Sermon Tone Analysis

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By Pastor Glenn Pease
Dave Weber worked for a company that went out of business, and he was thrust into the world of the unemployed.
Circumstances went from bad to worse, and he tells of coming to a point where most of us have never been-it was his last meal.
He, his wife, and two children sat down to share a can of chicken noodle soup.
It was the last bit of food in the house.
Dave, as a Christian, bowed his head and gave thanks for this pathetic meal, and then he prayed the Lord's Prayer.
When he said, "Give us this day our daily bread," he really felt the need.
He was a big bread eater, and a meal without bread was just not up to par.
He really desired some bread to go with the soup.
To add to his frustration somebody began to pound on the back door before he finished his prayer.
When he said his amen, his wife answered the door.
It was their neighbor from the house in back of them.
She had a problem.
Her brother was a delivery man for a large bread company that was distributing little loaves to customers as an advertising campaign.
He had four cases of these samples left over, and he had just dropped them off at her place.
She was wondering if they could use some of the bread.
With both laughter and tears they praised God, and filled the refrigerator, and their stomachs with bread.
Seldom does anyone ever get such an answer to their prayer, "Give us this day our daily bread."
Even the Weber family went on to recover.
Dave got a job, and they got their bread from then on just like everybody else does.
They bought it, or they baked it.
There are some dramatic examples in the Bible, and in history, where this prayer seems so relevant.
The Israelites in the wilderness were fed by the daily manna, and what could be a more relevant prayer?
Elijah was isolated from all society, and God sent ravens each day with food to keep him alive.
He could certainly feel comfortable with this prayer, "Give us this day our daily bread."
This prayer seems like the most relevant prayer that could be prayed in Ethiopia and other parts of the world where people are literally starving for lack of bread.
But for most of us this prayer borders on embarrassment.
It almost seems silly for us to ask God for bread.
Most Americans need to pray for a little less daily bread.
We already eat way to much.
A heavy man said to his thin friend, "You look like there's been a famine."
He responded, "And you look like the cause of it."
We live in a land of great abundance.
We ship grain all over the world so others can make bread.
We have got more bread than we know what to do with.
It is hard to pretend that we are lacking, and try to build up a desire so that we can sincerely and earnestly plead with God for bread.
The Western world is more into bread games than bread prayers.
It all started with a Mr. Gilbert in his New Zealand bakery.
He baked the world's largest loaf of bread in 1965.
It was 20 feet and 5 inches long.
But it did not hold the record long, for a baker in Scotland came out with a 23 foot loaf.
Mr. Gilbert was not to be outdone, and he responded with a 30 footer.
I can't bring you up to date on this exciting contest, but you can be sure there are bakers in this world trying to figure out how to make a loaf of bread the length of a football field.
The point is, we live in a culture where we have such abundance that we play games with bread.
We don't beg for it.
The result is that this forth petition of the Lord's prayer seems to be the least relevant of them all.
On top of that, it seems also to be the least respectable.
Jesus has been soaring to the heights of spirituality.
He has been dealing with desires for God's name, kingdom, and will, and now all of the sudden we drop down to the earthly subject of bread.
One moment we are focusing on the glory of God, and the next we are facing our daily grub.
The two seem, not just a little, but radically incompatible.
It is like dealing with a Stradivarius in one sentence, and in the next with the $3.98 plastic violin you get your two year old for Christmas.
It is like saying my hope for the coming year is for world peace, equally for all people, a balanced budget, and a better breakfast.
How did that get in the list?
You don't put the trivial with the tremendous.
I remember my first and only plane ride.
I was a chaplain in the Civil Air Patrol.
One of the pilots took me up in a small two seater.
I was in back of the pilot, and the wings were above, and so I had a clear view of Pittsburgh.
He took me above the clouds, and I saw brightness and brilliance like I have never seen as the sun shown on the tops of those clouds.
It was a truly heavenly experience.
Then the pilot spotted a hole in the clouds, and he dove down through it, and we were plunging straight for the earth.
I was embarrassingly scared.
The peace and tranquility of being above the clouds was gone and I was holding on and praying this guy would do something before we became earth centered.
I know we return to dust, but I was praying for a little slower process.
Instant dust had no appeal to me.
It was a great relief when he leveled the plane out and finally landed.
It was wonderful to touch the earth again with my feet, and not teeth first.
The point is, what I felt then I feel again on the mental level as I go from the first three lofty desires of this prayer to the fourth.
It is like plunging from the clouds of spirituality to the clods of the mundane and earthly.
From adorning the name of God; advancing the kingdom of God; accomplishing the will of God, Jesus plunges us to the level of acquiring food from God.
This is such a radical change that it has been embarrassing to Christians.
Great men of God like Jerome, Origen, and Augustine were embarrassed.
It is like someone ordering a pizza to be delivered to his seat as he listens to a great opera.
It is incongruous and not appropriate.
This is how Christians have felt for centuries about this fourth desire.
It has been an embarrassment to many that Jesus would drop from the sublime to the mundane, and shift from the sacred to the secular so swiftly.
Dallmann calls this desire an island of worldliness in an ocean of spirituality.
It stands out like a sore thumb as a purely secular desire.
All of the others are spiritual.
The first three clearly deal with God, and the other two on the man ward side deal with forgiveness and deliverance from evil, and these are two of the most spiritual subjects you can find.
Everything about this prayer is spiritual except this one weak link that stoops to the level of bread.
Could we have a misprint here, or a slip of the tongue, or a mental block?
How can we explain one penguin slipped in with five eagles or one pebble in with five diamonds?
One of the popular ways of explaining this earthly request is to spiritualize it.
Don't come down to the level of bread, but lift the bread up to the level of the other requests.
You say we are dealing with soul food here.
It is heavenly bread that comes like manna from heaven, and as nourishment for the soul.
The emphasis is one daily devotions rather than daily meals for the body.
Some Catholic authors have said it refers to the daily communion of receiving the bread of the Eucharist, and the refreshment of the spirit.
Other Catholics prefer the way most Protestants interpret it, and refer to the bread of life that God gives through His Word.
An 11th century Irish version says, "Give us today for bread the Word of God from heaven."
Protestants like this idea, and men like Erasmus and Olshausen say it is impossible Jesus would put the need for physical bread before the forgiveness of sin, and so they spiritualize it to mean bread of heaven from the Word of God.
All through history Christians have been somewhat embarrassed about the body-centered request in the midst of a soul-centered prayer, and so they have tried to spiritualize it to make it fit.
My task in this message is to try and defend the relevance and respectability of this earthy request.
First let's look at-
I. ITS RELEVANCE.
The first three petitions of this prayer are all God-centered.
They deal with the name, the kingdom, and the will of God.
But the last three are man-centered, and more specifically they are group-centered.
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