Sermon Tone Analysis
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Let’s start this out like I might start a youth lesson… with a game of name that tune:
1. Down on the Farm – Tim McGraw
2. We Shall Overcome – Pete Seeger
3. A Change is Gonna Come – Sam Cooke
4. Get Together – The Youngbloods
5. Imagine – John Lennon
6. Fightin Side of Me – Merle Haggard
These songs all have something in common: have become somewhat of anthem songs.
Songs that united a group of people and gave them an identity.
Down on the Farm – Just for me personally as a lot of my childhood was spent at my great grandparents farm.
We Shall Overcome – The words “We shall overcome, some day.
Oh deep in my heart I do believe we shall overcome.”
Evolved from an early 1900s hymn and became a rallying cry, or anthem for the entire civil rights movement.
Likewise in A Change is Gonna Come, Sam Cooke laments that “I go to the movie, and I go downtown, Somebody keep telling me don’t hang around” but the declares a hope filled “It’s been a long, a long time coming, but I know a change gonna come”.
Once again, this anthem became a rallying cry that gave identity to an entire movement.
Then came songs that united they hippie and anti-war movement:
Lyrics like Youngblood’s “come on people now, smile on your brother.
Everybody get together try to love one another right now” and John Lennon’s “You may say I’m a dreamer but I’m not the only one.
I hope someday you’ll join us and the world will be as one.
Imagine no possessions, I wonder if you can.
No need for greed or hunger, a brotherhood of man.”
These poems gave identity to an entire movement based on love and peace and anti-war.
And then you had those on the opposite side of that movement creating their own movement and rallying cry.
People like Merle Haggard who wrote “if you don’t love it leave it, let this song that I’m singin be a warnin, when you’re runnin down our country, man you’re walking on the fightin side of me”
These songs are all poetry that became an anthem for a group of people.
A rallying cry.
At their core, these songs gave identity.
And that’s the beauty of poetry.
It transcends the word and gives identity.
It reminds you of who you are.
And throughout the Gospels, we see Jesus giving us words that have become an anthem.
Words that give us identity.
Jesus was creating a movement and he gave the gift of words to unite people around this movement.
We’ve been working through a series called Identity Crisis and we’ve been focusing on Jesus’ sermon on the mount and how we can find our true identity as followers in Christ in the words that Jesus gave us.
This morning I want to zero in on one particular section of this.
A poem, if you will, that I believe Jesus gave to his disciples, and in turn us, to help shape us.
To remind us of our identity.
To give his people an anthem that would help create a movement.
So let’s dive in.
It’s right smack dab in the middle of the sermon on the mount that Jesus gives this anthem.
He has just finished teaching the disciples how not to pray.
He’s reminded them that they are not to be a people centered on self-glorification.
That they need not pray using fancy words and broadway worthy recitations.
And then he teaches them how to pray:
Matthew 6:9-13 - This, then, is how you should pray:
“‘Our Father in heaven,
hallowed be your name,
10 your kingdom come,
your will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven.
11 Give us today our daily bread.
12 And forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors.
13 And lead us not into temptation,[a]
but deliver us from the evil one
What I love about this teaching is that I don’t think it’s some random words that Jesus thought up on the spot.
I think he’s giving his disciples the prayer that he uses.
Those times when he removes himself from the crowd to pray to God… I think this is the prayer, or at least the model that he uses.
And he shares it with the disciples.
This was a prayer that Jesus used that centered his identity.
And he shared it as a reminder to the disciples of their identity.
And as you take a close look at this prayer that Jesus gives, it truly sums up the entire gospel.
In fact in other parts of the gospels, Jesus seems to sum up the gospel this way: love God, love others.
And this prayer seems to follow that model.
It starts with a focus on God, and then it moves to a focus on us (others).
Jesus gives this gift of a poem or prayer that allows his disciples to find and remember their identity.
To give them a place within his movement.
And this prayer models the same thing Jesus teaches throughout his entire ministry – love God and love others.
Let’s break it down quickly:
OUR FATHER
Notice it’s not MY father.
This isn’t just Jesus’ prayer, but ours.
Our father becomes this reminder and declaration of our identity – that WE are children of God.
It’s one thing for Jesus to pray this (of course he’s the son of God) – it’s another thing for “us”.
When Jesus says “our”, it’s an invitation for all to find their identity in being beloved children of God.
HALLOWED BE YOUR NAME
This is a declaration of who God is.
Set apart.
Holy.
Distinct.
To be revered.
In the midst of this movement, it reminds us of who God is.
It also invites us to recognize those times and areas in our lives where we have failed to acknowledge God as these things and it helps us to re-center our lives on those truths.
YOUR KINGDOM COME
Again, it’s this declaration of who we are.
A declaration that we believe the kingdom of God is here and now.
That it was ushered in through Jesus.
And that we are a part of that kingdom.
But it’s also a recognition that the kingdom has not yet permeated every part of God’s creation.
And it creates for us a rallying cry and it reminds us to invite and actively work toward God’s kingdom doing just that.
And then we come to what I believe is a central point of this prayer:
YOUR WILL BE DONE ON EARTH AS IT IS IN HEAVEN
If love God and love others is central, this is right there, too.
It’s the epitome of God’s kingdom.
It’s the model that Jesus showed us throughout his life.
It’s exactly what Jesus prayed in the Garden of Gethsemane – not my will, but your will be done.
And when we allow this to happen, that’s when God’s kingdom comes.
And then we shift to love others:
GIVE US TODAY OUR DAILY BREAD
We are a people who are completely reliant on God for all that we need in life.
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