Sermon Tone Analysis

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*I Am a Sinner Who Needs a Savior, Ephesians 2, Trauma Toolbox series #3*
*Series Title*: Open Your Trauma Toolbox
*Series Theme*: We are marking 6 non-negotiable, bedrock truths upon which to build your life.
These 6 truths form the pillars upon which your life will stand.
If you have them firmly in place, the inevitable storms that will blast against the walls and rattle the windows of your life will not move you.
You will endure.
You will stand strong.
Omit any one of these 6, and your will be like the foolish man in Jesus’ parable who built his house upon a foundation of sand.
When the winds come and the water rises, great will be the destruction of it.
Sermons in this series:
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The Lord, He is God, Isaiah 6:1-4
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The Bible is God's Word to Me, Psalm 19:7-11
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I Am a Sinner Who Needs a Savior, Ephesians 2:1-3
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Jesus is the Answer, John 14:1-6
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You Can't Earn a Gift, Ephesians 2:8-9
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Are You Married or Just Dating the Church, Ephesians 5:25-32
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When I was a college student in Chattanooga, one of the ways I would blow off steam was to go spelunking with five or six guys from our dorm in one of the local caves that dotted the mountains around the city.
About 10 o'clock at night, we would put on our grubbiest clothes, grab our headband lights, pack a few snacks, and off we would go.
Baptist Faith & Message (2008)
Someone who had scouted a location would take us to small hole on the slope of a mountain, usually hidden by brush and just large enough to crawl through.
And that is where our adventures began.
Once inside, we would find tight crawl spaces, vast caverns, underground rivers, foul smelling mud, and, yes, bats.
I loved it!
We would usually not emerge from this underground obstacle course until daybreak.
From the first time we went caving, I was an enthusiast.
Except for one time.
You see, one rule we all worked by is stick together because echoes can be deceiving and pay attention to how you get in so you will know how to get out.
But there was one cave where the crawl spaces seemed to travel in circles with very few reference points.
Our leader, a senior named Duane had always been very methodical, tying ribbons as markers at key places along our path.
But this time, as we tried to retrace our route back to the cave's opening, Duane had gotten a little turned around.
All the jokes and cutting up suddenly ended.
Tensions began to rise among the six of us as we debated which of several junctions to take.
And when we did agree and took one path, we found out 40 minutes later that we had gone in a circle.
It was then that our leader confirmed what my mind was already saying: we were lost.
To make matters worse, three of our lantern batteries that powered the headband light were fading fast.
And there is no darkness to match the pitch blackness of a cave with no light.
I remember to this day lying on my back in a crawlspace, staring at the rock just inches above my face as my light flickered dimly, and feeling raw fear seize my thoughts.
We only had about 30 more minutes at the most before all our batteries would fail.
And then we would be stuck inside this place where it is always night.
I fired prayers through the rock that God would come to our rescue--that He would send someone to us, us through the tunnel that would lead to the light of day.
Well, I'm here this morning, I'm happy to say!
Our leader finally spotted a marker he had left early in our descent and like horses that spot the barn, we hustled through the tunnels to greet the morning sun.
It was the last time I ever went spelunking.
But I will never forget that feeling.
All the jokes and cutting up were over.
I was lost.
My friends couldn't help me; they were lost too.
I didn't know which way to go.
And my little man-made light was fading fast, leaving me to the dark world in which I was trapped.
At that moment, all I wanted was to escape!
What I experienced for about 2 hours in the mountains of Chattanooga is also reality for you and me.
We are, all of us, lost.
Only the situation is much worse than losing your way in the darkness of a cave.
The Bible states that all humanity is eternally lost and in need of rescue.
Now it's likely that some in this room would object to this statement.
You might say that you and your family don't need to hear all this talk of being sinners—that it doesn't build your children's self-esteem and seems neurotic.
But I aim to show you that this is a core truth that is vital and central to having a proper perspective about yourself.
In fact, this is the third study in a series under the banner OPENING YOUR TRAUMA TOOLBOX in which we are describing 6 unbreakable, bedrock truths that you can count on no matter what happens to you.
Together, these truths form an anchor for your soul that no storm can dislodge.
So far, we have nailed down the truth that God is God, and He's big enough and wise enough to handle what I face.
Then we nailed down the second truth that the Bible is God's Word to us, a truth that is self-confirmed in its accuracy, wisdom, and transforming power every hour or every day.
Today, I call you to a truth that is hard to hear, a truth that many people simply don't want to face.
But no statement is more important or necessary.
You won't read this in Time or Newsweek.
This is not a part of our cultural assumptions about mankind.
But what we will focus on this morning is the basis for your relationship with God.
Here is our starting point with God: we are lost and need a Savior!
Let God's Word interpret your true condition, and point you to only One who can rescue you.
That brings us to Ephesians 2:1-3, where Paul, carried along by the Holy Spirit, diagnosed our problem: “And you were dead in your trespasses and sins in which you previously walked according to this worldly age, according to the ruler of the atmospheric domain, the spirit now working in the disobedient.
We too all previously lived among them in our fleshly desires, carrying out the inclinations of our flesh and thoughts, and by nature we were children under wrath, as the others were also.”
What God is telling us through Paul is that without rescue from a mighty Savior, we are dead in our sins (v.
1), dominated by the Devil (v. 2), and destined for hell (v.
3).
We are lost, sick to death with sin, sabotaged by Satan, and sentenced to hell.
Do not turn your mind from these truths.
Ponder them deeply.
Sink into what it means, that…
1.Unless we are rescued, we remain dead in trespasses and sins.
Two times in this chapter, Paul says it.
In v. 1, you were dead in trespasses and sins; in v. 5, even when we were dead in trespasses.
Don't rush past the word dead.
If you were to ask most people, even Christians, why sin is a problem and why we need rescue from it, they would say that sin makes us guilty before God and brings us under condemnation; and so we need a Savior who can forgive our sins and take away our punishment.
And that is absolutely right.
But that is not the point of Ephesians 2. That is not all we need.
The reason we need a Savior is not just that we are in the doghouse with God and need to be forgiven.
We need a Savior because we are in the morgue.
In the doghouse you might whimper.
You might say you are sorry.
You might make some good resolutions.
You might decide to cast yourself on the mercy of God.
But what can you do if you are in the morgue?
Nothing!
And the cause of death?
Trespasses killed us.
Trespasses focuses on our actions and their result.
We have made a false step, lapsed from righteousness, deviated from the standard set by God.
Sins focuses on us.
We miss the mark morally, are inherently offensive to God, and stand guilty before Him.
In v. 2, we are called “the disobedient”; literally we are called "sons of disobedience," which emphasizes that disobedience is in our spiritual genes.
Disobedience is our mother.
Unbelief runs in our family tree.
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