Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
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Announcements
connection cards
Elder Commissioning next week
Kristi’s service next Saturday at 2:30
Parking at community center lot
Office hours Monday through Thursday will be posted
Intro
I’ve got good news and bad news said the husband to his wife over the phone on a very busy day.
I am slammed at work right now.
Can you just give me the good news for some encouragement and tell me the bad news tonight?
Ok…Well, The airbags in our new car work perfectly.
Considering for a moment, that is really good news.
The degree of that good news is dependent on a very specific variable.
How bad is the bad news?
The good news of the airbags deploying correctly is better news the worse the reason for that deployment was.
There is an important character in the story of Jesus who we have mentioned before, John the Baptist.
He was immortalized in this famous poem from the late 20th century:
a man from the desert with naps in his hair, the sand that he walked was also his bed, the words that he spoke made the people assume there wasn’t too much left in the upper room.
With skins on his back and hair on his face they thought he was strange by the locusts he ate, the pharisees tripped when they heard him speak and so the king took the head of this Jesus Freak.
John was quite a guy.
You just heard scripture from Matthew describing him.
Thinking about what we know about Jesus from the reaction of men and women at his birth, professions from angels, and even his own mouth as a teenager, we are coming to understand that Jesus doesn’t just bring good news, but IS good news that changes EVERYTHING.
As we will see over the coming months, not everyone responds to the good news the same.
Some are prepared, some are not to receive this good news and the change it brings.
Because it does change everything.
So who was John then?
Why was his ministry important?
Going back to the terrible joke I started with, if Jesus’s good news is the airbag, John comes with the bad news of why the airbag is needed.
Not a perfect analogy, but maybe helpful.
Key is this verse from Matthew quoting Isaiah:
Matthew 3:3 CSB “For he is the one spoken of through the prophet Isaiah, who said: A voice of one crying out in the wilderness: Prepare the way for the Lord; make his paths straight!”
He came to prepare.
The hopelessly lost and the deeply religious for the same good news.
The life, death, and resurrection of Jesus as our only hope for salvation from an eternity apart from God, goodness, and hope.
Let’s pray and then look at the life and ministry of this unusual character.
More importantly, John’s call to the men and women who walked those sands 2000 years ago, is the same
PRAY
Preparation for Good News
How did John prepare people for good news?
#1 he:
Got Attention
Let’s read a portion of that again:
Matthew 3:4 “Now John had a camel-hair garment with a leather belt around his waist, and his food was locusts and wild honey.”
Imagine this guy out by the River.
Wild hair and beard.
We know from the angel visit to his parents that he was to be raised as a Nazaraite, one part of that is never cutting your hair.
Wild hair, camel skin garments, never making a trip to the Safeway for groceries but eating the bugs and honey that came his way.
But as people passed and he cried out his message, something in this presentation got their attention.
What gets your attention?
As one who stands up each Sunday to share a message from God’s word that I believe is worth you hearing AND acting on, I think a lot about how to get attention focused on the message.
Something funny, something emotional, something relatable
When I worked with teens, I had to think through the same questions, but the answers were different.
John was wild and bold out there.
Because God called him to begin preparing people and that meant getting their attention.
God has good news that will change everything.
But we naturally resist the changes, even if we receive the hope of Jesus, our natural bend is to resist the change that good news demands of us.
But God loves us enough to keep getting our attention.
He will use beauty.
Yesterday I spent the day at a viewing for Kristi’s friends and family.
It was a long and emotional day.
At one point I was standing next to a young lady from the family looking into the atrium there are Evergreen and the brightest green hummingbird came down and spent ten minutes flitting through the tree, down to drink from the fountain, occasionally showing us his iridescent red throat.
She looked over at me and smiled, “Kristi loved hummingbirds...”
I saw God getting her attention, just a moment of beauty, a reminder of goodness, grace and love in the world.
Not just her, but me too.
God will also use our pain to get our attention.
Note: This is not the same as God causing our pain.
But we live in a world of grief and God will not let it be wasted.
Most of you are aware that we suffered a second loss Wednesday night as Monica’s younger cousin Devin passed in his sleep.
Monica is with her family this weekend, but is grateful for all your prayers.
I spent some time on the phone with Devin’s sister on Friday and noticed she and I had a shared reaction.
An increased fire in our hearts for evangelism.
At Thursday night’s elder/deacon meeting, I asked our team to consider their evangelistic temperature, and as I looked at mine, I don’t know that it’s been higher.
Thankful that Kristi and Devin both knew the Lord…but reminded of 2 things.
I have no guarantee of one more heartbeat.
I have no way to know if a chance to share the story of Jesus with someone will come around again if I let it slip.
I found myself along with Dana praying with the psalmist:
Psalm 90:12 CSB “Teach us to number our days carefully so that we may develop wisdom in our hearts.”
Let God get your attention.
He has good news, and your and my natural bend is to ignore some or all of it to preserve our comfort zone.
The best of life comes when we turn toward him when he calls.
Number #2 John calls people to prepare, after getting their attention
Called for Repentance
We already heard in the introduction:
Matthew 3:1-2 “In those days John the Baptist came, preaching in the wilderness of Judea and saying, “Repent, because the kingdom of heaven has come near!””
Matthew 3:5-6 “Then people from Jerusalem, all Judea, and all the vicinity of the Jordan were going out to him, and they were baptized by him in the Jordan River, confessing their sins.”
To repent means to turn around in the mind.
To reverse course and set out in a new direction in your heart of hearts.
He gives a compelling reason:
The kingdom of heaven has come near.
Good news is coming…but good news is only good news if you know the bad.
If in the airbag story the accident was that he pulled in to a parking space too far and bumped the curbing and “POOF”…not good news.
If it was a significant accident and the airbag saved their lives…That’s great news.
Let’s understand what John is calling them back to.
Genesis, God creates man and woman in his image, his identity to be loved by him to love him, and to rule this world with him.
the story of the fall is the day we decided we wanted to take from this life rather than give…which is a rejection of his image.
It’s like if the mona lisa declared that she was not a portrait, but a seaside landscape.
Or if as a potter was working on making a mug, it declared that it was a plate.
We were made to be givers of life…but we chose…because God in his love for us gave us the dignity of choice that the mug or the painting as simply objects do not have.
and we used that choice to ruin ourselves and this world.
The story going forward is God all the while promising that at some point there will be a man who will bring restoration of man and God in defeat of the devil who tempted us away…God begins by choosing a family and showing unmerited favor, grace on them.
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