Sermon Tone Analysis

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Anger
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James 5:7-19
 
An old seaman said, "In fierce storms we can do but one thing.
There is only one way (to survive); we must put the ship in a certain position and keep her there."
Commenting on this idea, Richard Fuller wrote:
 
      /This, Christian, is what you must do.
Sometimes, like Paul, /
/      you can see neither sun nor stars, and no small tempest lies /
/      on you.
Reason cannot help you.
Past experiences give you no /
/      light.
Only a single course is left.
You must stay upon the /
/      Lord; and come what may -- winds, waves, cross seas, thunder, /
/      lightning, frowning rocks, roaring breakers -- no matter what, /
/      you must lash yourself to the helm and hold fast your /
/      confidence in God's faithfulness and his everlasting love in /
/      Christ Jesus./
1)  The Expectation of the Lord’s Return.
(vs.
7-9)
 
It is hope for the Christian.
He came to offer himself as our Savior.
o     Every eye shall see Him
 
o     Every knee shall bow
 
o     Every tongue shall confess
 
o     Every enemy will be defeated – sin, death, sickness
 
HOPE
 
Hope opens doors where despair closes them.
Hope discovers what can be done instead of grumbling about what cannot.
Hope draws its power from a deep trust in God.
Hope "lights a candle" instead of "cursing the darkness."
Hope regards problems, small or large, as opportunities.
Hope cherishes no illusions, nor does it yield to cynicism.
Hope sets high goals and is not frustrated by repeated difficulties or setbacks.
Hope pushes ahead when it would be easy to quit.
Hope puts up with modest gains, realizing that "the longest journey starts with one step."
Hope looks for the good in people instead of harping on the worst.
a)     Suffering is seasonal.
You’d better believe that there is an end to it and God knows how much we can endure.
Often we are convinced that we can take no more when God knows that we can.
i)        Training.
If I were going to train someone, I would immediately take them out of their comfort zone.
Physical training is the process of introducing pain into a person’s life.
We would never put ourselves through that pain because it hurts too much.
Others, circumstances, withholding the object of our desire (If we want it enough we will endure.)
produce something in us that make us better.
ii)      Once I am in shape I am no longer bothered by the same rigor of exercise.
What once brought pain, I can now handle with ease because I am stronger.
iii)    In pain we are instantly qualified as guides to those who are in the mists behind us.
iv)    In our sufferings we find a point of identification with Christ.
b)     It takes time to produce a crop.
I am convinced that there is no adversity that enters our lives without bringing the opportunity to become better, stronger more able to bear lasting fruit for the Kingdom.
In other words there is no purposeless pain as far as God is concerned.
Often we do not look for these benefits.
We object to troubled times as though they were purposeless.
Sometimes the lessons that we can learn in times of lesser trouble can preserve our very lives when the ultimate test comes.
Jacques Plante was an amazing man.
His career as a goaltender for the Montreal Canadiens, New York Rangers, St. Louis Blues, The Toronto Maple Leafs and finally the Boston Bruins included the development of the goalie face mask, and the movement of the goalie out of the net to help the defense (revolutionary when Plante began them, but now standard practice).
He won the Vezina trophy seven times for highest achievement in goal, and was named to the all star team seven times.
He had 79 career shut-outs.
What most don't know, however, was that it was adversity that moved the man into the goal net.
Jacques Plante was a severe asthmatic.
As a child, when he would play defense on the ice-pond in sub-zero weather, he had difficulty breathing whenever the position would require him to skate fast.
As a result, he moved into goal where he wouldn't have to do high-speed skating.
When Plante was interviewed about his illustrious career, he frankly confessed, "If it hadn't been for my asthma, I probably would have stayed on defense and never progressed beyond pond hockey."
What may seem an obstacle may in fact be the stepping stone, the loss may in fact be the gain.
n      Rev.
David Chotka.
From the files of Leadership.
Afflictions, when sanctified, make us grateful for mercies which before we treated with indifference.
We sat for half an hour in a calf's shed the other day, quite grateful for the shelter from the driving rain, yet at no other time would we have entered such a hovel.
Discontented people need a course of the bread of adversity and the water of affliction to cure them of the wretched habit of complaining.
Even things which we loathed before, we shall learn to value when in troubling circumstances.
We are not fond of lizards, and yet at Pont St.
Martin, in the Aosta valley, where the mosquitoes, flies, and insects of all sorts drove us nearly to distraction, we prized the little green fellows, and felt quite an attachment to them as they darted out their tongues and devoured our worrying enemies.
Sweet are the uses of adversity, and this among them--that it brings into proper estimation mercies which were before lightly esteemed.
n      Charles Haddon Spurgeon, The Quotable Spurgeon, (Wheaton: Harold Shaw Publishers, Inc, 1990)
 
It is suffering that creates compassion in my heart for others who go through difficult times.
Divorce and the pain that I encountered as a teen has left a very soft place in me for young people who encounter the same thing.
The story goes that Harry the Eighth, wandering one night in the streets of London in disguise, was met at the foot of a bridge by some of the night watchmen; and, not giving a good account of himself, he was carried off to the Poultry Compter and shut up for the night without fire or candle.
On his liberation he made a grant of thirty chaldrons of coals and a quantity of bread for the solace of night prisoners in the Compter.
Experience brings sympathy.
Those who have felt sharp afflictions, terrible convictions, racking doubts, and violent temptations, will be zealous in consoling those in a similar condition.
It would be good if the great Head of the church would put unsympathizing pastors into the Compter of trouble for a season until they could weep with those who weep.
 
n      Charles Haddon Spurgeon, The Quotable Spurgeon, (Wheaton: Harold Shaw Publishers, Inc, 1990)
 
As soon as we know our dependence, our own nothingness, we begin, by dying, to live.
In this is our only hope: that knowing our nothingness, we come to learn from tribulation--and then tribulation, instead of paralyzing us and beating us to death and despair, is the necessary condition for us to learn how to live and tribulation teaches us the truth: it teaches us that our philosophy in which everything is centered on ourselves is false and deadly, because evil, in it, is inexplicable, and increases more and more as we try to avoid it more and more.
-- Thomas Merton in Run to the Mountain.
Christianity Today, Vol.
41, no.
6.
 
c)      Growth is facilitated by rain as much as sunshine.
Almost everyone would rather have sunshine than showers.
But just imagine what our world would be like if it never rained again.
An example of such a place is in Northern Chile.
Franklin Elmer, Jr., described a region between the great Andes mountain range and the Pacific Ocean where rain never falls.
He wrote, "Morning after morning the sun rises brilliantly over the tall mountains to the east; each noon it shines brightly down from overhead; evening brings a picturesque sunset.
Although storms are often seen raging high in the mountains, and heavy fog banks are observed far out over the sea, the sun continues to shine on this favored and protected strip of land.
One would imagine this area to be an earthly paradise; but it is not.
Instead, it is a sterile and desolate desert!
There are no streams of water, and nothing grows there."
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