Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Anger
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Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
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Intro: This week we have read through the account of Elijah and Elisha.
There should be plenty for your groups to discuss tonight as we look at Mount Carmel, Elijah in the desert, and even Elisha asking for a double portion of Elijah’s spirit.
I think you are going to have some really good discussion tonight.
The person who really jumped out at me through my reading this past week was Ahab.
You know Ahab, he is married to Jezebel, he refers to Elijah as his adversary, and he has done more evil than any other king before him.
Our main passage is .
To catch you up on Ahab to this point, Scripture tells us that Ahab followed the ways of Jeroboam in idol worship and it that were not enough, he even marries Jezebel, the daughter of the king of Sidonians and a Baal worshipper.
- He did more to anger the Lord than all the kings before him.
Then Ahab is met by Elijah.
The prophet of the Lord.
Ahab even refers to Elijah as his adversary.
Ahab tells Elijah
All of this happens before God starts to work on Ahab’s heart.
You see Elijah is about to call out the prophets of Baal on Mount Carmel and the power of God is going to shine in the land.
God is going to end the famine in the land.
Further, God is about to give Ben-Hadad, the king of Aram into the hands of Ahab.
Ahab fights Ben-Hadad again, but this time Ben-Hadad gets tricky and makes a treaty with Ahab, but God told Ahab to take them out.
He didn’t and God sends word to Ahab that his life will be traded for the one he allowed to get away.
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That brings us to what I want to focus on today:
Greed always leads to pain.
Well Ahab found a vineyard close to the palace that he wanted.
The problem is that it belonged to a guy named Naboth.
So he goes home and skips dinner and is having a really bad pity party.
Then his wife Jezebel comes in and tells him to exercise his royal power over Naboth and take his vineyard by force.
THey devise a plan that included inviting Naboth to the palace for dinner and having some wicked men make accusations against Naboth, which ultimately gets him stoned.
Ahab found a vineyard close to the palace that he wanted.
The problem is that it belonged to a guy named Naboth.
So he goes home and skips dinner and is having a really bad pity party.
Ahab wanted this vineyard so bad that he was coveting it.
His greed overcame him.
Then his wife Jezebel comes in and tells him to exercise his royal power over Naboth and take his vineyard by force.
They devise a plan that included inviting Naboth to the palace for dinner and having some wicked men make accusations against Naboth, which ultimately gets him stoned.
Is any of this starting to sound familiar to you? Ahab himself didn’t actually kill Naboth, but he was responsible for it.
He had access to many vineyards, but he wanted Naboth’s.
What Ahab does here is just like what David did with Bathsheba, especially if you look at it through the prophet Nathan’s description of it.
Then Ahab’s best friend Elijah comes back into the picture.
1 Kings 21:20-
These are pretty harsh words from God, but that doesn’t surprise us.
Ahab has been a pretty bad guy this whole time.
Verse 25 even repeats the first verse we looked at tonight - Still, there was no one like Ahab who devoted himself to do what is evil in the sight of the Lord.
Don’t miss this.
Ahab is the worst human being who has ever existed (at this point).
You are probably rooting for him to die at this point, but…
Ahab humbled himself.
He repented.
He understood the weight of his decisions and actions.
Let’s look at what God has to say about it.
God relents from his anger because of Ahab’s repentant heart.
You know what, he does the same thing for us.
No matter where you are on your spiritual journey, humble yourself.
Repent.
Seek the Lord’s Will first
humble yourself.
Repent.
God is faithful to forgive us.
I want you to think about someone that you don’t like.
They are mean, they do things that make you want to talk bad about them, someone you know.
Start to see them as someone who can be saved and redeemed by the grace and mercy of Jesus Christ.
That person may even be saved.
If they are, pray for them, that God would bring them back to Himself.
They may be lost.
Pray for their salvation.
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