Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Tone of specific sentences

Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
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Introduction
Good evening and welcome back!
It is good to see everyone out this fine Sunday night.
Tonight if you do not care turn in your Bibles to .
Tonight we are going to try and cover quite a bit of ground by covering this entire chapter which contains 49 verses.
And the reason I feel like the Lord has led us in this direction is because this whole chapter is really one big conversation that Jesus has with his disciples.
And what we are going to find is that Jesus is once again going to draw a comparison between how his disciples are supposed to be acting and how the Jews were actually conducting themselves.
In the fist part he is going to issue a warning about falling victim to the hypocrisy of the Jews.
Then he is going to move into what we call the “Seven Woes” which basically outline how the Jews are condemning themselves by their own behavior.
And then Jesus is going to call them out for what they truly are, a brood of snakes an vipers.
But before Jesus gets to any of this he actually is going to set the stage by posing a question to the Jews.
The end of chapter 22, records this question . . .
Matthew 22:
And when we get into tonights Scripture we are going to see why Jesus asked them this question.
But first, once they replied that the Christ, or the Messiah was the “Son of David,” Jesus tells them this . . .
Matthew 22:
And what Jesus is drawing out is their misunderstanding of the nature of the Messiah.
They were expecting a King or a military leader, simply a descendent of David to rise, take the throne, and lead them out of Roman bondage.
And they were too near-sighted to see that the bondage they were going to be delivered from was eternal bondage.
However, when Jesus posed this question to them, their reaction was . . .
And they couldn’t say anything because they knew that Jesus spoke the truth.
And now that their lack of knowledge and understanding was completely exposed, Jesus turns his attention to the disciples and the people, in order to clarify some real truths about the Pharisees and Sadducees and how we as His followers are really supposed to be acting.
Which brings us to our passage.
So, if you are able to stand, I’d invite you to stand with me.
Starting in , verse 1, Matthew writes . . .
Scripture Focus
Matthew 23:1-
Warning Against Hypocrisy (vs 1-12)
So, Jesus really leaves nothing much to the imagination here.
He has the Jews in a place where they cannot really question his understanding of the Scripture, or even his authority for that matter.
And Jesus has already called them on the carpet for several things and now he is going to turn to their overwhelming level of hypocrisy in how they conduct their religion—how they do church.
So, we need to pay careful attention here because it also can reveal some levels of hypocrisy in how we do “church” as well.
So, again Jesus starts out . . .
And this aspect of sitting in “Moses’ seat” is in reference to their position as the spiritual authority over the nation of Israel.
Remember Moses had a direct line of communication with God and these Pharisees and teachers of the law are supposed to have the same direct line of communication with God.
They were supposed to be so connected to God that . . .
So, first point is that their authority and supposed connection with God dictates that the people are supposed to listen to them and follow their direction.
However, the problem is that they do not practice what they preach.
In other words they are really good at telling others how to live their lives, but they don’t apply those same principles to their own lives.
And to take it a step further, the things that they are telling others to do and advising them on how to live are things that do not benefit the person, but rather the Pharisee.
They are basically exploiting people “in the name of the Lord.”
Lifting themselves up and lining their pockets at the expense of the people.
Their allowing the buying and selling at the temple is just one example.
And they got by with it because they claimed authority from God and claimed that “God told them it was okay.”
And it is the same thing we see play out many times in the modern church.
We have a group or a leader who convinces their people that they are closer to God than anyone else and that everything they say is directly from God and they demand the strictest loyalty.
It is their way or no way.
And this is very destructive and very dangerous.
And just to be honest, this can apply to any of us.
We should all practice what we preach.
How can we expect others to do what we are unwilling?
Jesus goes on to explain that . . .
They make good bosses but not good leaders.
And then he exposes the real reason for their (and our own) hypocrisy . . . .
Matthew 23:5
It’s all for show.
It’s all to be seen.
It’s all to make themselves look “big” and “important.”
There is no substance to them—no sincerity—it is all a bunch of talk.
Ever know anybody like this?
They talk a big game and everything that comes out of their mouth lifts them up and not God?
That’s what Jesus is talking about here.
And Jesus’ followers are not to act that way.
God did not call us to rule over people and lift ourselves up.
Matthew 23:8-
And if we are truly His follower—truly filled with the Holy Spirit . . .
Matthew 23:11-
But what about those who do not live this way.
Those who follow men and their own desires as opposed to God.
Jesus addresses them.
He says . . .
The Seven Woes (vs 13-32)
Snakes and Vipers (vs 33-39)
Do you think Jesus was making a point here?
He is doing nothing more than calling them out.
And he goes on as well . . .
Matthew 23:33-
But to his true disciples . . .
Matthew 23:39
Altar Call
And really the message for us tonight boils down to how we conduct ourselves.
Do we conduct ourselves like disciples?
Or, do we act like these Pharisees and teachers of the law?
Do we practice what we preach?
Do we obey Christ?
Do our actions and speech lift up God our ourselves?
What would others say if they were asked about us?
Are we Christians or are we hypocrites?
That’s what it boils down to.
And you know which you are, because God has revealed it to you.
But the real question is, if God has revealed hypocrisy in our life to you, are you willing to do something about it?
Are you willing to remedy that, to fix it?
Because revealing it to you is one thing—doing something to fix it is completely different.
What are you willing to do?
We are going to put on some music and I would like everyone to spend some time in prayer this morning.
Will you do that?
Will you allow God to speak to you tonight?
It is time to act, what will you do tonight?
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