Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Tone of specific sentences

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Anger
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Anger
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In the seminary curriculum, courses on homiletics cover the preparation and delivery of sermons.
Among other things, students in this class learn to learn to keep the needs of their intended audience in view when writing sermons.
Preaching to a congregation of new converts, for example, would require a much simpler presentation than preaching to a gathering of experienced pastors and elders.
I mention this today because I wrote this morning’s sermon with a very specific audience in mind.
My audience is the young people in our congregation, particularly those between the ages of twelve and twenty-five, for whom the temptations of the world are especially attractive and, at times, seemingly overwhelming.
The transition from childhood to adulthood is hard enough by itself, but in a day such as ours, when fleshly lusts appear out of control, the challenge is even greater.
This morning’s text speaks to this.
So, young people, please pay attention!
Of course, this does not mean that the rest of you can go to sleep.
Hopefully, those of greater Christian maturity have already begun to conquer the pleasures of sin, but no matter how mature your faith may be you will never achieve perfection as long as you live in this world.
Peter’s words are not limited to young people.
For that matter, he didn’t even mention young people as a distinct group.
Rather, he addressed his exhortation to everyone who professes faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.
Each one of you must be on guard against the deadly warfare that seeks the destruction of your soul.
!
Beloved Strangers and Pilgrims
Peter exhortation begins with an appeal to his readers in verse 11 as /dearly beloved/ (ἀγαπητοί).
He expressed his love for the church of Jesus Christ to encourage you toward greater progress.
But his address is really more than just an expression of love.
It occurs twice in I Peter (here and 4:12) and four times in II Peter 3 (vv.
1, 8, 14 and 17), and in each instance it precedes an exhortation for you, as the people of God, to be extremely careful in your theology and circumspect in your walk.
In fact, his second epistle ends like this: /Ye therefore, beloved, seeing ye know these things before, beware lest ye also, being led away with the error of the wicked, fall from your own stedfastness.
But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
To him be glory both now and for ever/ (II Pet.
3:17–18).
It seems that Peter addressed his readers as /beloved/ when he got down to the nuts and bolts of applying the Christian faith to the lives of believers.
It’s as though this word introduces a very personal message.
At the very least, it shows the apostle’s concern for the church’s growth.
We see this in our text, too.
Not only did Peter identify his readers as /beloved/, but he went on to beseech them as strangers and pilgrims.
Here Peter’s concern comes across both in the verb /beseech/ and in the description of his readers as /strangers and pilgrims/.
The word /beseech/ is a very powerful word.
Even in English it has the idea of begging and imploring.
The Greek word (παρακαλῶ) literally means to call to one’s side.
One person calls another person to his side to comfort him, to exhort him or to instruct him.
In fact, this verb has such a wide range of meanings that the KJV uses no less than ten distinct English verbs to translate it.
The translation in any given instance depends, of course, on the context.
However it’s translated, it highlights the earnestness of the effort.
You call someone to your side, beseech him, comfort him or exhort him because you desire his improvement in one way or another.
And so it was with Peter.
He sought the good of those to whom he wrote.
Further, Peter described his readers as /strangers and pilgrims/.
With this he reminded his readers of their relationship to the world.
What exactly is that relationship?
Peter says that we’re not at home.
Although we live in the world, we’re really here as non-citizens or resident aliens.
We’re foreigners, whose true and proper home is heaven.
Just as the patriarchs who looked for a heavenly city, whose builder and maker is God (Heb.11:8ff.),
Philippians 3:20 says that /our conversation is in heaven; from whence also we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ/.
In this verse, the word conversation refers to a commonwealth, the administration of a commonwealth, or, more specifically, citizenship in a commonwealth.
Our word /politics/ comes from the word translated /conversation/ (τὸ πολίτευμα) in this verse.
We are citizens of heaven.
Peter explained this in even greater detail in the verses immediately preceding our text.
In verse 4, he said that believers come to the living stone, who was rejected by men, but precious to God.
