Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Anger
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Anger
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Keith Bushnell
Welcome and thank you those present and Trinity Church
Music by Theron Smith
“So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God.
I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.” (Isa 41:10 NIVUS)
 
“"Do not let your hearts be troubled.
Trust in God; trust also in me.
In my Father’s house are many rooms; if it were not so, I would have told you.
I am going there to prepare a place for you.
And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come back and take you to be with me that you also may be where I am.”
 
“You know the way to the place where I am going."
Thomas said to him, "Lord, we don’t know where you are going, so how can we know the way?" Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life.
No one comes to the Father except through me.” (Joh 14:1-6 NIVUS)
 
| Prayer Keith Elno Bushnell |
| Keith Elno Bushnell Lansing Born January 23, 1927, in Charlotte; died October 7, 2008, in Lansing, MI, at the age of 81.
Keith graduated from Lansing Eastern High School in 1944 and M.S.U. in 1949.
He was a veteran of the U.S. Navy and U.S. Navy Reserves, retiring as a Commander after 35 years of service.
Keith also retired from MDOT in 1989, as Director of Design, after 39 years of service.
He was a member of the First United Brethren Church for 55 years, where he taught Sunday school, a member of Gideon's and ITE, International Transportation Engineers, and enjoyed traveling.
Keith was preceded in death by his parents, Elno and Letha (Snore) Bushnell.
Surviving are his wife of 61 years, Darlene; daughter, Sandra (Kenneth) Mayes of Carson City, MI; sons, Terry (Ellen) Bushnell of Lansing, Trent (Patsy) Bushnell of Grand Ledge, and Brian (Pamela) Bushnell of Lansing; 11 grandchildren; 12 great-grandchildren; and brother, Carl (Betty) Bushnell of Lansing.
Funeral services will be held Friday, October 10, at 11:00 a.m. at Trinity Church, 3355 Dunckel Rd., Lansing, with the Rev. Scott Hergert, of First United Brethren Church, Lansing, officiating.
Interment will follow in Evergreen Cemetery, Lansing.
The family will receive friends at the Gorsline-Runciman Funeral Homes, 900 E. Michigan Ave., Lansing, on Thursday from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. and at the church on Friday 1-hour prior to the service.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that contributions be made to Gideon's International, Lansing South Camp, P.O.
Box 842, Holt, MI 48842; YFC - Youth For Christ, P.O.
Box 80555, Lansing, MI 48908; or to the First United Brethren Church, 1330 E. Grand River Ave., Lansing, MI 48906, in memory of Keith Bushnell.
|
 
Memories
Philippians 4:4-10
Every person can be contented in their life if they will master the keys Paul speaks of.
Introduction: 
                I have chosen this passage because I think of Keith as one of the most contented people I have ver known.
He did not require the best things in the world.
He was happy with things that lasted.
He was kind of like the writer of this passage.
Even when things in life were not going well he did not complain.
He really seemed to exemplify the idea of someone being content.
In this passage the author gives us some keys to staying content.
Key I.  Rejoice
A.      One of the first thing the author tells us is to rejoice.
He even repeats himself, he says, “Rejoice in the Lord always, I will say it again rejoice.”
In the Bible times when something was repeated it was done so the reader would take extra notice of that.
It probably seems a little strange that we would be talking about rejoicing at a funeral, but I believe this was something that Keith had learned and he lived by this.
For the person who has put their faith in Jesus Christ, there is always reason to rejoice.
No matter how ugly things might get in our world, there is reason to rejoice.
B.
Perhaps it would help you to get your mind around this if your realized that the author was writing from a Roman prison, expecting to be executed.
He was a man who had been beaten many times.
He had spent much time in prison.
He was a man who was familiar with suffering.
Yet he was able to communicate to his readers the importance of rejoicing.
He knew that no matter how bad things were in his life Jesus Christ endured more.
He also knew that eternity with Christ would cause all of the bad to disappear.
The good that is coming is so much greater than the bad this is right now.
C.
Everyone has times in their life when they feel that things have gotten really bad, and maybe even felt like things could not get any worse.
That ability to rejoice at those times forces us to take our eyes off from our circumstances and causes us to look at both the suffering that Jesus endured for us, and the great future we have in Jesus Christ.
I am confident that keith was so sure of this that he was a man who could rejoice in the Lord always.
No matter how bad his circumstances were.
No matter was obstacles he faced he could rejoice.
Keith’s cancer treatments and his other ailments were nothing compared to what layed ahead for him.
He could rejoice always.
Key II.
Know God is watching
A.      Another secret of contentment is knowing that God is always with you.
The author actually says, “Let your gentleness be evident to all.
The Lord is near.”
The author knew that God is everywhere all of the time.
Even as he was sitting in that Roman prison he knew that God was with him.
He knew that when he was floating with the debris from a ship wreck God was with him.
He knew that when he was being flogged, God was with Him.
He knew that in every situation he faced God was with Him.
He was a man who was very aware of God’s presence.
God was with him when things were going well and when they were going very bad also.
B.
In the short time that I knew Keith I did not see him when he was acting like God was not near.
Keith had an abrasiveness about him that could be construed as a lack of gentleness.
Deep down I believe that he was a very gentle person.
He was a man who cared about what was happening in the world.
He had a concern for people in the world who don’t know Jesus Christ as Lord and savior.
C.
As a Christian it would be troubling for me to know that God is always with me, if I was doing something I was not supposed to be doing.
I think it would also bother me if I was not a Christian and I knew God was with me.
God’s presence would make me want to be on the right team and living within God’s plans.
Key III.
Give your worries to God
A.      God has given us a mechanism by which we can communicate with him.
That mechanism is prayer.
We can speak to God at any time and in any place.
We are even encouraged to do that.
In the passage I have chosen the author says, “in everything. . .
present your requests to God.”
We can give God our requests, our concerns and our needs.
The describing words he uses in that passage are don’t be anxious, and with thanksgiving.
We can give our requests to God no matter what our situation or difficulty.
B.      Typically when you give someone something, you don’t take it back.
You give whatever you are giving and you don’t ask for it back.
Christians need to learn to give their concerns to God and not take them back.
Some people have mastered the ability to give their requests to God and leave them there.
Keith left me with the impression that he was someone who was able to do that.
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