Sermon Tone Analysis

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Text: 1 Peter 1:17-19
The Apostle Peter gives us many insights in this short, 3-verse, passage.
Let’s look at one.
How we view God.
First, he talks about how we view God.
Yesterday we celebrated the life of Bob Millage.
Several of you were unable to be here because of the snow and the bad road conditions.
Thankfully, the roads around the church, and for most others, and our drive and parking lot were not affected.
So we had over 100 people here to celebrate Bob’s life.
I think it is the most we have ever had in the sanctuary.
We pretty much filled the 80 places set for a lunch afterward
As Bob’s pastor I did my best to honor his life and, with Sister Donna’s help, to included everything she wanted in the service.
The North GA Honor guard honoring Bob’s service in the Army as a Vietnam vet
Their former pastor from Antioch Baptist Church spoke.
His brother, his son and a friend spoke about his life.
By the time it came to me, the service had lasted about an hour and a half.
I imagined everyone was tired and so I wasn’t going to preach some long-winded sermon.
So, I shared one verse: where Isaiah says in Isaiah 64:8 (NASB95) But now, O LORD, You are our Father, We are the clay, and You our potter; And all of us are the work of Your hand.
See how yesterday connects with today?
Peter says, IF you address God as Father ...
Is that how you perceive God?
I pray that it is because, what I prepared but didn’t share yesterday — yes, you are getting leftovers (the long-winded sermon) — but leftovers at God’s table is better than anything you’ll get looking at social media, or watching news on TV, or anything else the world has to offer.
… What I prepared yesterday, was that this past Wednesday we started a study in the Gospel according to Matthew that includes Jesus’ instructions on how to pray.
Jesus tells us to begin our prayer with:
Our Father who is in heaven ...
Who?
Our Father
Our GOOD Father
I pray that you have a relationship with God where the Holy Spirit is doing the work described in:
Romans 8:14–18 (NASB95) For all who are being led by the Spirit of God, these are sons [daughters, children] of God. 15 For you have not received a spirit of slavery leading to fear again, but you have received a spirit of adoption as sons by which we cry out, “Abba!
Father!” 16 The Spirit Himself testifies with our spirit that we are children of God, 17 and if children, heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with Him so that we may also be glorified with Him.
18 For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is to be revealed to us.
If you call God Father ...
It is because you are in right relationship with Him.
And if you are in right relationship with Him, you not only call God your Father, but you see Him as a GOOD Father.
God speaking in Isaiah and Jesus speaking in the Gospel of Matthew wanted us to know that we have a Father in heaven.
A good Father.
Jesus said in: Matthew 7:11 (NASB95) “If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give what is good to those who ask Him!
James 1:17 (NASB95) Every good thing given and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shifting shadow.
I like what two contemporary Christian songwriters, Anthony Brown and Pat Barrett, say in a song they wrote that about God being good.
They say:
You're a Good, Good Father
It's who You are
It's who You are
It's who You are
And I'm loved by You
It's who I am
It's who I am
It's who I am
The Bridge of that song says:
You are perfect in all of Your ways
You are perfect in all of Your ways
You are perfect in all of Your ways to us
Now I know that it would be easy to question whether God is a GOOD heavenly Father at a funeral.
That He is perfect in all of His ways.
How could a good heavenly Father take away an earthly father — even if He did give him to us, in Bob’s case, for 73 years?
That was 20 years longer than my father lived — we have no guarantees about how long we will live.
But we question, how could Father God who is perfect in all of His ways...
Take away a husband?
A grandfather?
A brother, uncle, brother-in-law, cousin ...
A brother in Christ?
As I mentioned yesterday, the problem is, those who serve a perfect, loving heavenly Father, do so in an imperfect and harsh world.
Let me repeat that.
I speak of those who serve God, because there are those who have chosen to NOT be in relationship with Him.
God doesn’t force us to accept Him.
We can live in rebellion against our Creator and Sustainer.
We can refuse to accept the love and compassion of the One who gave His only begotten Son to die in our place — that’s what the Father did when He gave Jesus to die on the cross.
It doesn’t seem wise to reject such love — but there are those who do.
But ALL of us whether in relationship or outside of relationship with God, live in an imperfect and harsh world made that way, NOT by Father God — NO!
As Genesis 1 repeatedly says: what God created was good.
It was perfect.
But then, as Romans 8:20-22 tells us, God’s perfectly created, good world was corrupted and made imperfect and harsh by sin.
Humanity chose this imperfection, the harshness when they chose to disobey their good Father who always knows best.
With that choice came death.
And that is what we dealt with yesterday, the death of a man loved by many.
But Bob Millage didn’t die a hopeless, futile death.
Through a relationship with his Savior and Lord, Bob knew God was his Father, he knew God AS his Father.
Because of what we read in vs. 19 of our text, Bob died in hope — in the hope of a better tomorrow — of an eternity with Jesus.
Bob had, as verse 19 says, been redeemed with precious Blood, the Blood of Christ.
Bob had experienced the POWER of the Blood that we sang about a few minutes ago.
Yes, There is pow’r, pow’r, wonder-working pow’r
In the blood of the Lamb;
There is pow’r, pow’r, wonder-working pow’r
In the precious blood of the Lamb.
That Blood has the power to redeem us from death!
Over the next few weeks leading up to our service on Good Friday at 6:30 pm.
I will be talking about the Blood of Jesus, shed by the Lamb of God.
… You know, last year I talked about this.
Non liturgical churches, like ours and most others in the AG, have normally just skipped Good Friday — the day we remember the death of Jesus on the Cross.
We skipped it and only celebrated the resurrection.
I know in a lot of churches I’ve attended and some I’ve pastored, it has led to people wanting to sing and talk about the Cross on Resurrection Sunday when we should be rejoicing over … uh, the Resurrection, the empty tomb, death defeated.
But this year we will remember Jesus’ death on the Cross:
Singing songs about the Cross and the Blood
Remembering Jesus’ sacrifice by sharing the Lord’s Supper together.
I encourage you to plan to be here for that service.
We want to especially remember the Blood, because it is ONLY through Jesus and His Blood, shed for us, only through the witness of the Holy Spirit and in no other way, that we and Bob know the truth of the scripture with which I mentioned earlier: Isaiah 64:8 that tells us:
That the LORD, is our Father,
That we are the clay, and God is our potter;
That everyone is the work of His hand.
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