Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Agreeableness
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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
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Openness
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Anger
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Introduction
Living in Stink Bank - Everyday, the smell of waste invades our neighborhood.
People complain about sickness, news crews in neighborhood - our home value plummeting - I’m stuck in Stink Bank.
Every day, you produce about 4.6 lbs of waste.
Americans produce enough waste each day to fill 63,000 garbage trucks!
This morning - a story about waste - some of us feel like we have wasted our lives.
Wasted lives on pursuing bad relationships, selfish desires, etc.
You don’t have to waste your life.
Instead, you can experience love and acceptance like never before.
Looking at perhaps most famous story in Bible - even if you’ve never read the Bible, you’re probably familiar with this story.
If you feel like you have wasted your life, two truths from this passage that will encourage you:
God loves you even if you have lived an outwardly wasteful life.
Jesus’ teaching drew a crowd of people who had wasted their lives - tax collectors and sinners.
If Jesus was the Messiah, why spend time with people who had wasted their lives on sin?
Why not spend time with those who had spent their living out the commands of God? Pharisees don’t understand.
Two parables: Man has 100 sheep, loses one - he goes after it.
Finds it, rejoices!
Woman has ten coins - loses one - searches house - rejoices over found coin!
Jesus came to find the lost - and heaven rejoices when the lost has been found.
A third story - directed at the self-righteous Pharisees.
“A man had two sons.”
Think of this story in two acts.
: Younger son demands his share of his inheritance.
(Younger son received 1/3 of inheritance).
You don’t receive inheritance until your father is dead!
Son essentially saying to father, “I wish you were dead.
I have no interest in a relationship with you.
I just want your stuff.”
Every person in the crowd enraged as they heard the story.
Honor/shame culture - If you treated your father that way - cut off from the family.
Father treated such a rebel as if he was dead.
Yet, father sold off 1/3 of property and gave it to his youngest son.
Went to a far away country - as far from father as he could get - father out of sight and out of mind - a land of opportunity.
He lives wastefully - going after every pleasure imaginable - but not long until he spent everything.
Famine came to the land - no choice to hire himself out - got a job feeding pigs.
Broke - just wants to eat pig food.
This is where Jesus should have ended the story.
Tax collectors and sinners would have hung their heads in shame - they knew from experience that you get what you deserve.
Pharisees would have held their heads up in pride - Maybe a pharisee shouted “Amen!” Served the boy right to be broke and hungry after treating his father like he did.
But, story doesn’t end in the pig pen, and no one in the audience expected the turn in the story that Jesus was about to tell.
Boy come to senses - repents - changes his way of thinking.
“I’ll go home confess my sin - maybe my father will hire me as a servant.”
No expectation of being anything more than a servant, but at least he would eat again.
The shocking part of the story: the father is waiting - sleepless nights.
Where was his son?
Was he alive?
Praying for this day - sees son in distance and runs to son - lavishes him love.
Son begins to confess - but father cuts him off - brings best robe (father’s own robe), a ring - position and authority - sandals - a luxury.
Fattened calf - probably saving for a wedding feast.
Let us celebrate!
Not celebrating a wasted life but that what was lost had been found.
Celebrate that the son came to his senses.
If you were a tax collector or sinner in audience - hope! “Could God love me that way?”
If you were a Pharisee, “Say what?
What kind of father would do this?
Is he out of his mind?”
That’s the point - Our heavenly Father’s love is so amazing - it seems as if He is out of His mind to love people who have treated Him so badly - Tim Keller - God is a Prodigal God - That He would love people like us seems like such a waste.
But - this is good news - God loves you even if you have lived an outwardly wasteful life.
Outwardly - everyone knows it.
There’s no hiding it.
You’ve wasted your time - your resources - opportunities.
Maybe everyone has turned on you because of wastefulness, but not God.
Note - if you have lived wastefully:
No shame - Father doesn’t shame son - He embraces.
Jesus has endured your shame for you.
No punishment - Instead a feast!
Jesus has been punished for you.
No cost - Doesn’t ask son to pay back - father absorbs the lost.
Jesus has paid the price for you.
If you have lived your life wastefully, Good News - Heavenly Father desires to lavish you with love and grace if you will come to your senses and come home to Him.
You’ve been lost, but now you can be found!
No shame - Jesus endured your shame.
No punishment - Jesus punished in your place.
Throwing away picture of Hudson - hours of work wasted - Staci can’t get it back - You feel like you can’t get your life back - the Gospel says you can get something better than your life back - you can get a new one!
No cost - Jesus paid your debt.
If you have lived your life wastefully, Good News - Heavenly Father desires to lavish you with love and grace if you will come to your senses and come home to Him.
You’ve been lost, but now you can be found!
God loves you even if you have lived an inwardly wasteful life.
- Another brother.
“A man had two sons...”
Imagine, as Jesus told about the younger brother, His eyes fixed on the tax collectors and sinners in the crowd - they could know the love of God.
Now, as He talks about the older brother, His eyes are fixed on the Pharisees.
Even though they were extremely religious, they were extremely ignorant of the love of God.
The older brother was a description of them!
And, while the younger brother had been wasteful, the older brother was just as wasteful.
He lived an inwardly wasteful life.
Vs. 25 - Older brother in the field - comes home after a long day of labor, hears the music - and ask what was going on.
Not like his father - he wasn’t waiting for his brother’s return - just kept on with his responsibilities as if nothing had happened.
Servant: Come to party but elder brother refuses.
His father comes out and the brother reveals his heart.
Pay attention to what he says - because some of you are older brothers.
You’ve lived an inwardly wasteful life - on the outside you look like you have your act together.
You are a faithful church member.
You live a moral life - never cheated on your spouse or your taxes.
You don’t cuss or drink.
You have a good reputation in the community - but inwardly - you’ve wasted your life because your heart is heart to God’s mission to seek and save the lost.
You can’t rejoice in the Lord’s work because:
You’ve wasted your life on self-righteousness.
“Look how many years I have served.
I have never disobeyed your command...” Be honest - you put yourself on a pedestal and look down on others.
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