This, of course, is an allusion to Psalm 118, which predicted the death and resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ.
And as we come to this living stone, according to verse 5, we are made living stones ourselves.
In Christ we are privileged to be part of /an holy priesthood/ and /to offer up spiritual sacrifices/.
And in verses 9 and 10 Peter added even more.
We are nothing less than God’s people — chosen by God, set apart by God, appointed by God to serve him.
We are, as Peter wrote, /a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiar people; that ye should shew forth the praises of him who hath called you out of darkness into his marvellous light: which in time past were not a people, but are now the people of God: which had not obtained mercy, but now have obtained mercy/.
You see, this is what you are, if you have embraced Christ’s sacrifice and death by faith.
This incredibly privileged status is yours.
As one commentator wrote, you must, therefore, count yourselves as being gloriously different than those among whom you live.
You must look beyond the scatter­edness and suffering of your lives and see yourselves as God’s chosen vessels.
And then you have to ask yourselves, What should be my attitude and response to this mighty outpouring of God’s favor?
!
Fighting the War against the Soul
According to Peter, your first response to God’s grace should be to /abstain from fleshly lusts, which war against the soul/.
In other words, withdrawing from the world is not an option.
You are called upon to engage in holy warfare — a warfare that begins with conquering your sinful desires.
In other words, you must demonstrate your redeemed status by the distinctiveness of your life.
Your life should not look like the life of a worldling.
The fleshly lusts that Peter had in mind are not simply what we might call sensual sins, like fornication or pornography.
Rather, they include all the sins of the flesh that Paul lists, for example, in Galatians 5, viz., adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lewdness, idolatry, sorcery, hatred, contentions, jealousies, outbursts of wrath, selfish ambitions, dissensions, heresies, envy, murders, drunkenness, revelries, and the like (vv.
19–21 NKJV).
In short, we can say that fleshly lusts include anything that pleases you and displeases God.
Moreover, you have to understand that such things are not just dangerous — they’re deadly!
Peter says that they /war against your soul/.
Rush Limbaugh is fond of saying that the whole idea behind war is to kill people and break things.
No one can succeed in war without doing both.
Satan, your adversary and accuser, can be satisfied with nothing less.
Later in this same book, Peter says that /your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour/ (ch.
5:8).
Beloved, if your faith is not in the finished work of Christ, you will be consumed.
You will end up as a casualty in this war, unless you turn to the Lord Jesus in repentance and humility.
There can be no other outcome.
After listing the works of the flesh, Paul reminded us of this very sobering fact: /of the which I tell you before, as I have also told you in time past, that they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God/ (Gal.
5:21).
But even true believers can be seriously wounded in the battle.
When we give in to fleshly lusts, even for a short time, we allow these lusts to disrupt our fellowship with God, which often makes us doubt the sincerity of our faith as well.
Your responsibility, then, as a chosen generation and royal priesthood, i.e., those whom the gospel addresses as /dearly beloved/, is to abstain from these lusts.
Stay away from them as far as you can! Don’t go anywhere near them!
Unfortunately, Peter had to say this because it’s the opposite of how we sometimes deal with temptation.
Rather than running from it, we snuggle up to it.
We get as close to it as we can, while convincing ourselves that we would never actually do it.
Yes, we like to save just a small part of our affections for the things that tickle our desires, even though we know God hates them.
Now, let’s look at a few things.
As I go through this list, I challenge everyone here, especially the young people, to examine your hearts.
Ask yourself if you are guilty of cherishing any flesh lust in these areas: (1) Dress.
Is your clothing modest or intentionally provocative?
Are you trying to draw attention to your physical characteristics, or would you rather people see the hidden beauty of the heart?
(2) Books, television and the movies.
Do you read books and watch shows that are wholesome and not profane, or do you prefer to have your desires aroused by steamy scenes and exposed skin?
Is God’s name honored or abused?
(3) Music.
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