Sermon Tone Analysis
Overall tone of the sermon
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Last week we began our new series, Evangelism & Us.
We know that if we want to end our guilty silence and to
grow in clarity & confidence in evangelism we need a fresh vision of Jesus;
We need to be clear & confident in the message of evangelism.
The message is the good news about Jesus: who He is, what He’s done & what He will do.
The message is the good news about Jesus: who He is, what He’s done & what He will do.
We need a grand fresh vision of Jesus’ identity & work …and how that addresses our condition.
We need a grand fresh vision of Jesus’ identity & work …and how that addresses our condition.
We need the message that embodies this vision of Jesus.
We need the message that embodies this vision of Jesus.
It is the good news message about Jesus, expressed for today.
It is the good news message for today.
Not a good news message for yesterday.
Not a good news message for yesterday.
Not a false message for today, but the authentic message.
Not a false message for today, but the authentic message.
AND
Not some good parts of the good news, but the whole of the good news for today.
Think about it: We have such a great subject for our message!
May you all become as enthused about our message as I am …and more.
I am an unmitigated, unstinting Jesus-ologist!
What about you?!
Jesus has always attracted and enthused people from of every era...
…from every racial, spiritual and social background!
Jesus has rightly fascinated the practitioners or art, music and literature ‘til today.
What about you?
In the early decades of this 21st century since his arrival people are still flocking to Jesus —
— even those who hate the faults of the churches, and,
— even more so in developing nation states — less so in the enlightened, so-called first world.
The four original gospels have always shown true Christian disciples just HOW Jesus could attract & minister to anyone — whether you are just one person amongst thousands in vast hungry crowds — whether you are bed-ridden as a sick child of a nobleman — whether you are a celebrated scholar secretly creeping in to query Jesus in the anonymity of night.
Jesus could dine with a self-righteous Pharisee, or, He could rub shoulders with national traitors, tax collectors & prostitutes!
Jesus was bigger than merely human politics:
He could attract & hold the loyalty of a traditionalist-conservative like Nicodemus, a traitorous collaborator like Zachaeus, and even an aggressive radical like Simon the Zealot!!
They were all part of Jesus’ support group!
Jesus was, & is, strikingly attractive to deep places of the human heart AND YET He was ALSO profoundly disturbing to the human psyche!
Today, in our increasingly postmodern Western societies, people are attracted to fewer of Jesus’ true characteristics and worsening in their discontent towards Jesus’ true values...
…I mean, they’re outright opposed to His staggering claims for Himself and His unrelenting claims for our allegiance and love.
For us, intellectually self-satisfied and adulterous sinners, Jesus can be quite a shock to our self-determination and our cultural excuse-making.
SO, the true Jesus is not ALL attraction and delight to many people especially today...
Thus last week, I spoke of our temptation as witnesses to only speak the nice parts of the message about Jesus...
So often, we’re tempted to speak only of the more socially acceptable parts of the gospel message.
We often fail to move on from the easier parts of the gospel message to the more challenging parts of the gospel message.
I guess in trying to speak of the gospel for today, we often get bogged down in modern people’s FELT needs.
You know what I mean by “felt needs”, don’t you?...
…the needs which people FEEL and of which they’re conscious.
Of course, that is where we may begin …we begin where people are.
We best take careful note of each person’s felt needs.
Listen to their stories ...or their complaints …their groans.
Listen for their wounds, their loneliness, their family upheaval, their vocational frustration, their unemployment —
— whatever it is, we listen, we discern, and we begin …where people are “at”.
Isn’t that precisely what Jesus did when He began to evangelize individuals?
Remember the different starting points where He began with different people.
Compare the approach Jesus used when He spoke to Nicodemus as opposed to when He spoke to the Samaritan woman st the well.
With Nick, Jesus begins with Nick’s intellectual hunger and his spiritual independence.
With the lonely woman, Jesus begins with her thirsty but idolatrous heart.
Although we may begin with a person’s felt needs, we must never just stop there; Jesus didn’t.
We, like Him, must move on to their deeper needs; these are the ones that ultimately only the Lord Jesus can fully address.
We simply must move on to how Jesus would meet those deeper needs.
We must speak to how He would take them on from where they are.
We make the first of many mistakes if we just completely settle for a person’s own understanding of themselves and their condition.
By dealing with people only at such a level, we tend to only tell them parts of the true gospel...
…and our evangelism remains incomplete and inadequate.
Let me illustrate what I mean:-
One of the most irresponsible things a doctor can do is just accept a patient’s self-diagnosis.
Of course, the doctor should begin by listening to a patient’s felt needs, personal complaints — a pain here, a lump there, a change of colour when...
But then the doctor goes on to notice the patient’s other symptoms.
The doctor questions, prods, examines and scans more of the patient.
The doctor must make his/her own, independent, more fully-informed, diagnosis.
The doctor mustn’t just write out a prescription based only upon what the patient initially describes; they might as well hand over their prescription pad for dangerous medicines to every self-assertive patient!
Relying only upon the self-diagnosis of the patient is one of the most irresponsible things that a doctor can do!
The whole reason for diligent study in the medical profession is so that the medical professional can make a more sound diagnosis and be readied to prescribe or administer difficult treatments.
In the same way, the Bible’s teaching gives us a better understanding of people spiritually …to correctly perceive their spiritual problems — a better understanding and perception than most people can naturally grasp for themselves.
You see, according to the Bible, they don’t really know who they are and they don’t know what’s most profoundly wrong with them.
That’s always true of anyone who’s outside of a saving relationship with Jesus the Christ.
Anyone like that, does not yet understand His purpose and design for a fully integrated human being...
…reconciled to God
…indwelt by the Spirit of Jesus
…led by the Lord
…responsive to His Word
…trusting and enjoying His good heart toward us.
Let me give you an example of this in practice:
[A] Your unsaved friend is speaking with you, say, of their loneliness.
So you listen to them attentively; you respond with sensitivity ...
You can respond with words of empathy …reflecting the fear and angst of where they ARE.
That’s good as far as it goes.
But it’s not full-orbed Biblical love and humility yet.
For your comfort is not God’s salvation...
You realize that you are not a substitute for Jesus; you are a minister of His gospel.
Speaking His gospel is a fuller love than limited Christian kindnesses.
SO...
[B] gradually, step by step, you lead them to the understanding that the deepest root of their loneliness is their lostness from God — it’s their alienation, away from the God who made them to be His image, His representative.
You unfold the truth that they’re wanting to have life — but without being in restored relationship with Him who IS life.
In other words, you are leading them beyond their initial felt needs to a deeper diagnosis...
…and such a diagnosis always involves Jesus, Who He is & what He does, AND our natural condition before Him.
THUS
[C] You then can relate to them various aspects of Who Jesus is, what He has done & what He will do.
You see there are many aspects to the work of Jesus for their salvation.
It’s usually wise to start with those aspects of Jesus’ work that most directly relate to their acknowledged needs & problems as you are helping them to see them.
The we can & must explain the wider aspects of Jesus’ work for them ...in important areas that may not have felt so urgently just yet.
Let me see if I can sum up the different types of broad concerns that the good news covers.
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