Sermon Tone Analysis
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1. New Year’s Resolutions?
a. Yes
Are you the kind of person who makes New Year’s Resolutions?
Do they help or hinder you?
Do they encourage or discourage you?
For some people they are great motivators.
Resolutions really help them to have a focus, a plan, and it helps them to stick to their decision.
Jonathan Edwards, the famous puritan preacher, made all kinds of resolutions in his life, such as: “Resolved, that I will do whatsoever I think to be most to God’s glory, and my own good, profit and pleasure, in the whole of my duration, without any consideration of the time, whether now, or never so many myriads of ages hence.
Resolved, to do whatever I think to be my duty and most for the good and advantage of mankind in general.
Resolved, to do this, whatever difficulties I meet with, how many soever, and how great soever.
Resolved, to live with all my might, while I do live.
Still, others make resolutions and have no luck whatsoever at keeping them.
It is another reason to add something to the “did not do” list.
b.
No
Then there are the people who don’t make any resolutions at all.
They know themselves; they know how prone they are to fail.
And still others simply don’t find resolutions very effective in their daily living.
Resolutions or not, the key to making lasting changes has to do with identity, behaviour and attitude.
As Christians, we keep in mind our identity, who we are in Christ, we remember that our proper behaviour comes from Christ living in us, which gives us a hopeful attitude for achieving God’s glory in this life.
Our attitude then is not so much what we resolve to do, but what God has resolved to do in and through us.
2. Future Hope: New Heaven and New Earth
Jesus promises to make all things new.
John, while receiving this vision, this revelation, which he wrote down in the book we call Revelation, saw many different things.
We can summarise the book of Revelation like this: God Wins.
God has defeated everything that works against him.
The old way of doing things is no longer.
We can see this in the book of Colossians and the Belgic Confession clearly explains it.
The old way of worshipping, of sacrificing, of living is fulfilled in Christ, and now we have Christ in us, living in us!
We are able to live as God created us to live, because we are new creations in him.
We didn’t make ourselves new; Christ made us new.
The Holy Spirit came into our lives and he made us alive in Christ, so that we could respond to him, and confess Christ as our Saviour and Lord.
Because Christ is the author of salvation, he works it out in us.
And he proves the effectiveness of what he set about to do, he gives us great hope for the future in the vision he gave to John.
Read the book of Revelation, if you haven’t read it already.
It has some strange, figurative language in it.
But the message is clear: repent, the end is coming.
Come to Christ, he makes all things new.
One day every person, every being will bow down and worship Christ.
One day, Christ will complete the good work he’s begun in all of us.
He will make all things new, new heaven and a new earth.
And then he adds a seemingly strange statement: “There will no longer be any sea.”
a.
Should surfers, boaters and beachgoers despair?
If you’ve ever gone to the ocean, it’s a tremendous amount of fun.
Is John telling us that God is going to get rid of the ocean?
Does this mean the end of deep sea fishing, surfing, boogie boarding?
No, John isn’t describing that sea.
Whether the new earth will look like the old one, and whether or not we’ll be able to do the same fun kinds of things, like sledding, skiing, waterskiing, etc.
I honestly don’t know, and don’t really care.
The new heaven and the new earth will be so far beyond our expectation, that it will not disappoint, and more than the satisfaction that we could ever derive from those kinds of activities, our greatest satisfaction will come from being with God, face to face!
b.
What does John say has come to an end?
What John is saying, what God has revealed in John’s vision is this: there will be no more death.
The two things that John says there will be no more of is the sea and death.
The sea represents danger, enemies, threats, illness, pain, sorrow, suffering and death.
It all will cease to exist.
It will be wiped from memory.
If there are tears, Christ will wipe them away, for good.
How can sorrow exist where the Son of righteousness reigns?
How can death exist in the presence of eternal life?
How can hunger and thirst exist in the presence of the bread of life and the living water?
Jesus will provide all our needs according to his riches.
He has promised that to us now, we have it now, but we don’t always experience it.
And there are many reasons why we don’t but I’m not going into that now.
We will have it all at the coming of the new heaven and the new earth because we will be in the presence of the Son.
The disciples, after Jesus rose from the dead, before he ascended to heaven, went fishing, providing for themselves, doing what they thought was best, what they knew they could do.
Jesus provided, again, a huge catch of fish.
And when they finally got to shore, he had a meal prepared for them, and he reminded them that they were fishers of men.
In Lord’s Supper where Christ is our meal, Jesus reminds us that we’re his disciples too, and called to do the same work!
In the new heaven and the new earth, his very presence nourishes us and sustains us!
3. Who makes all things new?
Have you ever had the experience of trying with all your might to do something only to fail every time?
You put your whole mind to it, all your will, all your strength, but nothing.
Then, along comes a friend, or a family member, and they show you a simple thing, they give you the smallest bit of information, that little insight, or little thing that you were missing, and suddenly, you have it, you can do what you’ve been frustratingly unable to do.
That’s what God does for us in Christ.
All our striving, all our efforts to make ourselves new is like trying to push our way through the door, when the sign says “pull”.
We push and push, and get nowhere.
Christ comes along, opens our eyes, gives us new hearts, new lives, new life, and yokes us together with him, and pulls open the door for us.
Suddenly, we’re living the way God created us to live.
We desire Godly things; we look for ways to live as Christ, rather than looking for ways to sin.
Christ is in us, living in us, yoking us to him, and moving us to live for God’s glory!
4. What resolution should Christians make?
So, if Christ makes all things new, what kind of New Year’s resolution should a Christian make?
Every Christian, everyone here, should make this resolution: “Resolved, to be yoked with Christ, trusting in him, living in me, to live through me, solely for his glory and purpose.”
(Read Twice)
5. What does Christ promise?
Christ promises to make all things new.
Jesus promises to do this.
Jesus is in us.
Jesus has already made us new.
Jesus lives through us, via the Holy Spirit.
This is reality.
This isn’t a future hope.
This isn’t a desire for something far off.
It is now.
Christ came so that we may have life and live it to the fullest.
These are not mere words.
This is the truth!
Christ promises to live through us, so that in Him, we can do greater things than he did during his ministry on earth!
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