Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Worship
1. Give Me To You - By: Newsboys
2. Mighty To Save - By: Laura Story
Prelude Song:
3. I Will Wait- By: Aaron Shusts
Communion Song:
4.Please Forgive Me - GVB
4.Please Forgive Me - GVB
Benediction Song:
5.The Old Rugged Cross - Bart Millard
Call To Worship Scripture Reading
Scripture Reading
Lamentations 3
Let Us Lament & Remember The Lord
Sorrow, grief, bewailing: Lamentation.
These are all words to describe the bitter fruit of sin.
And it is the title of that woefull book of scripture: Lamentations:
(Perhaps fitting that we come to a book lamenting sins captivity so close to when so many will begin school)
TITLE:
A. Hebrew: The title to the book in Hebrew is hkya (‘Ekah).
This is the Hebrew term for “How,” “Alas,” or “Oh” that appears as the first word in the Hebrew text in 1:1; 2:1; 4:1.
This word was commonly used in Israelite funeral dirges (cf.
; )1
B. Greek: The title to the book in Greek is QRHNOI (Threnos) meaning “lament.”
C. Latin: The title to the book in the Latin Vulgate was a transliteration for the title “lament” (Threni) and was subtitled Id est Lamentationes Jeremiae Prophatae which became the basis for our English title “Lamentations.”
The date of this book would be around 586B.C. and after.
It is just after the fall of Jerusalem, at the time of Jeremiah, which many believe wrote Lamentations.
Lamentations is a collection of songs or poems, each chapter making up one with a total of 5.
And each poem following an accrostic type pattern.
PURPOSE:
There are a few purposes of Lamentations that are brought before us:
To provide emotional insight as a postscript to the book of Jeremiah and to express grief over the fall of Jerusalem because of her sin
To expres grief over the fall of Jerusalem because of her sin
To remind us the readers that “sin inspite of all of its allurement and excitement carries with it heavy weights of sorrow, grief, misery, bitterness and pain.”
To “offer reproof, instruction, and hope” to the survivors of fallen Jerusalem and to “chasten Israel that they recognize the righteousness of God’s dealings with them, and that in a spirit of repentance the cast themselves once again upon His mercy.”
KEY WORDS:
There are three keywords that help us to see what Israel is to learn as well as what we must learn from this book.
The first word is that which creates the need for the second two.
It is the causentory word that brings a need for healing.
The second is that which begins a road to healing as well as that which can stand as a major fork in the road.
The third is that which brings healing.
SIN - To do what commands you not to do or to not do what God commands you to do.
(The sin of commission & commission).
It is to transgress against the Lord & His commands.
LAMENT - Sorrow, grief, bewailing.
Grieving such as that which is done at a funeral.
REPENT - To feel and to express pain, sorrow, or regret.
To remember with sorrow past actions and to change the mind in consequence of the past injury done by past conduct.
In context it is to recognize the captivity of sin and cast yourself at the mercy of another while lamenting your own previous actions, choices and decisions.
THOUGHTS:
Having given background of the entire book.
This morning I want to zero in on .
Lamentations three is where we see not a sinful nation grieving of sin, but the very servant of God lamenting and in utter despair.
I believe there is much to be gleaned from this on how God works.
(Let me also say this - though we are not looking at a sinful nation - we are seeing the circumstance which specific sin brings forth over all.)
The book of Lamentations sits as the elephant in the room.
It is that reality that nobody wants to admit to or even if we admit to it, we certainly don’t care to address it.
Yet, as you ought to be picking up from your reading of the scripture, within those very things that our flesh stands against, lay our very real hope great hope.
Sin births captivity - it is ugly - it is death.
If we are to be cured then lamenting must become us and repentance must be found by us.
Sin is wide spread, it’s circumstantial effects lay not only on the present sinner but also upon the righteous.
And yet God is still wonderfully just and perfectly in control.
In either case, whether the sinner in need of discipline or the righteous in a sinning community, the remedy is repentance - it is looking, turning, trusting in and obeying God.
Our struggle is learning how to lament and how to repent.
You are suffering, you are grieving, you are sorrowful - but where does that take you?
What are you grieving?
In lamenting there is some form of death.
We are effected by someone or something which emotionally is having that ill feeling effect of death upon us.
An expectation has been destroyed - a comfort lost - health wrecked - finances turned upside down - a child gone astray - a marriage in shambles - freedom lost - life lost - a friend or loved one gone....on and on it goes.
But what has caused the death, or rather, what has caused the emotions, the feelings of grief and despair?
This answer is where the confusion comes in.
I will give two answers:
Sin
God
Lamentations 2:16
SINNER: Look to God, but don’t blame God.
Seek God out - don’t run from God. Recognize your sin, the grief of your state, but don’t be bitter at God.
RIGHTEOUS: Look to God, but don’t blame God.
Recognize God as in full control, but don’t lack trust in his goodness, love and mercy.
Trust that His purpose in the calamity that is present is good for you.
Sinful man repent and righteous man cry out.
Some immediately find themselves guilty and cripple themselves in not releasing their burden of guilt to Christ.
They lament and lament but never seem to hear the mercy of God and get up and obey.
Others tell themselves that they are righteous and above God’s rod, and therefore set themselves at war with God and others when difficult times come.
Friends we are all in need of the discipline of God.
We are all in need of His sanctifying work to be upon us.
Through the course of discipline, and that heavy blanket of emotions that overwhelm us we must remember that God is reclaiming our hearts, transforming our minds and drawing our all in all back to Himself.
Thus, give God credit but don’t blame God
Through the seasons of lamenting and those long days of having that bitter sorrow for sin God is bringing us to the beginning of repentance and restoration which is then to be completed by turning to God in faith and obedience.
Hear the Word of the Lord church, does the Bible not say:
Question: Does this proverb speak of the sinning man, the righteous man or simply any man?
I would offer that it speaks of any man and if it is in particular then it is in instruction to the righteous man.
Indeed it is sandwiched between trusting in the Lord with all of your heart (v5), leaning not on your own understanding (v5), acknowledging God in all your ways, not being wise in your own eyes (v6), honoring God with your wealth (v9) and the blessing of the one who finds wisdom and understanding (13).
Right in the middle of all of that comes “do not despise the Lords discipline nor be weary of his reproof”
discipline - to chastise, cultivate, instruct, correct, improve
reproof - to convince of a fault or make manifest.
When God is improving you - don’t despise it!
Are you perfect in your understanding?
Are you beyond God in your wisdom?
Then seek to gain from God’s discipline.
Church, again hear the Word of the Lord:
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