Sermon Tone Analysis

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Called to Freedom
Galatians IX: Outgrowing Grace?
Galatians 3:1-4
April 14, 2013
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
~* Midweek Service
~* Prayer
~* Marriage RX: Conflict Resolution
PRAYER
SCRIPTURE READING:
CROSSING THE NIAGARA
Once upon a time, there was a guy named Charley who had a rather unusual occupation – he walked over the Niagara Falls on a tight rope, a distance of about 1000 feet.
That’s like walking to the transit center on a rope, as 150,000 gallons rush past every second, the roar of the falls in the background.
But for him, it was no more challenging than walking to the transit center.
He would draw great crowds, and to keep them coming, he kept upping his game: walking backwards, doing summersaults, carrying various large objects across.
Once he even brought over little table and chair and ate his lunch at the half way point.
But the greatest challenge was carrying onlookers over with him.
The first challenge was persuading them then was the fact that he could never be complete sure what they would do.
On one Sunday afternoon he done all of the regular tricks, and it was time for the finale.
By this point, Charlie had a knack picking out a willing “guest.”
So he chose his target, a man named John, and started persuading him.
Normally, it took a fair amount of teasing and cajoling, but John was eager for the trip.
Too eager in fact.
Something told Charlie that this was a really bad idea, but didn’t see any way out and loaded John up on his back.
As the trip began, John was loud and confident, bragging to his friends.
Normally, the even the confident passengers were unnerved as soon as Charlie stepped over the river, but then calmed down the further they went, as they learned from experience how solid Charlie was.
But this time, the exact opposite happened.
The further they went the more nervous John became.
He tried to sound calm, but began asking questions about the strength of the rope and Charlie’s past record.
Charlie’s calm answers didn’t calm John.
Over the next 100 yards, John went from maintaining a façade of calm to obvious fear.
By the time they got a third of the way, John was starting to panic and Charlie was starting to get worried.
Shortly after the pass the half way mark, John said he couldn’t take it anymore and wanted down.
Obviously, that was a very bad idea, so Charlie said, “We are more than half way there, just hang on.
It will all be over soon.”
“Let me down!
I want to go back!” yelled John in a strangly high pitched voice.
“You can’t!
You can’t do this on your own.
The only way across is on my back.
Stay calm, I will get you across.
Trust me.”
But by this point, John was completely hysterical.
Charlie pleaded, begged, joked, yelled.
He tried everything he could think of to calm John down.
Nothing worked.
If the circumstance hadn’t been so deadly serious, John’s foolishness would have been funny.
John was starting to hit Charlie, demanding to be let down.
He was flailing around, and for the first time ever, Charlie began to lose his balance.
“Okay, okay, I will let you down,” Charlie finally said.
Just give me ten second.
I need ten seconds to get stable enough to set you down.
Count with me: Ten, nine...”
And so John, practically screamed “eight, seven, six” and all the way down to zero.
True to his word, Charlie slowly started to let John down.
At first, relief flooded John’s face, then as soon as feet hit the rope and he let go of Charlie, he started to lose his balance and grabbed whatever he could hand on to.
It is said that a drowning man will, in his panic, pull his rescuers under water.
So John grabbed Charlie and pulled both of them off of the rope and into the cold water.
On the distance shore, the deadly silence of the crowds gave way to screaming and panic.
John was also screaming as he splashed about, but then he felt the bed of the river under his feet.
In those ten second, Charlie had only just managed to get them to the shallow part of the river.
I am glad to say that the whole event had a positive effect on John.
He had a reputation of being a loud braggart, but sufficiently humbled by the event, he became a much nicer person.
Charlie on the other hand decided he had had enough of this business and decided to become an accountant.
The end.
CRAZY PILLS
We end that story and enter back into Galatians right as PAUL is finishing up HIS own STORY about why grace is so important to him.
But his utter FRUSTRATION and amazement BROKE THROUGH:
Galatians 3:1-4 You foolish Galatians!
Who has bewitched you?
Before your very eyes Jesus Christ was clearly portrayed as crucified.
2 I would like to learn just one thing from you: Did you receive the Spirit by observing the law, or by believing what you heard? 3 Are you so foolish?
After beginning with the Spirit, are you now trying to attain your goal by human effort?
4 Have you suffered so much for nothing – if it really was for nothing?
Like CHARLIE, he is desperate to get there stupidity through their thick skulls.
~* You FOOLISH Galatians!
Who has BEWITCHED you?
I feel like I am taking CRAZY pills!
It’s like he is saying, “I have been THINKING really hard about this, trying to figure out WHY you would abandon grace and try to be justified by good works.”
~* “I have come to the CONCLUSION that it must be one of two things: Either you are STUPID or you are INSANE.
Which is it?”
But here is the thing, they are not STUPID, and he knows it.
They are actually very INTELLIGENT; Paul’s writing here is very complex.
He doesn’t use small words.
~* INTELLIGENCE and WISDOM are not the same thing.
BEGINNING WELL IS NOT GUARANTEE
Every week, I approach preaching with prayer, begging God to show me how he wants to speak to us through his word, asking him to show how this APPLIES to us.
~* I don’t want NICE sounding SERMONS, I want God’s truth to set you free and bring you life, “and that in more abundance.”
The thing you have to understand is that starting well is NO GUARANTEE of finishing well:
Galatians 3:3 After beginning with the Spirit, are you now trying to attain your goal by human effort?
You can BEGIN with GRACE, fully understanding that you desperately need Jesus and that if you let go of him, you are dead.
At the beginning you are dependent on the Spirit.
~* Next week we will talk about the depending on the HOLY SPIRIT.
In the Greek, the expression “HUMAN EFFORT” is the FLESH.
It does not mean “doing what our body wants.”
Flesh means “me without the Spirit of God,” me operating UNDER my OWN POWER.
~* IRRELIGIOUS FLESH is immoral, promiscuous, etc; RELIGIOUS FLESH is very moral, under its own power.
The problem here is not being BAD PEOPLE, it is trying to do it on YOUR OWN.
STRANGER THEN FICTION
LISTEN to me very carefully: The longer you are a Christian, SOME TEMPTATIONS (such as immorality) decrease, but some INCREASE.
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