Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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class=MsoNormal>May the words of my mouth and the meditations of all our hearts be acceptable in you your sight – our creator, redeemer and sustainer – Our Lord God of all – Amen 
/ /
/I am the way, and the truth and the life.
No one comes to the Father except through me.”(John 14:6)/
 
Do you know these words?
Powerful words… – in my opinion it is the most powerful statement ever!
Let me say them again and let’s consider them deeply
 
/ /
/I am the way…, and the truth… and the life….
No one comes to the Father except through me.”(John 14:6)/
 
 
What do you think about when you hear this statement?...
·         For some it might be a word of clarity
there is not ‘many roads’ to the mountain-top – just one
·         For others you might have experienced Christian groups that have used this scripture as a defining statement of identity
And that is an understandable claim – for three times Jesus says - “I am…”
·         For others, when you hear this clear statement it causes you some stress
Whether you believe it or not - whether you see it as a black and white statement… or something that you believe, but it is in need of some contextual explanation
·         For some it might be very comforting
You see in this statement, a word of promise – a promise that you can rest your faith on
It is for this reason that it is part of the most popular piece of scripture chosen for funerals – verses 1 & 2 of John 14 /- “Do not let your hearts be troubled.
Believe in God, believe also in me.
2In my Father’s house there are many dwelling places.(John
14:1-2)/
·            And for others it might be too hard to accept – and you understand this part of scripture as something that Apostle John wrote 60 years after Jesus and not actually the words of Jesus, removed from the situation and in light of the expulsion of the Christians from the Jews
           
No matter how you see it – it is a powerful statement
 
/I AM…THE way… THE truth… THE life… NO ONE comes to the Father except through me/
 
These are the words of Jesus the Christ, the messiah – the long awaited messiah
We, Christians, believe that Jesus came as a fulfillment of the Old Testament prophets and the promises of God
We believe that God’s written relationship with humanity – the Bible – is entirely pointing us to His one, and only Son
And Jesus is the key to understanding everything about God
            Jesus also says /“Whoever has seen me has seen the Father”/ (John 14:9b)
 
Now… all of this is fine, if you are in… if you are a Christian that believes in our Lord Jesus
But it doesn’t take long for /our/ warm glow beside the fire, to cool,
When we start to think about others – others outside…
We live in a modern once thought-of ‘Christian country’ – where we ask God’s blessing in our national anthem
But what about those people in the world that have never heard of Jesus – never heard the good news of the Gospel
What about the Hindus or Budhists or any number of religions.
What about the people born deep into a Muslim country, where belief in anything other than Islam is outlawed
                        How are Jesus’ /“I am”/ claims going to reach them
 
As a starting point, New Testament scripture reveals to us that Christianity is an exclusive group
            Meaning some are in and some are out
Remember our parable just last week of the good and bad fish – or the parable of the wheat and the weeds from two weeks ago
 
And it is this ‘exclusivity’ that St. Paul is wrestling with, in our passage from Romans today
Paul writes: /I have great sorrow and unceasing anguish in my heart.
(Romans 9:2)/
 
When I was in seminary – this question about the exclusive claims of Christianity was a common topic for discussion – ultimately it is a debates about God’s salvation
Often or in fact nearly always it was a theoretical discussion – that is what happens, when people gather for countless hours of study over three years of school
They debate about what *is* all this knowledge of God for
And inevitably the argument moves to the question “what about the Pigmies?” – people so remote that missionaries have never reached them
And so we, like Paul, wrestle and suffer from emotionally distress with the idea of people not reached – people that haven’t accepted that Jesus is the way and the truth and the life
 
Yet also important are questions that are deep behind the abstract theoretical questions
They are our own questions about faith
Our own questions about the promises of God
 
And sometimes for non-believers it is a starting point that they simply find too difficult to get past – what about those that don’t know Jesus
            Or what about all those people from /before/ Jesus
 
