Sermon Tone Analysis

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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
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Agreeableness
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Anger
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This morning we are celebrating the women in our life that help raise you, teach you, and care of you.
Mother’s have played an important roll in all of our life.
Some are still here and other have gone on.
For some people it can be a difficult time.
There women who have experienced infertility or miscarriages or who are still praying for God to bless them with a godly husband and family.
Some may be grieving the loss of a mother or a child.
And some may be feeling as if they’re failing at motherhood altogether.
You could feel like any one of this things.
In the weeks leading up to the second Sunday of May, we’re surrounded by flowery cards filled with sappy sentiments about how wonderful our mothers are.
In church, we’re often pointed to the example of “the Proverbs 31 woman,” who gets up early, stays up late, and somehow manages to perfectly balance selfcare, motherhood, and a career.
But for many women this ideal looks nothing like their real lives, and the disconnect leaves them feeling broken, hopeless, and like failures.
This morning we are be look at two women if the Old test that went though the feeling of brokenness, hopeless and like the feeling of failure.
So if you have your bible turn to 1 Samuel 1:1–8 first and put something there to mark it.
Now turn to Ruth 1:1-14.
If you do not have you bible you can follow along on the screen in a few minutes.
before we look at the passage today.
I have a question for you.
So think for a moment.
How does God see the mom who doesn’t have everything perfectly figured out?
What is his heart toward the mothers who are praying for children who have walked away from the faith?
Does he hear the moms who are grieving children taken from life too soon, or the women who long to be mothers but whose time has not yet come?
The answer: he sees them as his daughters, and he loves them just as much as the mothers who—externally at least—appear to have it all together
All through out Scripture, we see examples of mothers who are exalted.
Mary Jesus mother
Timothy mother and grandmother
mother who struggled.
Sarah and Elizabeth mothers who longed for children well into their golden years before their prayers were answered
We see stories of mothers celebrating, grieving, and doing whatever they can to keep their children alive in the midst of tyrannical decrees and famine.
Naomi
In the book of Ruth we see a family and a nation in crisis.
Not only was there a famine affecting the entire region, but the people of Israel had forgotten God and the work he did for Israel when he brought them out of Egypt into the land of promise (Judges 2:10).
We do not know much about Naomi’s family before their move to Moab, it’s safe to assume she did her best to care for them.
But when she went with her husband in search of food, she didn’t just leave her hometown—she left her community and any relationships that meant something in her life.
In the following ten years, Naomi would meet grief after grief as the family she’d spent her life nurturing slipped through her fingers, one after another.
Before we reach the end of the first chapter, we find Naomi with her widowed and childless daughters-in-law, scavenging for food in a field owned by another man (v. 6).
Naomi
Some might think that Naomifamily fleeing Israel during the famine as a lack of faith, Ruth would never have made her bold confession (Ruth 1:16–18) if she hadn’t witnessed examples of their faith in some way during her brief marriage.
Nor would she have trusted in Naomi’s God if she hadn’t seen evidence of him at work in Naomi’s life before and after the death of Naomi’s husband and sons.
Hannah
This women was the first wife to a man named Elkanah.
He had a second wife.
This second wife had children but Hannah was childless.
Every year this man would head up to Shiloh the place of worship to offer a sacrifice to God.
He would give more to Hannah cause he loved her more but the Lord kept her for conceiving.
Hannah was taunted
Family dynamics aside, instead of finding
compassion from someone who was privy to her innermost grief, she was
mocked (1 Samuel 1:6).
Instead of finding support from her husband, she was made to feel guilty for not being content (v.
8).
And instead of finding understanding when she entered the house of the Lord, she was accused of living a life of sin (vv.
12–14)
Although Hannah was deemed a failed, sinful woman by her culture’s standards, her faith in God never wavered.
Instead, she allowed him to use her grief to draw her into a deeper place of trust, one where she could entrust the life of her long-prayed-for son to his safekeeping.
And when she brought three-year-old Samuel before the Lord, she brought a boy who had witnessed his mother’s faith and who shared her passion for the Lord a hundredfold (1 Samuel 1:24–28).
What can we all learn for these two mother?
We all know that we should treat our mother right, love them, and show that we care for them too.
But there more we can learn.
We are all called to support those around us
No one should feel like Naomi or Hannah.
All women should be loved and support because they are member of the some body.
Motherhood is not a only road
Motherhood is not a road that’s meant to be walked alone.
We as a church have a privilege and a responsibility to come alongside mothers and women who long to be mothers: to encourage, lift up, and offer physical help as needed.
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