Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Heavenly Father, May the words of my mouth and the meditations of all our hearts, be acceptable in your sight – Our strength and our saviour – Amen
 
 
Our God is an Awesome God!
 
            Despite it all, Despite all that we do to turn away or ignore God - God keeps coming back
God lives… in the mess of all our lives
                                    Our God is an awesome God!
It has been said that there is ‘the God of the Old Testament - and there is ‘the God of the New Testament’
Well that /might/ be a view for some of the attributes of God
But that is not true for the most important attribute of God
            In particular – God’s mercy
 
Today we had yet another passage from the prophet Samuel – again this week from 2nd Samuel
We are reading through large chucks of books of the bible – in a somewhat continuous fashion – over the course of three years we will cover the majority of the Bible on Sundays
The high points – or main stories of each book
And so we are yet again walking through the on-going sage that is David – the most important King that Israel has ever had.
Here are some of the high points of what we have covered in the last few weeks
We started in mid-June to hear the story of How David as a young boy was selected and anointed to be the future King of Israel
Selected by Samuel, the prophet… THE prophet of Israel, King Saul’s closest advisory – after the Spirit of the Lord had left King Saul
As you may remember, he was shown 7 of David’s older brothers – 7 of Jessie’s sons that were invited to the banquet
And yet it was the uninvited, youngest, smallest that was chosen by God for Samuel to anoint
And we heard God’s view about David’s brothers…
/“Do not look on his appearance or on the height of his stature, because I have rejected them; for the Lord does not see as mortals see; they look on the outward appearance, but the Lord looks on the heart”/(1 Sam 16:7)
*Like* last week, where St Paul declared “/for the sake of Christ; whenever I am weak, then I am strong./
(2 Cor 12:10)
God regularly addresses the expectations of this world, and turns it on its head
We are often faced with surprising choices of God, the contrast between the way the world views things… and the more important way that God views the world
 
And then we had the account of David and Goliath, with a surprising twist at the end
            David was sent to the battle front, on an errand for his father Jessie
To bring some food for his three eldest brothers – the only ones old enough to be soldiers in Saul’s army.
We heard the absurd details of a story in which it appears that the deck is completely stacked against David ever being there,
Against David ever having Saul agree to let him stand and fight, as the representative risking all of Israel, on a boy
We see the dramatic contrast between the super-human giant, Goliath, battle trained and experienced
And the young, inexperienced, 8th son, shepherd, out on an errand
Yet again, like the story of the previous week, “God rejects the obvious choices”
We are reminded “that God's strength is sufficient” – but also so much more than that
We were given a window into understanding the Doctrine of Election – where God shows us in the election of David – that election is for a purpose
There is the lesson on the preparation for purpose that David underwent, by the grace of God
How the menial job of tending to the sheep, protecting them from the bear and the lion – was good conditioning for the Giant Goliath
Providing for us - That God *is* faithful through all the lessons in life
And we are challenged to face the Goliath shadows in our own lives - face them while remaining in faith of God’s provision
And finally and ultimately, the surprise twist of the story that David wasn’t the underdog after all –
Because it was the team of David and God…
                                    The true underdog was the Giant Goliath
We learned that we all can bring glory to God’s name by living the good news that God is with us
Now and forever – that by living the purpose of our lives and not being sidetracked by the Goliath’s shadows, we *are* both the blessing and the blessed
 
Then last week, where in 2nd Samuel we hear how David, is at long last, selected by all of Israel, the tribes in the north and the tribes in the south, to be the King
            Selected as a boy – King over all Israel not until he was 38
                        We heard how David at that moment made a covenant with the elders
We are reminded of the most incredible characteristic of God’s Good News
… that God has risked it all on us
That we still need to be part of the Gospel
Each of us in word or deed - to friends, family, colleagues at work and neighbours - We need to have faith in the gospel, in order for the Gospel to affect us
God’s risked it all on our participation
 
And finally we come to our reading from today
Today we have the story of Ark of the Covenant – basically the elaborate container that held the stone tablets of the Ten Commandments that Moses brought back from meeting with God
            We have the Ark of the Covenant coming to Jerusalem
 