Today St. Paul in the beginning of Romans 9 reveals to us remarkable words coming from his heart
He carries a personal burden but he is also aware that the only one who can relieve him of this burden is God working through the Holy Spirit.
These are people that are family, friends of Paul – it matters that he~/we understand this point – For St. Paul it is his own flesh and blood, the Jews
 
For us, it might on first glance, be a theoretical question – A theological question which the biblical scholars should contemplate
            But, …  I bet it is more than that
                        I bet you have people in your life that you deeply care for, that are not Christian
                                    Colleagues, friends… members of your own family
 
When Jesus says – /No one comes to the Father, except through me/
who do you think of that might be on the outside
 
And so St. Paul’s writes
/3For I could wish that I myself were accursed and cut off from Christ for the sake of my own people (Romans 9:3)/
/ /
Most parents sound very much like Paul when it comes to the problems confronting their children.
Most parents would gladly substitute themselves to endure the adversities that face their children.
Even though we realize such substitutions aren't possible, we often find ourselves wishing, like Paul, that we could take the problems on ourselves, in the place of our family members.
We wish those things happened to us /"for the sake of my own people."/
Paul’s torturous wrestling over Romans chapters 9-11, about what does God say to the Jews in light of Christ, ultimately lead us to three chapters about the nature and identity of God
These three chapters – fed into by chapter 8, are what many scholars have called the high-water mark of Paul’s writing
 
And how did Paul bring his audience to this strategic point in the letter?
The theme and thesis, found in chapter one, of the letter starts us on the path for the rest of Romans:
/"For I am not ashamed of the gospel; it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who has faith, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.
For in it the righteousness of God is revealed through faith for faith; as it is written, 'The one who is righteous will live by faith'"/ (Romans 1:16-17)
/ /
The argument begins describing that God's judgment and wrath have been revealed to Jew and Gentile *alike*,
Neither is standing in a place of privilege, all are guilty before God (1:18-3:20).
Into this universal human reality Romans 3 tells us that: /"the righteousness of God has been disclosed, and is attested by the law and the prophets, the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ *for all* //who believe"/ (Romans 3:21-22).[1]
Paul is wrestling with God’s nature – God’s relationship to humanity – and specifically God’s relationship to God’s chosen people – the Jews
This wrestling with what scholars would call supersessionism is not limited to St. Paul – it has been a matter for the church, since the beginning
And the church hasn’t always understood God’s heart in this matter
                                    Christians have seen Jews as the scapegoat – the source of problems in society
                                                For some they have gone as far to claim that it is because Jews killed Christ
                                                            This is, of course absurd, but it reveals a deep seated confusion
So when Christians seek to establish multi-faith relations with their spiritual ancestors, the Jewish people, the response is often a sceptical one
 
How, the church could have provided a safe harbour for anti-Semitic ideology and action for so many generations is perhaps our greatest failing.
Martin Luther, who is maybe my favourite protestant reformer, wrote an extremely racist and embarrassing 65,000 word piece called “On the Jews and Their Lies”
            We haven’t always understood Romans 9-11 – we haven’t always got it right
And yet, yet… the answers were there all along – the response to relationship with our Jewish brothers and sisters is there *in* Paul’s writing
 
Simply put…We are to understand God as the perfect arbitrator of justice and mercy
            We are to understand that when God makes a promise – when God makes a covenant
                        Thou, it might - and in all likelihood will, be broken by us – it will never be broken by God
                                    God is steadfast – God’s faith in us is permanent
And so the Jews are always under the promises of the covenant
 
As recently as 1965 – The Roman Catholic Church has officially changed their position on their relationship with the Jews – with a document called /NOSTRA AETATE/
Where before the church has had a murky and at times despicable attitude in regards to Anti-Semitic behaviour and practices – history of the European pograms and the Holocaust are a real black eye for the Church
            The church has come out with a very clear position in favour of the Jews
The church states that the Jews are people of the first covenant – and God is steadfastly faithful
 
 As important and wonderful as this statement is – and it is an historic statement
            St.
Paul made this claim all along
Scripture has been there declaring this merciful and grace filled position from the beginning
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