Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Tone of specific sentences

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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
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Anger
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! God and our days
 
1 Lord, you have been our dwelling-place
throughout all generations.
2 Before the mountains were born
or you brought forth the earth and the world,
from everlasting to everlasting you are God.
3 You turn men back to dust,
saying, “Return to dust, O sons of men.”
4 For a thousand years in your sight
are like a day that has just gone by,
or like a watch in the night.
 
10 The length of our days is seventy years—
or eighty, if we have the strength;
yet their span is but trouble and sorrow,
for they quickly pass, and we fly away.
11 Who knows the power of your anger?
For your wrath is as great as the fear that is due to you.
12* **Teach us to number our days aright,*
*that we may gain a heart of wisdom.*
PSALM 90 esp.
v 12
 
 
Tuesday next – July 4th – is a significant day in my family.
It is Stephen’s forty third birthday, and the forty third anniversary of my ordination – here at Bristol Road.
I could never have imagined that forty three years later I would be standing here to minister God’s word.
Some days are always significant  - and usually they mark anniversaries – a yearly celebration.
We tend to mark of our lives by years.
This morning I turn to the most famous Psalm there is on the subject of age – a Psalm attributed not to David, but to Moses – PSALM 90.
I want us to consider GOD AND OUR DAYS.
FIRST OF ALL CONSIDER THE STRUCTURE OF THE PSALM
 
Moses begins with a statement about the eternal God
He then moves on to remind us of our mortality and our impending judgement
Our text is the “hinge verse”
The prayer continues to the end of the psalm.
It is a psalm of personal reflection in later years.
MOSES
 
Of all the characters of the Bible history Moses had many reasons to look back over his life and weigh up the significance of his life.
40 years in Egypt
40 years in Midian
40 years in the wilderness
 
Whenever in the course of that long life, Moses wrote this prayer he had plenty of experience to draw on.
What he has to say is not just the ramblings of an old man – but the words of one of the greatest of God’s leaders.
He has learned what Paul described as “the secret”
 
He has learned to reckon his days against the background of certain fundamental truths – and I want us this morning to do just that too.
1.
God is eternally trustworthy
2.    God will judge all of our days
3.    God can transform our future
4.    God requires our TODAY
 
 
!
God is eternally trustworthy
Too easily we compare our lives with the lives of others – the real standard for our lives if God Himself – revealed in Jesus Christ.
So we are reminded of HIS FAITHFULNESS
 
!!!! 1 Lord, you have been our dwelling-place
!!!! throughout all generations.
!!!! 2 Before the mountains were born
!!!! or you brought forth the earth and the world,
!!!! from everlasting to everlasting you are God.
!!!! 3 You turn men back to dust,
!!!! saying, “Return to dust, O sons of men.”
!!!! 4 For a thousand years in your sight
!!!! are like a day that has just gone by,
!!!! or like a watch in the night.
On the great scale even of earth’s history, when compared with previous generations there is ONE CONSTANT      -       One HOME
 
God has been faithful
God is in charge                 as Isaac Watts renders it:-
 
Our God, our help in ages past,
Our hope for years to come,
Our shelter from the stormy blast,
And our eternal home.
Under the shadow of thy throne
Thy saints have dwelt secure;
Sufficient is thine arm alone,
And our defence is sure.
Before the hills in order stood,
Or earth received her frame,
From everlasting thou art God,
To endless years the same.
There were times when Moses was acutely conscious of Him – and times when he behaved as if God was not in charge.
That is one of the great ironies of the human condition – that man may respond to the revelation of God – even trust in Him – and yet turn this way and that in pursuit of other aims than God’s and in a strength man does not have – but assumes.
If we are going to understand the way God influences our lives we have to see Him as eternal and faithful, holy and other.
! God will judge all our days
 
!!!! 7 We are consumed by your anger
!!!! and terrified by your indignation.
!!!! 8 You have set our iniquities before you,
!!!! our secret sins in the light of your presence.
!!!!  
!!!! 11 Who knows the power of your anger?
!!!!
For your wrath is as great as the fear that is due to you.
When Moses looks back at his own life, and when he examines the momentous events of his nation’s history – he is aware next of the GUILT of mankind, and the inevitability of JUDGEMENT
 
Moses was closer to that judgement than we are.
He witnessed for himself the plagues of Egypt, the coming together of the waters of the Red Sea, the Mountain of Sinai and the reaction of the people to God’s law.
Sadly we have forgotten this in the 21st Century – but we do so at our peril.
But Moses also experienced it at first hand – I have to say that I believe he wrote this psalm late in his life – after the failure that cost him entrance to the Land of Promise.
The disappointment of the faces of defeated footballers is nothing compared with the awful sense of failure that Moses felt when God told him he would not enter the promised land.
Yet if we are to make sense of our world and our times and our own days – we need to face up squarely to what THE JUDGEMENT OF GOD REALLY MEANS.
There is so much injustice and crime and sin that seems to go unpunished in our world.
Doesn’t God care?
The very mortality of mankind is a reminder of that judgement.
Do not consider it lightly.
But there is another truth here:
 
! God can transform our future
 
!!!! 13 Relent, O Lord! How long will it be?
!!!! Have compassion on your servants.
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