Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

This automated analysis scores the text on the likely presence of emotional, language, and social tones. There are no right or wrong scores; this is just an indication of tones readers or listeners may pick up from the text.
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Tone of specific sentences

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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
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Social Tendencies
Openness
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Anger
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*When God Doesn’t Seem To Answer**!*
 
*Introduction*:
-          The night was dark and foggy.
A man walked in the darkness from his house to the cobble-stone street, his step determined and relentless, but his face – had anyone been able to see it in the dark – was tear-stained and weary.
-          As he reached the street, he peered both ways, looking for the lantern of a horse-drawn, London cap.
-          The man muttered:  “Nothing!
Am I too late?
But no!
I must end all tonight!
And the river it must be!” 
-          Then, in the distance, he saw a hazy light, slowly enlarging.
-          Almost whispering, the said bitterly:  “God, you provided me no support, but here you provide the cab to take me to my death!”
-          “Where to?” asked the cabbie.
“London Bridge,” the man replied.
“A cold night it is, sir – what sort of business have you at the bridge at this hour?”
But the man said nothing.
-          The cabbie ended his attempt at conversation, and set off toward that well-known destination.
But the fog became thicker and thicker, so that the cabbie could not even see the nose of his horse.
-          What should have been a 20 minute ride lasted an hour, and still there was no sign of the river or the old bridge.
-          The cabbie peered into the fog, desperately looking for some familiar sign.
Suddenly the fog lifted.
The passenger, startled from his stare looked to his right and saw, to his amazement, his own home.
-          The cab, lost in the fog, had circled back to the very place he began the journey.
-          “My God!
You have answered me!”
-          Later that night, this man, William Cowper (Cooper), one of the greatest of England’s 18th century poets, meditated on *Psalm 77* *Read*
-          That same night, William Cowper penned this great poem, “/Light Shining out of Darkness/” *Read*
-          This poem has actually been written into a Hymn that I am not familiar with and it isn’t in our Hymn book but it is called “His Way” taken from this poem and Isa 55:9 "So are my ways higher than your ways.”
* But here in Psalm 77 we find a man who has called out to the Lord, but doesn’t seem to be getting an answer.
* Have you been in that situation?
* Are you in that situation right now?
* You have called out to the Lord, and you remember that, yes, in the past He has always answered you, but now there seems to be no response.
* The sky seems to be solid, like brass, and God is silent, as far as you can hear.
* If so this Psalm is for you.
Actually this Psalm is for Every Christian, because I believe that all of us go through such times in our lives.
* We are going to look at Four parts of this Psalm tonight.
* The Cry, The Questions, The Resolve, But God!
 
 
*Outline*:
I         *The Cry* (*Vs.
1-6a*)
A      The Bibles gives us all aspects of life.
It does not hide the troubles that are a part of life.
B       This Psalm is telling us of a man who is in deep trouble.
C       We don’t know why.
D      We can see that it is clearly a personal issue and not a national issue.
E       The psalmist is seeking the Lord in the midst of his trials.
F        And yet, as he calls out to God and gets no answer, the Psalmist says his soul refuses to be comforted.
(Vs.
2)
G      He is caught up in the middle of his trouble, and he expressed his belief in God through his crying out, but his soul is refusing to be comforted.
H      The thought of God brings no relief to him.
He moans when thinking of God.
I         We get a clue as to why this is by looking at Vs. 5-6
J         He says that he considered the days of old, and remember the past, recalling his “song in the night.”
(Vs.
6)
K       This sounds like in the past he was in a tough time and cried out to God and God lifted him up out of the trouble and gave him a song and brought Joy and Peace back into his life.
L       But that remembrance now brings pain rather than comfort, because his burden is NOT lifted this time, he isn’t receiving any comfort from God this time.
M     This leads to the Psalmist’s second problem.
N      His first problem is his day of trouble – the grief.
O      But his second and really more important problem is that he begins to question God’s love and care.
P        This time of grief in itself is no worse than other days he has faced.
But this time, when he calls out to God he gets “No” sense of his presence.
Q      Which leads to his Questions
II      *The Questions* (*Vs.
6b-10*)
A      He brings out these questions concerning God.
B       These are logical questions given his circumstances.
·         “In the past,” he says, “God answered my cries.
He gave me a song in the night.
But today, what do I get?
I hear nothing from him.
Has God Changed?”
C       All of these questions in these verses are interesting, because in a sense they answer themselves.
D      Look at the first half of Vs 8 “Has His unfailing love vanished forever?”
1        The phrase “Unfailing Love” in the Hebrew is just one word.
A word that implies the whole covenant relationship between Israel and God
2        Translated in different ways:  loving-kindness, faithful love, steadfast love, mercy, but the idea behind it is that God has made a promise to these people.
3        God has made a promise that he will always be there for them, day after day and century after century, working out history to fulfill the promises he has made to them.
4        All of this is included in this word “Unfailing Love.”
5        So the Psalmist is asking, “Has this covenant love come to an end?
Has this unfailing love failed?
Is God’s Word no longer valid?
Are God’s promises no longer valid?
Has the flow of his mercy stopped?”
E       Remember that for the Psalmist there is nothing in his present circumstances that gives evidence of God’s love.
F        So he is faced with the a choice: 
1        He has believed God in the past, when God answered him.
Now he has to ask
2        “Do I believe God when I don’t hear an answer?”
3        In the past have I believed God because of his blessings?
Now, do I simply believe God regardless of whether he is blessing me or not?
G      Recall the Story of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego:
1        These three young men (Probably Teens)
2        Did not bow down to the image and the king ordered them to bow down and gave them one last chance, “bow down or be thrown into the Fiery Furnace!”  “What God can deliver you out of my hand?”
3        God had been with them in the past and blessed them with wisdom and stature
4        But now God didn’t seem to be there stop this nonsense.
5        They were faced with a choice:  “Believe God regardless of our circumstances, or did we believe in the past only because of his answers?”
6        How did they respond?
They answer the most powerful man in the world with these words:  “Our God is able to deliver us; but even if he does not, let it be known that we are not going to serve your gods.”
7        They chose to believe God regardless of their circumstances.
8        That is what the Psalmist is faced with and that is what we are often faced with.
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