Sermon Tone Analysis

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Tone of specific sentences

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Anger
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Sadness
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Introduction
Introduction
Get Out of the Ghetto
Irwyn Ince / General
Genesis / Ghetto; Peace; Division; Hostility; Diverse; Judgment; Reconciliation; Salvation; Mercy; Restoration
By the power of the Holy Spirit, Jesus’ church must reject ghetto living and persevere in pursuing reconciliation.
I have become somewhat of a coffee snob over the past 19 or so years.
It all started when I began taking classes in seminary part time.
I’d need a little pick-me-up to make it through that 7-10 pm class after a day of work.
I now prefer to prepare my coffee at home just how I like it.
But for many years, Starbucks was the primary place where I got my regular caffeine fix.
Since I had given Starbucks so much of my money, I was interested in hearing the story of Starbucks’ founder, Howard Schultz, when he was interviewed on 60 minutes back in 2006.
He grew up in my hometown, Brooklyn, NY, but under different circumstances than me.
He grew up in the projects because his family was poor.
His father was a delivery driver, picking up and delivering cloth diapers.
His father fell on the job, broke his leg, and was subsequently fired.
With no worker’s compensation or disability package, his family spiraled down from working class to poverty.
He said that he saw the fracturing of the American dream first hand at age 7.
ESV
Introduction
I have become somewhat of a coffee snob over the past 18 or so years.
It all started when I began taking classes in seminary part time.
I’d need a little pick-me-up to make it through that 7-10 pm class after a day of work.
I now prefer to prepare my coffee at home just how I like it.
But for many years, Starbucks was the primary place where I got my regular caffeine fix.
Since I had given Starbucks so much of my money, I was interested hearing the story of Starbucks’ founder, Howard Schultz, when he was interviewed on 60 minutes back in 2006.
He grew up in my hometown, Brooklyn, NY, but under different circumstances than me.
He grew up in the projects because his family was poor.
His father was a delivery driver, picking up and delivering cloth diapers.
His father fell on the job, broke his leg, and was subsequently fired.
With no worker’s compensation or disability package, his family spiraled down from working class to poverty.
He said that he saw the fracturing of the American dream first hand at age 7.
Howard Schultz grew up in the ghetto.
You could see the emotion in his face and the tears welling up in his eyes as CBS filmed him walking down that same hallway to apartment 7G.
As a teen, he says, his dream was to get out.
“I never allowed myself to dream beyond that.
I was afraid to dream beyond that.”
His dream was to get out of the ghetto.
He could think of nothing better than to be free of ghetto life.
It’s easy for us to resonate with Shultz’s dream if our sole picture of the ghetto is a run-down, densely populated urban area characterized by blight, crime and poverty.
But I know you fellows are sharp people.
And since you’re so sharp, you’ve already realized that I’m only going through all of this to set you up.
See, I also have a dream.
And my dream is that the followers of Jesus Christ would have a divine dissatisfaction for ghetto life.
My dream is that God’s people would get out of the ghetto.
What do I mean by that?
I’m not talking about a ‘ghetto’ in its more common use, but ‘ghetto’ defined as an environment where a group of people live or work in isolation, whether by choice or circumstance; groups or communities living in isolation, getting their sense of worth and dignity from their identification with that community.
And we have all kinds of ghettos; racial ghettos, political ghettos, socio-economic ghettos, generational ghettos, academic ghettos, athletic ghettos...and the list could go on and on.
And what we find is that in the history of this country, Jesus’s church has been a promoter of ghetto living.
The problem is that when I look at what I see is that ghetto life, that type of ghetto living is the result of God’s judgment upon humanity at Babel.
It is a blight, not a blessing.
The challenge question for you all posed by Dir.
John Kyle as he described this year’s conference them is, “Now that you’ve spent a year as a fellow, what part will you play in God’s unfolding plan for the redemption of all things?”
What I want to say to you from this passage is that central to God’s unfolding plan for the redemption of all things is the reunification of the human race in Jesus Christ.
That is, central to God’s plan is that he is going to knit us back together in his Son.
So I ask John’s question this way, “What role are you going to play in your life and vocational pursuit that bears witness to God’s reunification plan for humanity?
Our text is comprised of four scenes, so I want to work through this message, “Get Out of the Ghetto,” with four “C’s,” Coexistence (One Big Happy Family), Construction (in Solidarity), Confusion (Deconstruction by Confusion), and Community (Life in the Ghetto).
Coexistence
ESV
ESV
1 Now the whole earth had one language and the same words.
2 And as people migrated from the east, they found a plain in the land of Shinar and settled there.
Practically everywhere we look we see bumper stickers and billboards, posts on social media calling out for peaceful coexistence; for civility.
In Howard County, MD, where I used to live, a few years ago there were bumper stickers all over the place saying Choose Civility in Howard County.
It’s an ongoing effort by the county’s library system to position Howard County, MD as a model of civility.
I ain’t mad at them for the effort.
You see bumper stickers on cars calling for us to co-exist, seek peace not war.
Rodney King asked a question over twenty years ago that has become iconic in this land of hostility.
“Can’t we all just get along?”
People are left frustrated that we’re unable to come together as a human race and create this peaceful and civil coexistence.
Well, there was a time in human history when everyone had the same language and spoke the same words.
Humanity was in solidarity.
Moses tells us that everyone could speak and understand each other.
They migrated together from the east and settled down in the land of Shinar (Mesopotamia).
Everybody’s getting along.
So what’s the problem with this picture?
Before we hear the people speak themselves in v.3, vv.1-2 let us know that, yes, everyone’s on the same page, but they’re on the same page in their rejection of God’s command.
They’re on the same page in their rebellion against what God has explicitly commanded them to do.
After the Flood narrative in , God once again commands humanity to be fruitful and multiply, to fill the earth (9:1).
Yet, what do we find humanity doing?
In direct and conscious rebellion they determine, “we don’t want to fill the earth, we want to settle down right here.”
It’s not that they were ignorant of God’s command.
They couldn’t claim that they didn’t know what they were supposed to do.
We don’t find the Serpent here in ch 11 like we find in chapter 3, tempting humanity to disobey God’s word.
Man as one big happy family was one big happy family against our Creator.
The term “from the east,” or, “eastward” in v.2 marks a separation in Genesis.
It conveys the reality that the Babelites are outside of God’s blessing.
We see this reality expressed throughout Genesis.
In 3:24 when God drove Adam and Eve out of the garden of Eden, he placed the cherubim and flaming sword at the east of the garden.
In ch.4 when Cain killed his brother Abel, he went away from the presence of the Lord, and settled in Nod, east of Eden.
In ch.13 when Lot separates from Abraham he journeys eastward to settle in Sodom (cf.
25:6, 29:1).
So, in moving eastward and settling in Shinar the big happy human family is outside of God’s blessing.
That’s why bumper sticker theology is fruitless.
Bumper sticker theology calling for coexistence by itself isn’t enough to do anything.
Even if by some means we were able to achieve this corporate civility and peaceful coexistence by our own efforts, we would still be a corrupt people unified only by our sinful rebellion against God.
As vv.3-4 tell us, our solidarity would be expressed in trying to use God’s gracious gifts to usurp his authority and make a name for ourselves.
Conctruction
Look at vv.3-4.
Humanity has one language, speaking the same language, and look at what they say to one another.
Here’s their solidarity expressed in their construction project.
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