Sermon Tone Analysis

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Anger
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What is Body-Life 101?
In recent years, churches have rediscovered what we are calling “body-life.”
This is a scriptural concept, though it does not define all that is involved in the ministry of the local church, since there are other pictures of the church besides that of the body.
Body-life refers to the ministry of each Christian to the others, just as the various members of the human body minister to one another to maintain health and life.
Family members must learn to minister to each other.
The older members teach the younger members (see Titus 2:3–5) and encourage them when they are in difficulty.
While ministering at a summer Bible conference, my wife and I met a lovely Christian couple who had nine children.
It was a delight to see how the older children helped the younger ones, and how the parents were relieved of minor tasks and able to enjoy their leisure time.
According to Ephesians 4:12, the spiritual leaders in the church are supposed to equip the members to do the work of the ministry.
In most churches, the members pay the leaders to do the work of the ministry; and the leaders cannot do it all.
Consequently, the work begins to weaken and die, and everybody blames the preacher.
Paul named some special family members who need personal help:
The Unruly:
This word means “careless, out of line.”
It was applied to a soldier who would not keep rank but insisted on marching his own way.
While the loving atmosphere of the family encourages individual development, there are some things we all must do in the same way.
If we do not have rules and standards in the family, we have chaos.
Paul dealt with this problem again when he wrote his second Epistle to the Thessalonians (2 Thes.
3:6, 11), so apparently this first admonition did not impress them.
Rules and traditions in a family must never be so overemphasized that creativity is stifled.
As a parent, it is a joy to see each child blossom out with his or her own personality, talents, and ambitions.
But it is a sorrow to see a child rebel against the rules, abandon the traditions and standards, and think that this kind of lifestyle shows freedom and maturity.
This kind of attitude in the church family causes arguments and splits.
The Feebleminded:
This term has nothing to do with mentality.
The literal translation of the Greek word is “little-souled, fainthearted.”
These are the quitters in the church family.
They always look on the dark side of things and give up when the going is tough.
In families where there are three or more children, usually one of them is a quitter.
Every church family has its share of quitters too.
These people need to be encouraged, which is the meaning of the word translated “comfort” in the King James Version.
It is also found in 1 Thessalonians 2:11.
The Greek word is made up of two words: para, near; and muthos, speech.
Instead of scolding the fainthearted from a distance, we must get close to them and speak tenderly.
We must teach the “little-souled” that the trials of life will help to enlarge them and make them stronger in the faith.
The Weak:
“Hold fast to the weak!” is the literal translation.
“Don’t let them fall!”
But who are these weak believers?
Certainly, Paul did not mean people who were weak physically, since he was dealing with the spiritual ministry in the church.
No, he was referring to those who were “weak in the faith” and had not grown strong in the Lord (Rom.
14:1–15:3).
Usually, the weak Christians were afraid of their liberty in Christ.
They lived by rules and regulations.
In the Roman assemblies, the weak Christians would not eat meat, and they held to the Jewish system of holy days.
They were severe in their judgment of the mature saints who enjoyed all foods and all days.
We have the strong and the weak in our church families today, just as in our natural families we have children who mature faster than others.
How should we handle them?
With patient, reassuring love.
It is unfair and unwise to compare one child with another, for each one matures in his own time and his own way.
We must “take hold” of these weaker believers and help them stand and walk in the Lord.
This kind of personal ministry is not easy, and so Paul added some wise counsel to encourage us.
Be Patient:
It takes patience to raise a family.
That weaker member who demands much help may one day be a choice leader, so never give up.
A pastor friend and I were chatting after I had spoken at a service in his church, when a red-headed boy about ten years old came running past us, heading up the center aisle.
“Have you ever noticed,” remarked my friend, “that the biggest scamps in the Sunday School usually turn out to be pastors or missionaries?”
Patience!
Watch Your Motives:
Often as we minister to others, they reject us and even oppose us.
Often they show no appreciation.
But we should always serve in love, and be ready to forgive.
“Never pay back evil for evil to anyone.
Respect what is right in the sight of all men.
If possible, so far as it depends on you, be at peace with all men.
Never take your own revenge, beloved, but leave room for the wrath of God, for it is written, ‘Vengeance is Mine, I will repay, says the Lord.
But if your enemy is hungry, feed him, and if he is thirsty, give him a drink; for in so doing you will heap burning coals upon his head.’
Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good” (Rom.
12:17–21, NASB).
If your motive is a desire for appreciation and praise, you may be disappointed.
If your motive is “ourselves your servants for Jesus’ sake” (2 Cor.
4:5), you will never be disappointed.
Be Joyful:
Joy takes the burden out of service.
“The joy of the Lord is your strength” (Neh.
8:10).
God loves a cheerful servant as well as a cheerful giver.
Every church family has its Doubting Thomas or its Gloomy Gus.
To see them and listen to them is like witnessing an autopsy, or diving into a cold lake on a winter’s day.
God wants His family to be happy, and that means that each member must contribute to the joy.
The four spiritual characteristics Paul mentioned are part of the fruit of the Spirit named in Galatians 5:22—love (1 Thes.
5:13), joy (1 Thes.
5:16), peace (1 Thes.
5:13), and long-suffering (1 Thes.
5:14).
We cannot manufacture these spiritual qualities; they only come as we yield to the Spirit and permit Him to control us.
Family partnership is vital to the health and growth of the church.
Are you bearing your share of the burdens, or are you merely a spectator who watches the others do the job?
Are you bearing your share of the burdens, or are you merely a spectator who watches the others do the job?
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