Sermon Tone Analysis

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Chiefs vs Bills - AFC Divisional Round January 23, 2022
1:54: 29-26 Bills after a Gabriel Davis TD, plus 2pt conversion
1:02: 29-33 Chiefs after Tyreek Hill TD (64 yd)
0:13: 36-33 Bills after Gabriel Davis TD
0:00 36-36 after Butker FG
10:45 OT - 36-42 after Kelce TD from Mahomes
Last week, we talked about some proof of the resurrection, and also the implications of it.
Rather than to scramble on to the next good thing to talk about - as if there is a next good thing - Lorien and I thought it would be good to slow down and take our time working through this.
So, during the season of Eastertide (which lasts for 50 days from Easter to Pentecost), we’re going to spend some time looking at the resurrection, and then what’s next.
Let’s hop over to Luke 24:11
This passage is referring to the group of women (including Mary Magdalene) telling the disciples that Jesus has risen.
Eastertide Sermons (Sermon I: First Sunday after Easter: The Fact of the Resurrection) By Henry Alford, D.D., Dean of Caterbury
THE words spoken of in [Luke 24:11] (the former of these texts) were of no common character.
They formed, it is true, the report of the women who had returned from the sepulchre of the Lord, and this report might be regarded as tinged with mental excitement, and with feminine credulity.
During the last few moments of that Chiefs playoff game against the Bills, my son Taran was getting so excited.
By the way, the Chiefs are only his second favorite team.
But he was saying - there’s still hope!
I on the other hand, being well-rehearsed in disappointment as a long-time sports fan, spent quite a bit of energy explaining to him that it was over - there was no way the Chiefs were going to win or even tie the game up with less than 2 minutes left to play.
The disciples were really down.
Their hopes and dreams crushed.
They’d be fine if it was never known that they once confessed Jesus was the Christ - the Son of the living God!
Now, let’s have a look at Acts 2:32
Wait a minute!
This same group of disciples, dejected, downcast, ready to walk away from it all and go back to their former lives just 50 days ago, are now suddenly invigorated, willing to risk it all by sharing the news of the Resurrected Lord and King.
What happened?
We go back to 1 Corinthians 15:13-23
It turns out that Christ was and is indeed resurrected, and if you read a bit further in the gospels, you see that Jesus appeared to them.
Without the reality of the resurrection, this group of disciples and apostles likely would have silently returned to what they were doing before Jesus.
And, as a result, we would not have the Christian church today.
It was because those early followers of Jesus knew that he was raised from the dead that we have more than just a tale of the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, but we have recorded history verified by those that witnessed it.
I will pose the questions again as I did last week: what does this mean for us?
Every resurrection is preceded by death, and a cross (or difficulty) can yield great gain in a heart matured by it.
Like a butterfly, resurrection transformation happens from the inside out; there is no shortcut, and the end result is worth the process.
Transformation only happens when we enter into the chrysalis of our situation with complete surrender.
Learning to fly takes practice, and practice means we do what Jesus did over and over again.
What is something - perhaps one thing - that Jesus is asking of you today?
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