Sermon Tone Analysis
Overall tone of the sermon
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Generosity Moment
What Does Biblical Generosity Look Like?
Generosity is commonly associated with financial giving—
Such as a monthly tithe envelope or an automatic deduction from a bank account.
When we look at the generosity of the Bible, though, we see it goes deeper than just the amount of money we’re willing to donate.
Last week we said that one characteristics of true, Bible-centered Biblical Generosity is that...
Biblical generosity is tangible.
Instead of speaking about money in Matthew 25, Jesus mentions food, water, clothes, and love.
Biblical generosity is cheerful.
In 2 Corinthians 9:7 gives us freedom in our generosity.
God doesn’t want gifts motivated by a sense of duty or obligation.
He wants us to give out of joy and compassion.
If anyone knows generosity, it is God—who gave His Son to us freely, even when He knew we would abuse the gift.
Our generosity should be founded in love, not duty.
LESSON
Today is a scary day for some.
A day that some would want to skip in church history—nevertheless Pentecost Sunday is well documented and it leads us to many joys, benefits, and discoveries.
Let’s first start with the meaning of Pentecost...
Hold on to your hat.
Pentecost means: Fifty, BOO!
We are going to take a month and discover a little more about
Pentecost
Feast of Weeks
Firstfruit offerings
Joel’s prophetic words
Words fulfilled in Acts 2
and the promise of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit
Before Easter we did a series “BY MY SPIRIT” based out of Zech.
4.6
So you might says this series is--The Sequel: By My Spirit
Let’s read the passage in Zechariah
Key Points
Pentecost has its roots in the Old Testament Offerings given to the Lord
Among the many kinds of offerings we encounter in the Torah... one fascinating offering is the tenufah: the wave-offering.
The root of tenufah [tenû·p̄ā(h)… ten new faw]comes from a word that means to flutter or undulate.
A priest must wave the offering before God at the altar, rather than burning it.
This waving appears to indicate that the entity being waved belongs to God.
The wave-offering is then given to the priests to consume.
(A D’var Torah for Beha’alotekha by Rabbi Jill Hammer, https://ajr.edu/2018/05/behahalotekha/)
Prophetic voice of Joel
New Testament
Pentecost.
Word derived from the Greek word pentēkostē (fiftieth) which stood for the festival celebrated on the 50th day after Passover.
In the OT this festival, called Shavuoth (Weeks) in Judaism, is referred to as the Feast of Weeks (Ex 34:22; Dt 16:10) because it occurs 7 weeks after Passover.
Other names include “the Feast of Harvest” (Ex 23:16) because of its relationship with harvest season and “the Day of First Fruits” (Nm 28:26) because two loaves of newly ground grain were presented before the Lord.
This latter name, however, should be distinguished from the offering of first fruits at the beginning of the harvest season as mentioned in Leviticus 23:9–14.
READ FROM BIBLE:
My Story
10 y/o
16 y/o at camp
16 y/o at FGBMFI
Make it personal YOUR STORY
So, how about you?
Closing
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