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.
Emotion Tone
Anger
0.13UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.06UNLIKELY
Fear
0.12UNLIKELY
Joy
0.59LIKELY
Sadness
0.49UNLIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.66LIKELY
Confident
0.66LIKELY
Tentative
0UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.88LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.71LIKELY
Extraversion
0.1UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.79LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.76LIKELY

Tone of specific sentences

Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9
| 12-14-97 \\ \\ THE MATURE FAITH \\ GENESIS 22 \\ \\ The faith that makes possible a relationship with God has the potential for growth.
It begins as a small mustard seed, \\ but the mustard seed has in it the potential to become a great tree.
It was so in the life of the great example of faith, \\ Abraham.
\\ \\ Abraham had been walking by faith for forty years when God brought him to Mt. Moriah to offer his son Isaac.
The \\ forty years of walking with God had been marked by ups and downs along the way.
The faith that began his walk with \\ God had been tested severely by the long delay in the birth of Isaac.
You might have expected that would be the last \\ time that Abraham’s faith would be tested, but not so.
The last test to which Abraham’s faith was subjected was the \\ most difficult of all.
\\ \\ When this time of testing came Isaac was already into his teen years.
A direct word came from the Lord God that \\ Abraham was to offer Isaac as a sacrifice.
The Lord said, “Take now your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, \\ and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains of which I shall tell \\ you.”
This is to us an unimaginable kind of test, but it would not have been that unusual in the world of Abraham.
\\ Worshippers of pagan idols often offered one of their children to their god as a sacrifice.
It would not have come as a \\ surprise to Abraham at this point in history that God would ask for Isaac to be offered as a sacrifice.
The difficulty \\ with this request from God is that it had a conflict with the promise that God had given.
God had given a specific \\ promise that Isaac would be the heir through which God’s purposes for Abraham would be accomplished.
\\ \\ When faced with this command from the Lord, Abraham demonstrated mature faith.
Since his faith had grown \\ through the life experiences and his encounters with God in the past, he was now ready to stand this new test to \\ which God subjected his faith.
You and I need to have mature faith, or at least a maturing faith.
If you are a \\ teenager, it is probably not possible for you to have a mature faith but it is possible for you to have a maturing faith.
\\ If you are a young adult maturing faith is probably the best that you can hope for at this point.
But those of us who \\ have been in the way of faith for longer periods of time should have at this point in our lives a mature faith.
By \\ watching the faith of Abraham in this circumstance we can identify the qualities of a mature faith.
\\ \\ I.
A MATURE FAITH OBEYS GOD READILY.
\\ The word of the Lord came to Abraham as a command, “Take your son – and offer him there as a burnt offering on \\ one of the mountains of which I shall tell you.”
This command that came from the Lord was received by Abraham as a \\ command and was readily obeyed.
In this deed of obedience we are able to see a mature faith obeying God.
\\ \\ 1.
As worship \\ What we see in the faith of Abraham at this point in his life is more than just obedience.
It was obedience rendered in \\ the spirit of worship.
God did not command Abraham to murder his son, but to offer him as an act of worship, a burnt \\ offering.
And this is specifically what Abraham did.
\\ \\ When Abraham and Isaac came to the top of Mt.
Moriah, they built an altar.
“And Abraham built an altar there and \\ placed the wood in order; and he bound Isaac, his son, and laid him on the altar, upon the wood.”
When he did this \\ God recognized that what Abraham had done was more than just obedience; it was obedience rendered in a spirit of \\ worship.
God responded by saying, “Do not lay your hand on the lad, or do anything to him;  for now I know that you \\ fear God, since you have not withheld your son, your only son, from me.”
The word “fear” has in it the idea of deep \\ reverence and regard for God.
The obedience that Abraham rendered to God at this point was with understanding of \\ the worthiness and the glory of God.
This kind of obedience is the mark of mature faith.
\\ \\ 2.  In difficult things \\ Those of us who are parents can understand in part the difficulty of what God asked Abraham to do.
While it is true \\ that in the end God did not require the physical offering of Isaac as a sacrifice; in a deep sense Abraham did offer \\ Isaac spiritually.
He knew all of the pain that should accompany such a sacrifice before God intervened to stop the \\ process.
\\ \\ This is the sign of a mature faith.
A mature faith is able not only to obey in the simpler and easier matters that God \\ requires but it is able to render obedience in the difficult and painful thing.
And it is able to render this obedience in a \\ spirit of worship and reverence for God.   \\ \\ If you want to measure the maturity of your faith, you can subject it to the obedience test.
