Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Anger
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Lord, Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of all our hearts be acceptable to you, O Lord, my rock and my redeemer - Amen
 
When I was I kid we played a lot of games after school.
We played a bit of baseball
                        A lot of touch football
                                    But mostly we played a lot of road hockey
When we played road hockey, would often pretended we were our favorite NHL stars
            I was generally one of three people
                        I was Borja Salming if I was on defense
                                    Darrel Sittler on offense
                                                And if I came up with a last minute dramatic glove save
                                                            I was Mike Palmater in net
As a kid dreaming of playing in the NHL (the road hockey - NHL) we knew that we were just pretending
 
That notion of pretending or imagining yourself in another’s shoes, it never really leaves you
            I think that it is a part of the human condition to imagine ourselves - or relate         ourselves to another
                        That instinct of empathy is what draws us to books, or movies or TV,                                             especially the current trend of reality TV
                                                We imagine what we might do if we were in their shoes
 
Well as a new curate, fresh out of seminary - you might guess where my focus might be
            Archdeacon Michael
                        - well a little
                                    But actually in the characters in the bible
                                                And particularly the disciples
                                                            The first followers of Jesus
            You might have been thinking that I was going to say Jesus
                        Certainly in Jesus we have God incarnate
                                    walking as one of us
                                                to *relate* to us
                                                            and be a *model* for us
            But to put myself in His shoes is expecting too much of me
 
No, the person that I most relate to is - Peter
            The lead disciple
                        I say the lead disciple for a few reasons
                                    There are those that believe that the other disciples were still boys
                                                While Peter was the only adult in the group
                        Rabbis (teachers) took on disciples (followers - students) as the final                                   stage in their education, after they had done three previous stages
                                    and in order that the Rabbi’s teachings would continue on
            It was the practice of the Rabbi to have the eldest or the brightest to be first to      speak - the one to respond on behalf of the group
                        Peter is the disciple that we hear from the most in the Gospels
Peter and Jesus were the only ones that were considering the need to pay the temple tax
            A duty of adults
Peter had a wife and was the main provider for his extended family
            It was Peter’s mother in law that was healed
                        and lived together with Peter who was the provider for the whole family
Finally Peter had his own business - he was not merely a fisherman but owned *two* boats a somewhat wealthy and responsible role of the working class people of the time
 
But Peter’s role as the lead disciple is not the reason that I relate most to him
            No, it is Peter’s humanity
                        Peter’s ability to get it right *and* to get it wrong
            In Peter we see the ‘triumphs of Faith’ and ‘failures of human weakness’
 
In today’s gospel we have the most dramatic examples possible from the mouth of Peter
           
Mark’s Gospel today takes a break from the stories of Jesus power or proofs of who Jesus is
            From the feeding of the 5000, and the 4000, Jesus walking on Water,
            To Jesus Healing the Sick in Gennesaret, the Syrophoenician Woman’s daughter, a            Deaf Man, a Blind Man
Mark takes a break from all of that to share with us the mystery of Jesus
            The identity of Jesus
 
It starts out innocently enough
            Jesus asks the disciples who THE PEOPLE say Jesus is
                        */they/*/ (/the disciples/) answered him, “John the Baptist; and others, Elijah;                             and still others, one of the prophets.”/
Notice that for a people where most don’t believe in the                                                       resurrection of the dead - they are all dead
            *Then* Jesus asks the big question to the disciples - the people that know him the best
                        And if this were a Hollywood movie
-          the surrounding lights would dim                                    
-          and the camera would move from a wide shot to a close up
-          to catch the expression on their faces
-          the music would rise to a crescendo 
 
*/“But who do you say that I am?”/*
And it is Peter that responds
            responds in faith
                        as the spokesperson for the group - maybe
                                    but I think speaking out of his own heart
                                                out of his own experiences
                                                            out of his own - faith
 
                        */Peter answered him, “You are the Messiah.”/*
*/ /*
The one that Jews have been waiting for - the focus of scriptures
            The Messiah
 
Peter has got it right - in faith - he answered
 
This is the moment *that* if we relate to Peter - as I do - this is the triumphal moment - the highlight of your life
            And Matthew records it much more generously
 
/Jesus answered him, “Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah!
For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father in heaven.
18 And I tell you, you *are* Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it.
19 I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven/
 
Imagine how you might have felt when the Messiah - the hope of the nation for generations and generations - God in the flesh - Says *that *to you
 
But the story continues…
 
/Then Jesus began to teach them that the Son of Man must undergo great suffering, and be rejected by the elders, the chief priests, and the scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise again.
32 He said all this quite openly.
And Peter took him aside and began to rebuke him./
Again if we were watching a movie - I think this is the moment where we would all groan
            Groan at the huge mistake that Peter has just made
                        He has gone from declaring Jesus to be the Messiah - to rebuking Him
                                    In three short verses
                                                Rebuked *the Messiah* for the message that he is teaching
 
/ 33 But turning and looking at his disciples, Jesus rebuked Peter and said, “Get behind me, Satan!
For you are setting your mind not on divine things but on human things.”/
Peter moved from - the Rock on which the church is to be built - to Satan
            Moved there because he didn’t like the message of Jesus
                        He set his mind on human things
And what was the message of Jesus that Peter had the nerve rebuke
            It is tough message - it is the cost of discipleship
Jesus was speaking of suffering
            This was not the posterity gospel that has become popular in some Christian circles            today
                        The notion that all will be well if you just turn your life over to Christ
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