Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Anger
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Anger
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Intro
I don’t get political in the pulpit on purpose
But the one guy who irritates me more than everyone else is our governor
Just this week it was reported that 700K people left in last two years
Yet he is in Washington lobbying to be president by proclaiming California is the model for the country
No one can afford a home, homelessness is the real pandemic, and schools are no longer about education but America should be like us
He is a fake leader
Everything he does is for the attention of the media
He has a small circle of people around him telling him that he is right, while the vast majority can’t stand the guy
Yet somehow he will be in serious contention to be the president one day and people will vote for him
As Christians, we need to be able to discern fake leaders, especially in the church
Jesus shows us several signs of fake leaders and how we should respond
This is some great application as we move forward in these crazy times
Read Matthew 23:1-5
Transition:
All the questions are done
He has put the naysayers to shame
Now he is going to use the rest of his time between now and the last supper to teach the people
Matthew 23 records Jesus’ last public sermon.
It was not a sermon on salvation, on the resurrection, or on principles for living the kingdom life but rather a vital and sobering message of condemnation against false teachers.
Jesus deals with the hypocritical leaders
Then he talks about end times
Finally he shares some well known parables
The next several weeks are going to be rich
I encourage you to be hear and bring your Bible, and journal, and a pen
Preach but Don’t Practice vs. 1-3
He starts our by warning the crowds about the spiritual leaders
The initial characteristic describing false religious leaders is lack of divine authority.
The key to our Lord’s point is the fact that the scribes and Pharisees had seated themselves.
The ESV doesn’t say it but the NASB does
saying: “The scribes and the Pharisees have seated themselves in the chair of Moses
They were not appointed by God to sit in the chair of Moses and had not even been elected by the people.
They had simply appointed themselves that position of authority
False leaders have been around since the beginning of time
Paul called them preachers of a perverted gospel
John called them antichrists who deny that Jesus is the Messiah, the Christ
The first instruction Jesus gives is to bey their teaching if it is in accordance with the law
vs.
3a Obey their teaching
Jesus obviously was not speaking comprehensively of the lies and errors they taught but only of their instructions that conformed to Scripture.
He had made clear that the righteousness acceptable to God must exceed the hypocritical, works-oriented self-righteousness
We are to obey Biblical teaching, even if the teacher is lacking integrity
Too many Christians ignore teaching and use the hypocrisy as an excuse
How many times have you heard someone say they don’t go to church because of the hypocrites?
Next time ask them if they are still sitting under Biblical teaching and obeying Scripture
vs. 3b Ignore their works
When the scribes and Pharisees did occasionally teach God’s truth, they did not obey it themselves.
False religious leaders are characterized by lack of integrity, hypocritically demanding of others many things they never do themselves.
The unbelieving religious leaders did not have the ability to keep God’s law even had they genuinely wanted to, because they possessed no spiritual resources to make such obedience possible.
Being unredeemed, they lived only in the flesh and by the flesh’s power, and the flesh is not capable of fulfilling God’s law
Only the new person in Christ can “joyfully concur with the law of God in the inner man” (Rom.
7:22), and
only the redeemed life, the life “created in Christ Jesus for good works” (Eph.
2:10) is able to do good works.
How many times over the last three years have politicians gone on TV to demand things like masks and vaccine’s only to be found breaking the exact same rule
Our notorious governor leads that pack
Shut down schools while keeping his in Private schools
Requiring outdoor dining then found dining inside
It goes on and on
The false religious leader tries, often unsuccessfully, to put a cap on his wicked behavior to keep it out of view, but in so doing he merely traps it underneath the surface, where it festers, putrefies, and becomes still more corrupt.
Jesus tells us not to follow in their footsteps
We are held to a standard of living
Using someone as an excuse for your behavior doesn’t fly
Signs of Fraud vs. 4-7
How do you know if someone is a fake leader?
Jesus shows us three signs
There is more in this section but these are the three themes
vs. 4 Pile on Unbearable Burdens
The first theme is unrealistic expectations
Have you ever seen those redneck pictures of someone loading a ton of lumber in a car not meant to carry it
Or maybe the picture of a truck in a third world country that looks like it is going to tip over because the stuff on it is piled too high
A fake leader will demand more of his followers than he does of himself
What makes it worse is that they lack sympathy
We’ve all had bosses like this
Their really good at demanding work from you but never seemed to follow through on their end
The worst one would twist it to make it your fault
When the people failed to keep all of the requirements, as they were doomed to do, they were chided and rebuked by the leaders, who thereby added the burden of guilt to those of weariness and frustration.
The people were taught that it was only by their own good works they could please God.
If at the end of life the good works outweighed the bad, then God would grant entrance into heaven.
But the scribes and Pharisees offered the people no help in achieving even those fleshly goals, much less any spiritual ones.
The good news that Jesus brought, on the other hand, was that He would take away the load of sin that always outweighed their good works.
vs. 5 Do Deeds to be Seen
The Jewish religious leaders paraded their piety everywhere they went.
The center of their living was “practicing [their] righteousness before Men to be noticed by them
The motivation for all their pretentious religious activities and deeds is to be noticed by men.
Everything is done for outward show rather than from the heart, for fleshly gratification of ego rather than selfless service to God
Four times in the Pentateuch (Ex.
13:9, 16; Deut.
6:8; 11:18) the Lord commanded that His law was to be upon the hands and foreheads of His people as a reminder of Him.
The ancient Jews understood that command as it was given, not to be taken literally but as symbolic of God’s law
As the centuries passed, many Jews came to look it turned from making God dominant in their lives to making themselves dominant in the eyes of their fellow Jews
vs. 6-7 Love Attention
Cultivate Authenticity vs. 8-12
vs. 8-10 Strive for Unity
vs. 11 Be a Servant
vs. 12 Humble Yourself
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