wriggle free the more you sink.
And so we try and try to get satisfied.
We think to ourselves, if only I could have that bigger house, then I’ll be satisfied.
If only I had that better, faster car - THEN I’ll be satisfied.
If only I could have a prettier wife - THEN I’ll be satisfied.
And so society strives for the bigger house, the faster car, the prettier wife…and it turns out that none of that satisfies.
“I thought the bigger house would make me happy and content, but it’s just not right.
The living rooms aren’t big enough - the kitchen isn’t right.”
And so we upscale even more, or we knock down the kitchen and do it up again.
Pause
Now there’s nothing WRONG with this.
I’m not having a go at moving house or buying cars…but there seems to be something in all of us that looks for satisfaction, and when we try to find satisfaction in the wrong places then we are never satisfied.
For me it’s technology.
When I was big into photography, I wanted the bigger and better camera.
Every time I went on holiday I was looking at the duty free shops to see what’s available.
I used to drive Kate insane - and every time I got a better camera, there was always a BETTER model that I then wanted.
I wasn’t satisfied until I got the best camera money could buy at the time when I started to take wedding photos.
And even when i had that, I needed…or so I thought…bigger lenses, faster lenses, better glass, better flash… And it never ended.
Fast forward about 15 years and while I sold that camera when Naomi came along, if I still HAD it, it would now be almost obsolete.
Cheap cameras today have a bigger sensor than it.
My phone almost has a bigger sensor than that camera (although not as good).
Point is, we strive for satisfaction or contentment and we think it’s within our grasp, but it’s not…at least not if we try to find satisfaction in our STUFF.
And so we are like sheep without a shepherd - running around after what we THINK will feed our desire for satisfaction and it turns out we’re not feeding on lush green grass, but we’re feeding on dust.
Wouldn’t you like to feed off something that actually satisfies?
Wouldn’t you like to eat food that sustains and enhances your life rather than feeding of junk food?
Sheep need lush green grass to feed, to be healthy, to be satisfied - not dust…And in 1st Century Judea, dust was all they had for most of the year.
Yet around springtime, close to passover, grass started to grow in some areas, and it was a shepherd’s dream - “bring the sheep to the green grass and let them feed.
Let them have their fill.”
But sheep need LED to green pastures - what they need, IF THEY ARE GOING TO BE FILLED and satisfied…what they NEED is a shepherd, to lead them to the green pastures and beside the still waters so that they can eat until they’re full and drink until they are satisfied.
And we read that earlier from Psalm 23, when we read of the GOOD shepherd, the Lord who is our shepherd…and as verse 1 says, when the LORD is our shepherd we can be satisfied - we want for NOTHING.
Pause
Jesus, in Mark 6 takes his disciples to a desolate place - a wilderness place for rest, but a crowd see where they’re going and run ahead of them.
So they don’t get their rest - instead Jesus has compassion on them because they are like sheep without a shepherd.
And so Jesus fed them…spiritually - he taught them many things.
What those things were, we do not know, but it was food for the soul, I’m sure.
So these people, who are running aimlessly like sheep without a shepherd, eating dust are being led and fed by the GOOD SHEPHERD.
[Jesus leads and feeds]
But because they are human they get hungry.
The disciples want to send them away - there’s no need for a miracle here.
There are surrounding villages where people can buy food, but that wouldn’t fill them…that wouldn’t SATISFY them - Not like Jesus could.
So what does Jesus do?
He leads them…he leads them like a good shepherd does…he organises them beside the water (cos they went by boat) and he made them sit in groups…where???
On the green grass - in the green pastures... Like a good shepherd would do with his sheep.
They are led in the green pasture, beside the water.
And after Jesus feeds them they shall not WANT for anything.
This is the Good Shepherd in action right here…The one that David wrote about hundreds of years before.
And he’s about to feed 5000 people with 5 loaves and 2 fish.
Could this be Elijah - people are asking...
Cos Elijah did something like this where he fed 100 men with 20 loaves of bread.
But this is NOWHERE NEAR that - this makes Elijah’s miracle look like a party-trick.
Jesus is NOT Elijah, he’s not just some other prophet - he’s so much greater than Elijah.
So who is he?
Of course, this is what Mark is trying to tell his readers.
Pause
And so Jesus takes the bread, he looks up to heaven where his Father is seated, and he gives thanks to the Father - he gives HIM the glory for the provision of bread, he breaks the bread and he gives it to the disciples and has them distribute the bread among the people.
And what happens?
5000 plus people are fed…but not just fed - they are satisfied…and not just satisfied.
The Greek word used for satisfied is Choratzo and it means that they were FULL.
It’s the difference between going to Clenaghan’s and going to Cosmo.
For those who don’t know, Clenaghan’s is a fancy restaurant that has just been reopened.
It’s on the way to Aghalee - it has amazing food.
Or if you haven’t been there, think Wine and Brine in Moira, or anywhere that does really good, but gourmet food.
When you’re at that restaurant, you go home fed…but you’re not generally full.
At least not me.
When I see a recipe or a label on a packet that says, ‘serves 2’ I think - that’ll serve 1 of me.
So I’m never full coming back from there - don’t get me wrong, the food is awesome and the tastes are fantastic.
I’m fed, but I’m not full - and I couldn’t call myself satisfied…I wouldn’t call myself Choratzo.
But Cosmo, for those who don’t know, is an all-you-can-eat buffet with Chinese, Indian, American, British, Japanese - food from practically all around the world.
And you can eat as much as you want…or in my case, I can eat as much as I’m able.
Now, when I go there it is practically sinful, cos I stuff myself…to the point where I’m almost sick…and when I come away from there, I’m not satisfied…I’m FULL - I’m STUFFED TO THE GILLS.
That’s the difference....
When Jesus fed these 5000 people they were Chortazo - they were FULL - FILLED…Satisfied because they could eat NO MORE.
And interestingly, the word Chortazo which means fill, comes from the root word Chortos, which means grass - These sheep without a shepherd had been led and fed of the lushest grass in the world, because Jesus was the one leading and feeding.
Pause
Now, back to Psalm 23...
This is reminiscent of Psalm 23, isn’t it....
With the LORD as my shepherd, I am satisfied - he leads me beside still waters and green pastures where I can have the lushest grass.
In fact, he feeds me before my enemies, such is he provision and protection, and he gives me MORE than I need that my cup overflows.
Now, if ANYONE is this good shepherd that David writes about in Psalm 23, it’s JESUS!
Pause
My cup overflows...
Which means that Jesus leads and he feeds, but he also exceeds.
[Jesus leads, feeds and exceeds]
Cos Jesus had compassion on the crowd because they were like sheep without a shepherd and so he became their shepherd - the GOOD shepherd.
He fed them until they were overflowing, but in John’s account Jesus says something that we need hear today.
After Jesus feeds the 5000 he says this...
And he continued...
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