For me, when I think of the Ark of the Covenant – my understanding has forever been imprinted by Indiana Jones, when he first appeared on the cinematic scene in Raiders of the Lost Ark in 1981
It is a fun story of an action adventure star from an unlikely character Dr. Henry "Indiana" Jones, Jr. – an archeologist at Harvard University
He has been enlisted by the US government to find the Ark of the Covenant, before the Germany Nazis do – as they believe it contains unknown power that will make their military invisible
This belief in using the power of the Ark for personal gain is not an outrageous Hollywood idea – it is part of the legacy associated with the Ark of the Covenant found in scripture
And similar to the movie, where the final climactic scene has Indy's archrival, Belloq, befitted with high priestly regalia, opening the lid of the ark and unleashed the glory of the LORD,
Which quite literally melted Belloq and his Nazi benefactors, all those who would dare look upon the LORD
The biblical testimony reveals that God’s power is not to be trivialized or attempted to be manipulated
 
The account of the Ark of the Covenant has its ups and downs
In today’s account, we are told that David at first put the Ark on a new cart for the journey
That at one point, when it came to the uneven ground, Uzzah a Priest, one of Abinadab’s sons reached out and grabbed hold of it – and for his efforts was struck down dead
Why – why did God strike Uzzah dead
It is possible that *since* God was very exacting when it came to the Ark of the Covenant
That Uzzah’s action displayed both disobedience and also a form of arrogance,
Since the very power of God was present in the Ark of the Covenant, Uzzah by grabbing hold of it was in effect domesticating God
In a way grabbing hold of God Himself
            Now, before you think this is a terrible story out of character for God
This is not the only time when it is fatal to tamper with God’s instructions regarding the Ark of the Covenant
In 1st Samuel chapters 6 we hear how it ends up in Beth-shemesh, where the townsfolk greeted the ark with rejoicing,
But some curious ones looked into the ark - and they insight the wrath of the LORD…
And seventy died.
Not surprisingly the survivors commented, /"Who is able to stand before the LORD, this holy God?
To whom shall he go so that we may be rid of him?"
(1 Sam 6:20)/
Not too far off the climax of Raiders of the Lost Ark
It is stories like this that lead people to believe that there was a God of the Old Testament that was different than the New Testament
Or maybe people were just more sensitive – more aware of the presence of God and the role that God takes in their lives – we have the benefit of looking at history from wide lenses
Where in the moment of any situation we can lack that grand perspective
We discover that David forgot.
David forgot the part about the stories that said to treat the Ark with the utmost respect,
To not touch it, to carry it in a certain way, with poles, with reverence, not on some cart
And we are told that the Ark is delayed the entrance into Jerusalem for months, the presence of God delayed, and cost some poor guy his life.
We are told of David’s fear of the Lord
Maybe, because David too, was trying to domestic God and then is given a dramatic reminder of the power of God
Before this, David was using the Ark of the Covenant for his own purposes, bringing the into battle and winning –        That the very sight of it brought fear into Israel’s enemies eyes
And now David is trying to bring the power of God into “the new city of David” – Jerusalem
So, for a while, the journey is interrupted and David leaves it with a foreigner, a Giddite
Obed-edom’s house, where the ark rested for three months, had good fortune and was blessed
And so then David remembered that he wanted that for the whole people of Israel
        He overcame his fear and brought the ark into Jerusalem… and with it the power of God
 
Only when David realizes that the Ark is bringing blessing to another that David reconsiders and continues the journey
Generally when the story is told the focus is on David and his zeal for God
All through the travels David is dancing and celebrating with great exuberance in front of the parade of Ark of the Covenant
           
What is seldom the focus of the story is the fact that David is using the Ark of the Covenant as a crafty political move
            He certainly ingratiates himself to his people
He certainly brings it when it is politically expedient, after a messy battle with the Jebusites to gain control of the city that is renamed Jerusalem, literally meaning city of David
Yet leaving it along the way when it appears to be a thing that might bring a curse against its handlers
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