Sermon Tone Analysis

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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
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Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
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Anger
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Desperate Faith
 
Isa 36-37; 2 Kings 18-19; 2 Chron 32.
 
*YOU KNOW YOU'RE HAVING A BAD DAY WHEN... *
·         You have to hitch hike to the bank to make your car payment.
·         People send your spouse sympathy cards on your anniversary.
·         When you've been starving yourself for a week, but the scale shows a 3 pound weight gain!
·         The plumber floats by on your kitchen table.
·         The department of biological warfare ask for your stew recipe.
·         Your plants do better when you don't talk to them.
·         It costs more to fill up your car than it did to buy it.
·         Your doctor tells you that you're allergic to chocolate.
·         Your twin sibling forgets your birthday.
·         Your income tax refund check bounces.
·         Your doctor tells you you’re in great shape … for someone half your age.
·         The health inspector condemns your office coffee maker.
·         Your children's school calls to surrender.
Some crisis are ultimately trivial, and we can even make funny little lists about them that we post on the internet.
Other crisis are substantial and shape who we are as people.
*Today: A Bad Day in the life of King Hezekiah (Isa 36-37)*
·         Note:  Isaiah 7:3; 36:2
o        Same location.
§  Different time - 30 yrs later (701 BC)
§  Different army - Assyrian Empire (champs) vs. Syro-Ephraim alliance (the losers).
o        Isa 7 – Man of God approaches an evil king in crisis with an invitation to seek God.
§  Which Ahaz refuses.
§  He seeks his own way, with disastrous results)
o        Isa 36 – Enemy of God approaches a good king in crisis with an invitation to abandon God.
·         *Isaiah intends for us to compare the two stories.
Has Hezekiah learned the lesson that his father Ahaz did not?
Will this be any different.*
\\ !
Hezekiah’s Character (bkgd)
·         Mostly prelude to Isa 36 (cf. 2 Kings 18-19 & 2 Chron.
32)
·         By all accounts Hezekiah was a good king.
o         /"Hezekiah trusted in the Lord, the God of Israel.
There was no one like him among all the kings of Judah, either before him or after him.
He held fast to the Lord and did not cease to follow him; he kept the commands the Lord had given Moses.
And the Lord was with him; he was successful in whatever he undertook./”
(2 Kings 18:5-7, NIV)
·         Hezekiah has spent his entire reign trying to reestablish Judah as a politically and spiritual strong nation.
o        He refused to pay tribute to Assyria, thereby rejecting the alliance his father has rashly formed
o        He reopened the Temple his father had closed and tore down the false shrines and altars his father had permitted.
o        He was instrumental in reviving the worship of God according to the commands given to Moses at Mt. Sinai – practices that have lapsed into a mixture of superstition, idolatry, mindless ritual, and outright neglect.
§  He knew that a spiritually divided and diluted nation could not expect anything from God.
He knew that Judah’s spiritual condition was just as essential to her survival as here military or political state..
o        He diverted the water supply  so that it would continue to flow into Jerusalem, but be inaccessible to any besieging army outside the wall
·         Hezekiah’s aqueduct is still famous
o        Reinforced the walls and increased the arsenal.
o        Gathered the people and prepared them for what was to come.
§  Encouraged the to trust in God
§  “Assyria may have a mighty army, but we have a mightier God”
·         You know what happened as a result of all Hezekiah’s godly leadership?
o        */“After all that Hezekiah had so faithfully done, Sennacherib king of Assyria came and invaded Judah.”/*
(2 Chron.
32:1)
·         *IMPORTANT NOTE: We like to think that a godly spare us trouble, but this is never guaranteed.*
o        Hezekiah’s character did not protect him from crisis.
Even the godly must go through trials.
o        Question is not “how do you avoid trials?”, but “what do you do when trials come?”
 
! Hezekiah’s Challenge (ch.
36)
·         Sennacherib attacks Judah.
o        Isaiah had prophesied that, while the Assyrians would humble Judah, they would not conquer it completely (Isa 9:28-34; 14:24; 31:8)
o        But all seems for naught.
The promises seem to have failed.
Sennacherib seems unstoppable.
§  Acc.
to Assyrian records, he conquered *46 cities*.
§  And now he is threatening Jerusalem itself.
·         Hezekiah’s faith starts to wear
o        On one hand, Hezekiah continues to encourage the people that God will deliver them (2 Chron 32)
o        On the other hand, he strips the gold off the Temple doors and sends it to Sennacherib along with a letter of apology (2 Kings)
·         Sennacherib’s send his envoys with a reply specifically designed to demoralize the people and cause them to give up and surrender.
o        *Read Isaiah 36:4-20*
o        Long list of reasons to give up.
A few main focal points..
§  *You’re all alone* – friends and allies (i.e.
Egypt) are useless
§  *You’re too weak to help yourself *- I could even lend you my own horses (cf.
“I’ll fight you with one hand behind my back”).
§  *It would be easier to just give up.*
·         If you resist, you’ll end up eating and drinking your own filth.
·         If you give up, it will get easier
o    Cf.
“Following God is too hard.
It’s not worth the trouble.
Better to just give in.”
§  *God will not help you*
·         You God is mad at you – you tore down all his altars.
·         Your God told us to destroy you – it’s God’s will.
·         It’s pointless to trust God – even if He wanted to help you, there’s nothing He can do.
o        Have you ever heard any of these?
Have you ever believed them?
o        Maybe you’ve pondered giving up for some of these exact same reasons.
·         *Notable thing: All the points have some validity, EXCEPT THE LAST ONE … IT IS DANGEROUSLY DECEPTIVE.*
o        Hezekiah had /not /offended God by tearing down His altars.
He had actually done the right thing.
o        Isaiah had prophesied the Assyrian invasion (it was “God’s will), but had also foretold the ultimate defeat of Assyria (conveniently omitted)
\\ o        Sennacherib mistakenly equated the Living God of Israel with all the dead idols of other nations, as if all gods were essentially the same.
o        *Of all the distortions that crisis can create, distortions about God are potentially the most lethal.
If we believe them, we are in trouble.
*
·         So, God has taken Hezekiah to the breaking point where there is /absolutely nothing he can do to solve his  situation.
/
·         *At this point, Hezekiah must make a critical decision *
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