Sermon Tone Analysis

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Abraham
God, Abraham the covenant and the church
!!!  
!!!
Call to worship
!!!!!! Bible Verse
Therefore, since we are receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, let us be thankful, and so worship God acceptably with reverence and awe, for our “God is a consuming fire.”
(Hebrews 12:28-29)
!!! Invocation
Let your mighty outstretched arm, O Lord God, be our defence; your mercy and loving kindness in Jesus Christ, your dear Son, our salvation; your true word our instruction; the grace of your Holy Spirit our comfort and consolation, to the end and in the end, through the same Jesus Christ our Lord.
!!!!!!
The Lord’s Prayer
!!!!!! Blessing
Grace to you form God the Father and Jesus Christ our Lord.
!!! Hymn No 25:                               /“Great is your faithfulness”/
!!! Scripture Reading                     /Genesis 15:6-18a /
!!! Prayer of Adoration and Confession
!!! Hymn No 52:                               /“Not unto us, O Lord of heaven”/
!!! Offering and Dedication
Give generously to him and do so without a grudging heart; then because of this the Lord your God will bless you in all your work and in everything you put your hand to.
\\ There will always be poor people in the land.
Therefore I command you to be openhanded toward your brothers and toward the poor and needy in your land.
(Deuteronomy 15:10-11)
While the offering is taken up, elder Dagleish will do the announcements Ð (no music while he is speaking – music thereafter.)
!!! (Announcements Î)
Eternal God, every good gift comes from above, a certain sign of our Father’s love, in appreciation of which we return thanks by presenting these your tithes and our offerings, the first fruits of our labour, from hearts full of love to you for your mercy and grace.
Be pleased to bless both these gifts and we who bring them, for the advancement of your Gospel and Kingdom, and the glory of your great name, through Jesus Christ, our Lord.
!!! Scripture Reading                     /Romans 4 (selected verses)/
!!! Hymn 562:                                    /“Master speak for I am listening”/
!!! Sermon                          /“God, Abraham, the covenant and the Church”/
!!!!!! Introduction
My dear brother and sister in the Lord,
What do we mean when we say, “We are saved by faith alone”?  8 I suppose the question is, “Does faith save us?”  Than of course we need to understand where does faith come from?
We are studying the work of God in and through the life of Abraham.
God called Abraham and made certain promises to him.
In Genesis 12:2-3 we read:
I will make you into a great nation and I will bless you; I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing.
I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.
(Genesis 12:2-3)
To make this possible God had to provide descendants for Abraham and Sarah.
It also included a land or territory.
In a certain sense we can take this blessing of God upon Abraham and his descendants as a repeat of the covenant God made with first Adam and then Noah.
It was a command to have dominion, and it included a promise to provide the means to exercise that dominion.
The promise of God towards Abraham (and the other people of the Old Testament) is also described as the Covenant of grace.
8 When there is grace, there is faith.
And where there is faith, works are excluded.
Include works as a means of salvation, and both salvation and grace do not exist any longer.
We will come back to the question, “Does faith save man?”
For the moment, let’s go back to Genesis 15 to try to understand something of God’s covenant of grace with Abraham.
We will then ask the question, “How does God’s covenant of grace impact on the church today?”
What is the significance of the covenant made with Abraham for the church today?
!!!!!! 8 God, the Sovereign
We commenced our reading of Genesis 15 from verse 6 tonight.
We did it purely to save some time.
But one actually needs to understand this whole chapter from the beginning.
Let’s look at 15:1
Do not be afraid, Abram.
I am your shield, your very great reward.
(Genesis 15:1)
When God said to Abraham, “I am your shield”, it may also be translated as “Sovereign”.
The word shield is used only in reference to the 8 protective guardianship of God.
Of its eight occurrences, six have to do with the Assyrian crisis in the days of Hezekiah.
Isaiah assured the king that God would care for Jerusalem like a mother bird hovering with wings spread over her young in the nest (Isa 31:5).
God would protect Jerusalem in this crisis for his own sake and for the sake of David (Isa 37:35).
The deliverance of Jerusalem would demonstrate to the world that God was faithful to his promises and mighty to deliver his people from their oppressors.
Zechariah twice uses the same verb to describe the divine protection of God’s people in their wars against the sons of Greece (9:15) and of Jerusalem in the last days (12:8).
In all these references it is almost as if we see God in action to protect his own promise – the covenant of grace.
8 Further, all the riches Abraham had acquired by that time, could not measure up against the future display of God’s immeasurable covenantal grace.
The Lord said:  “I am your very great reward”.
The underlying meaning of the word for reward here refers to the wages of someone who is hired.
Put the two parts of verse one together and we might paraphrase it so sound something like:  “Abraham, I am your protection and your guide.
Trust Me.
I employ you in my service and will recompense you richly.”
And God took Abraham outside to look up to the stars.
And the Lord said:
Look up at the heavens and count the stars—if indeed you can count them.
Then He said to him, “So shall your offspring be.” (Genesis 15:5)
8 What did Abraham do at that point in time?
Verse six follows:
Abram believed the Lord, and He [God] credited it to him as righteousness.
(Genesis 15:6)
8 Now What is the righteousness referred to in this verse?
This word refers to an ethical, moral standard and of course in the Old Testament that standard is the nature and will of God.
Now let’s apply it.
The act of faith, which is obedient trust, in Abraham was tested against holy and perfect will, and God gave it the pass.
8 So, now we may argue that Abraham must have been some special person.
He had a great faith.
He was really special.
If only we could have more of the sort of Abraham in our day.
People with upright morals; people who would abstain from the moral corruption of our society.
That is how we now jump to define faith.
But we need to go to Romans 4 to see what the Bible says about faith which is regarded as righteousness.
8 Once again, keep in mind the question, “Does faith save us?”
In Romans 4:4 we once again come across the idea of wages and reward.
And immediately our idea of faith as an description of moral goodness that saves, get a knock on its head.
We argued that Abraham must have been a special man, with a moral life above suspicion for God to call him and make him a covenant partner.
Because here it says:
8 Now when a man works, his wages are not credited to him as a gift, but as an obligation.
However, to the man who does not work but trusts God who justifies the wicked, his faith is credited as righteousness.
(Romans 4:4-5)
8 Let’s stretch the argument a bit.
Is it possible that our faith is displayed in the fact that we partake of the sacraments as signs and seals of God’s covenant of grace?
It is possible to argue that God will look at us, partaking of these signs and then accredit to us the righteousness speaking of eternal protection and reward?
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