Is there anything you would \\ not do for God?
Is there some limit you have put on your obedience to God?
The mature faith is ready for whatever \\ God may ask.
\\ \\ II.
MATURE FAITH TRUSTS GOD ABSOLUTELY.
\\ I am a little hesitant to use the word “absolutely” in this context, but it seems to fit.
I am hesitant along with others to \\ see anything that we do toward God as being absolute, but a mature faith will come closer to this than anything I \\ know.
I gained the distinct impression, as I read the account here in Genesis and the commentary on this account \\ that is found in the New Testament, that Abraham’s faith trusted God implicitly and absolutely.
\\ \\ 1.
Without questions.
\\ As you read the inspired account of this incident you will be impressed with the directness and quickness in Abraham’ \\ s response to God.
When the command came to Abraham to offer Isaac as a sacrifice the record reads, “So \\ Abraham rose early in the morning and saddled his donkey, and took two of his young men with him, and Isaac, his \\ son; and he split the wood for the burnt offering, and arose and went to the place of which God had told him.”
As far \\ as the text is concerned, Abraham asked no questions.
Abraham did not struggle with what God had commanded.
\\ The reason he did not struggle is that he trusted God absolutely.
The God who had given him Isaac had proven to \\ be faithful to His word in the past, so Abraham did not stagger or stumble at what God commanded but rather acted in \\ trust.
\\ \\ The writer of Hebrews in the New Testament gives us insight into the nature of Abraham’s trust at this point.
“By faith \\ Abraham, when he was tested, offered up Isaac, and he who had received the promises offered up his only begotten \\ son, of whom it was said, “In Isaac your seed shall be called,” accounting that God was able to raise him up even from \\ the dead, from which he also received him in a figurative sense.”
(Heb.
11:17-19).
Abraham believed that the God \\ who had given Isaac in his old age according to his promise would indeed be able to raise Isaac from the dead if \\ Abraham offered him as a burnt offering.
He trusted God to do the impossible by human measurements.
He trusted \\ God absolutely.
\\ \\ 2.  Without limits \\ This is the mark of a mature faith.
It has come to such knowledge of God and such confidence in God that it can \\ believe God for the impossible.
All limits have been removed from the understanding of what God can do.
\\ \\ We must not misread the situation of Abraham.
We must not read back into his situation our knowledge of the ways \\ of God.
Standing from where we stand we know indeed that God is able to raise the dead.
We have the inspired \\ record of a number of resurrections from the dead, including the glorious resurrection of our Lord and Savior Jesus \\ Christ.
Abraham could not benefit from such a record.
There were no resurrection accounts available to him to \\ bolster his faith in God.
Rather he had to depend entirely upon on what he had come to know of God and His \\ faithfulness.
So he counted on God to be able to do what ever needed to be done to accomplish his purpose \\ through Isaac, including raising him from the dead.
Again, if you want to measure the maturity of your faith, you might \\ want to subject it to this standard.
Does your faith give evidence of an absolute trust in God.
Can you trust God to \\ do what he said he will do?
Can you trust God, or maybe better are you trusting God for the impossible?
Many of us \\ who have been in the way as long as Abraham have still not come to that place of trust that marks mature faith.
\\ \\ III.
MATURE FAITH RECEIVES GOD’S REWARD.
\\ Everything in this account encourages us to move upward in our walk with God and to seek a stronger and a more \\ mature faith in God.
Just recounting the rewards that Abraham received when he acted in faith encourages us to \\ press on.
Let’s just review together a few of those.
\\ \\ 1.  God rewards mature faith with a deeper knowledge of Himself.
\\ Abraham did not know it at the time, but he was actually experiencing something of the heart of God himself.
No one \\ is in a better position to understand the heart of God than this man Abraham.
There would be a day in the future \\ when God would do fully what Abraham did in symbol.
God offered his only begotten Son on a cross and allowed His \\ Son to die in our place.
The father heart of God knew something of what Abraham knew as he walked up Mt.
Moriah \\ with his son, Isaac, at his side.
\\ \\ This is always a benefit that comes to the mature in faith.
Their faith brings them into such a relationship with God \\ that they gain a deeper and fuller understanding of the heart of God than those who never mature in their faith.
\\ \\ 2.  God rewards mature faith by returning that which has been surrendered to Him in a more useable form.
\\ \\ This is not an unusual incident but rather is an indication of God’s usual method.
Abraham offered Isaac to God as a \\ sacrifice and God gave Isaac back to Abraham.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9