Sermon Tone Analysis

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Welcome
Good Morning!
I’m Pastor Wayne and I’d like to welcome you all to the gathering of Ephesus Baptist Church.
Today is Easter and we are are here to celebrate the finished work of Jesus Christ on our behalf.
May you experience the Father’s favor and steadfast love as we worship Him together this morning for His glory and our joy!
If you are visiting with us this morning, we want you to know that Ephesus is an active faith community on a mission with Jesus.
Here at Ephesus, we are one people giving our all to love God, love others, proclaim Jesus, and make disciples in our generation.
We have a connect card in the pew in front of you.
I invite you to take one and fill it out!
If you have prayer needs, you can let us know about those as well.
I promise, our prayer team will lift you up soon.
You can place those cards in the offering plate when it comes around.
Scripture Memory
Opening Scripture
Mission | Accomplished
Today is Easter Sunday, also known as Resurrection Sunday!
The resurrection of Jesus Christ is the fundamental tenet of Christianity.
The fact of the resurrection is our greatest hope!
Adrian Rogers has once said,
No Virgin Birth; No Deity, No Deity; No Atonement, No Atonement; No Resurrection, No Resurrection; NO HOPE!
Without the resurrection, Christianity would be a great story, but nothing more!
Thanks be to our Heavenly Father that this isn’t just a great story, it is a historical fact that accomplished the greatest rescue mission in all of creation.
We have been working our way through a sermon series titled: Mission 3:16 | Possible.
So far in our series, we have discovered that...
From before the foundations of the world were laid, our Heavenly Father had designed a rescue mission to save every sinner who would believe in the person and work of His Son, Jesus Christ.
Concerning this rescue mission, God the Father was All In, Jesus fully accepted His mission, and he too, was All In on the mission.
Jesus greatly amplified the mission on Palm Sunday as he revealed himself as the prince, the rightful King who was bringing redemption and restoration to humanity.
Today, we are going to marvel in the way that his mission was accomplished.
We are going to briefly survey the final moments of our Lord’s life as sin is beaten, then we will fast forward to the third day when death is defeated by means of an empty tomb and a risen King!
1.
His Hour Has Come!
Our Sin is Atoned!
At this point, Jesus’ death was imminent.
His hour had come.
This is the moment he had been made for.
At the wedding in Cana of Galilee, Jesus responded to Mary’s urging to work the first miracle by saying,
Later, following his triumphal entry into Jerusalem which greatly amplified his ministry.
Jesus told his disciples
His hour is here and it is fleeting away quickly.
His throat is beginning to dry out, so He yell’s out “I Thirst.”
Psalm 69:21 says, “and for my thirst they gave me sour wine to drink.”
This sour wine was not a poison, he had earlier refused wine mixed with myrrh.
No, this wine would prolong death as it caused the throat muscles to contract and keep one from crying out in pain.
John recognized this as a fulfillment of Scripture.
Jesus who had earlier said....
....now shouts out “tetelastai” or “It Is Finished.”
To me, this is perhaps the greatest thing Jesus ever said.
Some unbelievers and liberals have tried to point to this and say it is a sign of a man who had failed in life, but that is simply mistaken.
This was not a shout of desperation, but a shout of victory, because the rescue mission God sent him to complete is triumphantly completed in his death.
The significance of Christ’s death on the cross centers in substitutionary atonement—his death on our behalf.
Atonement: Could be read as “At - One - Ment.”
It means man’s reconciliation with God through the sacrificial death of Christ.
Through his sacrificial death, Jesus has provided a way for us to be at one with God, to be reconciled with God.
“It is Finished,” was not the cry of a man in defeat, but a cry of our sovereign in victory!
Jesus then bowed his head and delivered up his spirit.
Now, I am no expert, but you normally die and then bow your head, but John tells us that Jesus has just taken sour wine which should have prolonged death, now he bows his head and gives up his spirit.
Jesus is portrayed as totally in control of the time of his dying, just as he had been pictured as in control of his arrest, his appearance before Annas, his trial before the spineless Pilate, and the carrying of his own cross.
John is illustrating in bold letters that even what seems to be tragedy was still not out of God’s control.
The point of the story is not just that Jesus was killed but that he died in accordance with God’s appointed hour.
The hour of our atonement and redemption.
The hour the rescue mission began to be accomplished.
Sin took root in a Garden called Eden.
In a Garden called Calvary Jesus rooted out sin once for all!
On that day, Matthew says,
But the mission doesn’t end there, It can’t!
2. The Greatest Miracle of All: Resurrection.
John tells us that,
Today is not a day to offer up a defense of the resurrection, no today we revel in the biblical testimony to the historical fact of the resurrection.
Charles Colson once said
“I know the resurrection is a fact, and Watergate proved it to me.
How?
Because 12 men testified they had seen Jesus raised from the dead, then they proclaimed that truth for 40 years, never once denying it.
Every one was beaten, tortured, stoned and put in prison.
They would not have endured that if it weren't true.
Watergate embroiled 12 of the most powerful men in the world-and they couldn't keep a lie for three weeks.
You're telling me 12 apostles could keep a lie for 40 years?
Absolutely impossible.”
Jesus rose on the third day just as he said he would.
You can take that to the bank!
The question is really how do we live in light of this truth.
3. Living In light of the Resurrection.
Jesus’ resurrection points us to a new way of looking at the world, a new way of being that changes who we are and how we live in the world.
Listen to the words of Paula Gooder, I believe she has caught the essence of what it means to live in light of the resurrection.
Belief in the resurrection is an act of rebellion against the evil, corruption and oppression that can so easily swamp us.
Believing in the resurrection can be a refusal to accept that the world is as it is, that it can never change and that we must accept it simply as it is.
Believing in the resurrection allows us to see the world with a long view, a perspective that looks backwards to the resurrection and forwards to the end times, recognizing traces of resurrection and end times in what is happening now.
Believing in the resurrection can and should transform not only how we view the world, but how we live in it.
We should become people in whom others can see new life, and people who introduce that new life wherever the world is stultifying and life-denying.
Resurrection makes a difference not only to Jesus and the earliest disciples but also to us, as we live out our lives day by day.
We are called to imitate Jesus but we are called even more to be transformed by him, to find our old self transformed into a new Christ-like self.
Jesus’ resurrection opens up possibility.
Whenever and wherever moments of generosity, selflessness and humility occur, where there could have been only greed, selfishness and pride, we are called to notice such moments and celebrate them, and when they do not occur to strive to bring them about.
What difference does it make to our lives today?
The answer, it seems to me, is it makes all the difference in the world.
A life lived in the acknowledgement of resurrection is one that cannot remain unchanged.
We are called to see the world with new eyes, to live our lives transformed in Christ and inspired by the Spirit.
Conclusion:
The death of Jesus Christ on our behalf, along with his resurrection for our redemption, is the centerpiece of the gospel.
The fact that Jesus rose from the dead is not merely a concept with which we can agree or disagree but, something that deeply affects who we are.
Now, my friends, because in Jesus it is truly finished, God asks no more of you than for you to place your faith in the work that Jesus finished on the cross.
If you can accept the truth that He died on the cross, that He rose from the dead the third day and that His shed blood will wash away your sins, then you can be saved,
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