Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

This automated analysis scores the text on the likely presence of emotional, language, and social tones. There are no right or wrong scores; this is just an indication of tones readers or listeners may pick up from the text.
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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
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Analytical
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Anger
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Welcome
What are your favorite comfort foods?
Mine is a very high brow dish we call “Corn Dip”.
It was a treat my family had once a year growing up - only on Christmas Eve.
The recipe for corn dip is pretty esoteric.
You need one log of cream cheese, one log of Monterrey jack (pepper jack, if possible) and a can of corn.
You cook the corn in butter, then melt the cheeses.
Once it’s all melted together, you serve with nacho cheese Doritos.
What does this dish have to do with Christmas?
Nothing, as far as I can tell.
Where did it originate?
No idea, though based on the fact that it’s all fat and carbs, definitely the Midwest (where I grew up).
I love corn dip.
It’s my comfort foot because when I eat it, I’m instantly transported back to those Christmas Eve nights with my siblings and my parents, the joy and anticipation of the next morning burning bright as we scooped gooey dip into our mouths with cheesy, crunchy goodness.
Now that I’m an adult with my own bank account, I can make corn dip whenever I want.
But I still try to make it only once or twice a year.
Not just because it’s not the healthiest food choice.
No, because even though it’s a very plain dish that takes almost no skill to prepare, it’s special to me.
It’s sacred, in its own way.
So what’s your comfort food?
What reminds you of that space you’re safe, secure and free to hope?
We’re going to hear one of the great comfort poems of the Bible today, and we’ll explore how God uses images and ideas from long ago to speak comfort to a people in turbulent times.
Hope, after all, isn’t for the good times.
Hope is what we need in the hard times.
Message
We’ve spent the last two months exploring what it looks like to be Black Sheep in our current reality.
Not because we’re alienated from the larger culture, but from the Church.
Growing up, you felt distance from the Church because you were drifting from faith.
Today, though, a lot of the folks who are feeling this sense of isolation, of being the weird one - it’s not because of weak faith.
It’s actually the opposite
And it’s not because they’re drifting or backsliding or wandering from their faith.
It’s actually our faithfulness to Jesus that’s making us feel like outsiders to our own faith.
The people who claim to represent Jesus don’t actually look very much like him.
[Timeline] That’s why we’ve spent the last couple of months with the prophet Jeremiah.
Jeremiah lived in the years leading up to the Exile, one of the most apocalyptic and formative events in the history of God’s people.
Jeremiah was born into a world in the shadow of the Babylonian Empire, and the little nation of Judah spent decades trying to figure out how to survive Babylon.
They made payments to the emperor to keep him from conquering them.
They entered into alliances with other nations.
This was the big point of contention, because these alliances involved adopting the other nations’ gods - a sort of cultural exchange.
This idolatry was a violation of the covenant between God and God’s people.
It was a signal that God’s people didn’t trust that God’s way would preserve them, protect them and provide for them.
The people continued to give lip service to God, but their actions showed they preferred to trust the power of the nations around them.
Sound familiar?
This series has been challenging for us, in large part because we know where Jeremiah’s story went - the people didn’t listen to his warnings, and they endured the Exile.
As we consider the idolatry we see in our own culture, we’ve had to ask the same: is Christianity in our time and place on the same trajectory?
Turn with us to Jeremiah 31.
Today is the conclusion of our series, and we’re ending in a part of Jeremiah scholars call the ‘Little Book of Comfort’.
We’re ending this series in a place of hope.
We’re going to see today that God uses the deep history of God’s faithfulness to the people as a way to reassure those in the midst of crisis that God remains with them.
Let’s begin with a glimpse at the tone of the passage.
Read the first two verses with me:
There’s a temptation with passages like this to take a deep breath and say, “Oh, okay.
Everything’s gonna be okay.
God is in control.
We can just relax.”
Have you seen that?
In the midst of political turmoil, Christians shrug and say, “God is in control,” or “Everything’s going to work out in the end.”
It’s a way of shrugging our shoulders and hiding from the real pain and problems in our world.
In the worst versions, it’s a way of hiding from our own roll in creating the circumstances that are now so dangerous.
How do God’s promises steady us as we live faithfully in the here and now?
How can we use hope as the fuel for our faithfulness knowing that, like Jeremiah, we’ll be ignored and even rejected or ridiculed?
I want to work through God’s promises here and reflect on what we’ve seen is our role over the last several months.
So let’s begin with verse 3:
1. Rooted in God’s Love
We began our journey by insisting that we must be rooted in God’s love.
And here, we find a powerful reaffirmation of God’s love for us.
God loved us - and by ‘us’ we don’t mean here just the faithful few, remember?
God loves all of God’s people - even the faithless and idolatrous.
And God has loved us for much, much longer than we could possibly have loved God.
God’s love is an everlasting love.
It’s eternal, unending.
There’s nothing we can do, as Paul says in his letter to the Roman church, to separate ourselves from God’s love.
2. God as Source
In the second week, we looked at the reality of idolatry - how often we look to something other than God for our life, for protection and provision.
But God reminds the people that God is our source.
God draws us to Godself with ‘unfailing love’ - that’s that Hebrew word chesed we’ve seen a couple of times in this series.
It means God has obligated Godself to us.
By creating us, by loving us, God has committed Godself to us in a real, binding way.
One thing that means is that God is a never-ending source of living water - life itself to which we have eternal access.
Why would we build leaky rain catchers instead of drinking freely from God’s infinite love?
3. Freedom not Shame
Of course the sad reality is that we all turn to idols.
We’re all guilty of building cracked cisterns, leaky rain catchers, rather than receiving God’s love freely.
Ashley reminded us that when we’re confronted with this reality - when we see that we’re much more like idolatrous Israel than we like to admit, our tendency is to hide, or simply collapse in shame.
But God’s chesed, God’s unfailing love, lifts us up.
God’s love does not create shame, but freedom.
God’s love isn’t condemnation but liberation.
These three are foundational to the Black Sheep’s faithfulness.
We’re grounded in God’s love.
We’re aware of and watchful for idolatry in ourselves and the people around us.
And we’re not interested in judgment or condemnation but in liberation.
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We must be grounded in God’s love to hear what comes next.
Because many words in this series were hard for us to hear.
It’s only appropriate, then, that even here, especially here, God’s promises sustain us:
4. No Feast, No Fast
God warned the prophet against pretending everything is normal when it’s decidedly not.
For Jeremiah, this looked like withdrawing from funerals and weddings, fasts and feasts.
For us, it’s meant the end of relationships both individual and communal.
So God promises that these painful endings are not The End. Weddings will resume.
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