Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Anger
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1 Samuel 1-7
Hannah ‘prayed to the Lord’ (1:10-11).
God answered her prayer (1:20).
God does not always answer our prayers in the way that we want.
Sometimes, rather than changing our circumstances, He simply speaks His Word to us: ‘My grace is sufficient for you’ (2 Corinthians 12:7-9).
Always, He ‘gives grace to the humble’ (James 4:6; 1 Peter 5:5).
Let us find our joy and our strength in the Lord: ‘My heart exults in the Lord; my strength is exalted in the Lord’ (2:1).
The call of Samuel is a vivid example of what God can do in the lives of children.
Samuel’s early response to God set in motion a whole process of events leading Samuel to become ‘a prophet of the Lord’ through whom ‘the Word of the Lord... came to all Israel’ (3:10,19-4:1).
Let us ground our children in Christ, encouraging them to have great expectations of what God can do in and with their lives as they grow up, loving Him.
5:1-6:16 - In 5:3-4, we read of God’s superiority over Dagon - ‘The Lord is the true God; He is the living God and the everlasting King’ (Jeremiah 10:10).
God is ‘holy’ (6:20).
He calls His people to be holy.
With His call to holiness, there is His promise of blessing (7:3).
1 Samuel 8-14
Israel’s demand for a king did not arise from love for God.
It was motivated by human pride (8:5,20).
Having ‘rejected’ the Lord as King, the people made their choice.
They did not choose for God!
They ‘chose for themselves’ (8:7,18).
God allowed them to have their king but He did not approve of their choice (8:22,18).
‘He gave them what they asked, but He sent a wasting disease among them’ (Psalm 106:15).
Saul did more harm than good.
There was not much blessing during Saul’s reign.
God had greater things in store for Israel - but not until Saul’s reign was over!
The Lord is King: We must never forget this.
A human king is no substitute for the divine King (8:7).
God was not pleased with His people.
They wanted to be ‘like all the nations’ (8:5).
God refused to abandon His people.
They wanted a king.
He gave them their king (9:15-17).
He would wait patiently for His people to make a whole-hearted return to Him.
Samuel was not afraid to speak very directly to the king - ‘You have not kept the commandment of the Lord your God...
Your kingdom shall not continue’ (13:13-14).
Saul’s reign was about to end.
God’s love continued: ‘The Lord will not cast away His people, for His great Name’s sake, because it has pleased the Lord to make you a people for Himself’ (12:22).
Saul had become too full of himself and his own importance.
He needed to be replaced by ‘a man after God’s own heart’ (13:14).
To the divine King be all the glory!
Humanly speaking, Israel seemed to be ‘no hopers’ (13:22).
There was, however, something else.
The Lord was with His people and He would give them the victory (14:6,19,12,23).
1 Samuel 15-24
Saul did what he wanted - not what God commanded (15:3,9).
Saul would be replaced (26-28).
Love God ‘with all your heart...’ - not just a part (Deuteronomy 6:5)! ‘Samuel did what the Lord commanded’ (16:4).
Real obedience comes from ‘the heart’.
It is more than just ‘keeping up appearances’(16:7).
‘The heart of the matter is the matter of the heart’ - This is something we must never forget!’ 17:1-58 - David defeats Goliath.
This is not only a story about David and Goliath.
It is about the Israelites and the Philistines.
It is about ‘God’ and the ‘gods’ (17:43,46).
Victory comes from the Lord.
It is given by grace.
It is received by faith (17:47).
‘Saul was David’s enemy continually’ (18:29).
His real argument was with God.
‘The Lord was with David’ (18:14,28).
‘Jonathan loved David as he loved his own soul’ (20:17).
He was ready to die for David (20:30-33).
This is real love and true spiritual fellowship: ‘Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends’ (John 15:13).
‘Religion’ is no substitute for compassion (21:3-6; Matthew 12:1-4,7).
Saul imagined that God was with him in his pursuit of David - ‘God has given him into my hand’ (23:7).
He was wrong - ‘Saul sought him every day, but God did not give him into his hand’ (23:14).
We may like to think that God supports us in everything we decide to do.
We must, however, be honest before Him and recognize that there can be a great difference between ‘what I want’ and ‘what God wants’.
We must learn to choose God’s will rather than our own will (Luke 22:42).
We ask, ‘What is God’s will?’.
God says, ‘This is the will of God, your sanctification’ (1 Thessalonians 4:3).
God wants us to be ‘changed into His likeness’ (2 Corinthians 3:18).
He renews our minds, enabling us to live a life that is more truly and more fully in line with His perfect will (Romans 12:2).
Do you want your own way - or God’s will?
Saul recognized that David was a ‘righteous’ man to whom ‘the kingdom’ would be given (24:17,20).
There is a vital connection between godly character and fruitfulness in God’s service.
We dare not imagine that we will be fruitful for God if we refuse to give ourselves fully to Him.
1 Samuel 25-31
Saul and David were very different.
David was wise.
He had respect for ‘the Lord’s anointed’ (26:11).
This was grounded in ‘the fear of the Lord’ which ‘is the beginning of wisdom’ (Psalm 111:10).
Saul ‘played the fool’.
He ‘erred exceedingly’, choosing the way of self rather than the way of the Lord (26:21).
This is not only the story of David and Saul.
It’s like looking into a mirror.
In David and Saul, we see ourselves.
We are at the cross-roads.
We must choose.
God promises blessing - ‘The Lord rewards every man for his righteousness and his faithfulness’ (26:23).
This promise is full of challenge.
Choose ‘righteousness and faithfulness’.
Choose Christ.
Keep on choosing Him.
What a difference there is between fear - ‘I shall now perish one day by the hand of Saul’ - and faith - ‘The Lord will deliver me from the hand of this Philistine (27:1; 17:37)!
These words were spoken by the same man - David.
There is a battle going on within each one of us - a battle for faith, a battle against fear.
How do we overcome fear?
How do we grow strong in faith?
- ‘Perfect love casts out fear’.
It is God’s love which gives us the victory - ‘We love, because He first loved us’.
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