Sermon Tone Analysis

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Pre-Sermon: Advent, which means to arrive is the beginning of the Church calendar.
Beginning 4 Sundays before Christmas, Advent is a season of anticipation and preparation.
During Advent, we should purposefully anticipate and prepare our hearts for God our Savior – for the God who continually “Advents” – who comes to His wayward creation.
During Advent, we should prepare our hearts for God our Redeemer, who stepped into this world as a Baby, born of Mary.
It is a time that we celebrate the first arrival of Emmanuel, God with us, and we anticipate second coming of Jesus, the God who saves us.
“It is said that the door to the stable where the Christ-child has been born is very low - and only those who kneel find access.
Being ready for Christmas should mean that our thoughts are focused not just on [presents and parties and such], but on repentance, [humility] and interior ‘housecleaning.’
John the Baptist warned his hearers to prepare a way for the Lord - to make a clear and level pathway.”
~ Celtic Daily Prayer.
We say Jesus is the reason for the season, but do our lives truly reveal that?
If Advent is to be a season of anticipation and preparation, then I challenge us as the people of God to push back against the world and how it celebrates Christmas.
If it’s really about Jesus the Christ, then really make it about Jesus the Christ.
So, as we begin Advent, what can you do this season to prepare your heart, your home, your community for Christ?
The answer may not come immediately, but I do encourage us to seriously consider including more of Jesus in our Christmas.
During the 4 Sundays of Advent, we observe a theme each Sunday– Hope, Peace, Love, and Joy.
I encourage you to follow along with the Bible Project 28 Day daily devotion in your handout.
My sermons will be a little different.
Lastly, our services may go a tad longer as we add a few items, so I will not be having Sunday school and encourage you to fellowship.
Sermon - Turn to 1 Peter 1.
Every book in the Bible was written by a particular author, to a particular audience, for a particular reason.
Every letter or book has a theme in Scripture has a theme.
What is Peter’s theme?
“First Peter is about maintaining hope in the midst of suffering.
Because Jesus Himself suffered, and because God can be trusted to put all things right, Peter counsels believers to maintain their faith in Jesus.
Believers should do so even when they are being persecuted, mocked, and misunderstood; they should also imitate Jesus by enduring unjust suffering with grace.
Hardships are bound to come in this life, but they do not have the last word.
~ FaithLife Study Bible
What’s your hardship?
Does it have the last word – or is there a place for hope?
Let’s watch this video from the Bible Project then we’ll continue.
VIDEO
A few thoughts before we get into the Peter.
Remember,
Hope is not optimism.
Optimism looks for the good in a situation.
Hope looks for God in a situation.
There is a difference.
Optimism has its place, but Hope is better.
Let’s say your house collapsed and everything is destroyed – furniture, clothing, etc. Optimism looks for something good.
Optimism would say, “At least I listened to my mom for once and put on clean underwear.”
Hope is different.
Hope looks for God – Father, Son, Spirit - in the situation.
Hope looks for God who can take a bad situation and actually do something with it.
Optimism tends to ignore what is in order to look for something good (i.e.
ignores the collapsed house).
But hope doesn’t ignore the severity of the situation.
Biblical
Hope acknowledges the reality of chaos, evil, injustice, and suffering in our world.
Hope looks through what is, to find God and reject despair.
Hope looks for the God who can redeem, save, transform.
Hope looks for the God who parted the Red Sea, who killed the giant, who calmed the raging storm and looks for the Savior who died and rose from the grave – the Savior who bring justice and make all things right.
Hope believes what God can do and anticipates what He will do.
Hope believes God can bring something good out of the collapsed house – we just don’t know when – so we anticipate – which has been the way of God’s people since the beginning.
… or chosen – people who have come to faith in Christ – Christians.
And they are what?
… exiles scattered – refugees, persecuted, on the run, their lives have been disrupted, life is not going the way they planned – just wanted to go to college, get a good job, have a family …
Peter is writing to Christians who have lost their homes, jobs, friends, loved ones, lost security, stable income, dreams .…
These are the Christians who would soon be tossed to the lions ….
And the Peter writes,
What! Praise God in the midst of chaos, loss, and suffering?
Yes, this was not His design, but
Praise can be prevention for discouragement and provision for strength in difficult times.
Praise can keep us from despair and from losing our way.
So, if you need God in the midst of your trials, try praising Him (not easy).
At a minimum, if we know Jesus as our Savior, we can praise Him because -
New life – now and forever!
Have you received God’s gift of mercy, gift of forgiveness in Jesus Christ?
And it is a gift, given to us and wrapped up in Jesus Christ to those who trust in Him.
One of the benefits of this new birth is a living hope.
What is a living hope?
If something is living, it’s what?
Not dead!
Alive, perpetual, eternal.
We have this hope no matter where we are or what we’re going through.
Like Shadrach ….
They had hope that God would rescue them from the fire, but even if God didn’t, they knew He would ultimately save their souls.
God provides this hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead … and because of Jesus ...
Remember, Peter is writing to people who have been persecuted for their faith in Jesus Christ.
Let that sink in.
God’s people have never been and never will be exempt from grief, hatred, persecution, suffering, and trials.
But God’s people have always had and still have a living hope in God.
And in Christ we have a living lasting perpetual unconquerable hope that goes beyond our suffering and trials, goes beyond this temporary life.
Only in Jesus Christ do we have such a living hope.
Do you have this living hope?
You can, by trusting and believing in Jesus, the Son of God.
Where does a Christian’s hope and joy come from?
Our salvation - our deliverance from the bondage of sin and death – not necessarily from the elimination of trials.
The hope and joy of salvation is just as much about Heaven as it is about our personal and communal renewal, transformation and healing
… in this life.
Hope is not only about Jesus ushering us into His Kingdom; it’s also about Jesus ushering His Kingdom into us
- our hearts.
As we allow Jesus to put more of His Kingdom into our hearts, the more hope we have and the more hope we can give.
What does Peter encourage these exiles to do? Sit in the corner and wait for Jesus to come back?
Does he tell them to believe everything they read in the news about how bad things are …?
Hope arises from realizing this is not our home.
We are exiles and sojourners.
If we cling too tightly to this world, our hope will diminish.
Learn to hold this world and your stuff and your dreams loosely.
Lastly,
While in exile.
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