Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Lord in your mercy you provide to us new birth into the hope of the resurrection of Jesus Christ – May we offer our thoughts, words and deeds in thanksgiving and in honour of the faith that you have in us.
Amen
 
/“An inheritance that is …/
/            Imperishable/
/                        Undefiled/
/                                    Unfading/
/                                                Kept in Heaven for you”/
 
Today is All Souls day
And those God inspired words of Peter from our epistle lesson today lay out for me the role of the Souls that have gone before us…
            And ultimately the task that is set out for us
 
 
We live in this western society that holds hard and fast to the notion of - /competition/
            And to it’s companion ideal of /“what have you done for me lately/”
                        We can easily be /defined/ by our latest output
By the tasks that are most immediately behind us and how well we did in achieving them
 
We have just finished in this country a federal election
One, which was executed well by the returning government – spending millions with the sole goal of getting a slightly stronger minority government but in the process weakening their opponent
            The conservatives were the winners
                        And that is what we will remember – that is what grabs our attention
We look to the leader of the Liberals Stephan Dion, as the loser
and “what he has done lately” as insufficient and well – He needs to go
                        Never mind all the good and the ideals that he stood for over his career
                                    No – loser – time to go
 
And tomorrow is the final day of uncertainty to our neighbours in the south
            They will elect a new winner and set the fate of the loser forever
                        Rarely does a losing presidential hopeful run again
                                    It has been said that ‘History is always written by the winners’
 
Many, might point to the natural world and say that is merely the design of creation
            The theory of evolution is based on the strong surviving for the good of the species
That the weaker thans are to be a brief moment in history often not even making a mark on history
 
Before I was called into ordained ministry
            I was worked in various sales jobs, spending most of my time in the IT industry
For most of my business career, in the eyes of my employers, I was lead to believe, that it was not about doing my best, but about the bottom line
Each month, our sales numbers were closely monitored
At the beginning of the month was the message to work hard to start the month off strong,
As the month progressed – mine and the others were tracked against the forecasts, percentages closely scrutinized
And by the end of the month there was always the underlined message that sales were all that mattered and the fear that we were only a couple of bad months away from unemployment
I believe that many of you today can relate to that type of environment – whether it be at work – school or whatever you are involved with
 
It is there in most of the sports we do
            Now I understand that the very nature of sport is competition
But it could be so much more than reduced to the lowest common denominator
When I come back from playing squash – no one has ever asked me if I:
·         effectively dealt with my stress
·         or did I achieve a good heart-rate to help with the long term health of my heart
·         or maybe was I feeling good and moving fluidly and connecting well with the ball
            No - what everyone asks – How’d you do – did ya win?
 
Competition and ‘what have you done for me lately’ is everywhere
·         It is there at work
·         It is there at homes ‘keeping up with the Jones’
·         It is in our politics
·         It is in our schooling – our value somehow connected to the grade on a report
·         It is *a* main part for much of our leisure time in the sports we do
 
And yet, it is so temporal
            So limited to the moment
                        And fleeting away the farther we get from the recent success
 
But we Christians are given something more – something beyond the temporal
 
You see competition or trials are not inherently bad
            Peter writes
 
        /although now for a little while you may have to suffer through various trials,/
*/so that the genuineness of your faith/*/, more precious than gold that is perishable even though tested by fire, may prove to be for praise, glory, and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ./
The trials that Peter is writing about is ‘life’ – earthly existence
Whether that be the big moments in life which we can look to suffering in health of either - mind – body or spirit
Or the daily trials of living as fallen people in a fallen world
 
Because in God’s great mercy – we are given new birth – we are baptized into Christ
            Our *genuineness* is being refined
Tested in a refiners fire
            Where the impurities of the contaminated gold are burned away
                        Faith is what is left
                                    And striving for God’s ways, righteousness, the byproduct of that faith
 
I draw you back to the fact that we mark today as ‘All Souls Day’
The day in which later in the service we will read the necrology ~/ the memorial list of those that have died this year.
Members of our family, friends and people in which being connected to this parish family of St Luke was important
            Let us consider what they really left behind
           
I would like to illustrate this by an email story that I received last week
 
 
I'm invisible.
The invisible Parent.
Some days I am only a pair of hands, nothing more: Can you fix this?  Can you tie this?  Can you open this? \\ \\ I'm a clock to ask,' What time is it?'
I'm a TV guide to answer, \\ 'What number is the Disney Channel?'
I'm a car to order, 'Right around 5:30, please.' \\ \\ One night, a group of us were having dinner, celebrating the return of a friend from England ...
She had just gotten back from a fabulous trip, and she was going on and on about the hotel she stayed in.
I was sitting there, looking around at the others all put together so well.
It was hard not to compare and feel sorry for myself.
I was feeling pretty pathetic, when she turned to me with a beautifully wrapped package, and said, 'I brought you this.'
It was a book on the great cathedrals of Europe.
I wasn't exactly sure why she'd given it to me until I read her inscription: \\ \\ ‘with admiration for the greatness of what you are building when no one sees.'
\\ \\ No one can say who built the great cathedrals - we have no record of their names.
These builders gave their whole lives for a work they would never see finished.
They made great sacrifices and expected no credit.
\\ \\ The passion of their building was fuelled by their faith that the eyes of God saw everything.
\\ \\ As I read the book, I have this feeling that the missing piece has fallen into place.
It was almost as if I heard God whispering to me, 'I see you, I see the sacrifices you make every day, even when no one around you does.
No act of kindness you've done, no house cleaning or laundry, no cupcake you've baked, is too small for me to notice and smile over.
You are building a great cathedral, but you can't see right now what it will become.'
\\ \\ At times, my invisibility feels like an affliction.
But it is not a disease that is erasing my life.
It is the cure for the disease of my own self-centeredness.
It is the antidote to my strong, stubborn pride.
\\ \\ I keep the right perspective when I see myself as a great builder.
As one of the people who show up at a job that they will never see finished, to work on something that their name will never be on.
\\ \\ When I really think about it, I don't want my children to tell the friend they are bringing home - my parents’ do this and do that for us and our home.
That would mean I'd built a shrine or a monument to myself.
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