Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

This automated analysis scores the text on the likely presence of emotional, language, and social tones. There are no right or wrong scores; this is just an indication of tones readers or listeners may pick up from the text.
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BY PASTOR GLENN PEASE
Memorial Day began as a day to honor and remember those who died in the Civil War.
The very first soldier to die in that war was Colonel Ellsworth, a personal friend of President Lincoln.
Lincoln gave his regiment the honor of being the first to cross the Potomac into Virginia and pull down the rebel flag.
Ellsworth took a private with him and went up to the roof and pulled down the flag himself.
As he came down the stairs he was shot by the owner of the hotel.
At his funeral in the East Room of the White House, Lincoln stood by his body and exclaimed, "My boy, my boy, was it necessary that this sacrifice be made!"
Little did he dream that in the next four years nearly a million more from both North and South would follow this first casualty to the grave.
As the war proceeded, Lincoln realized that there would be an enormous price to pay to fight the evil of slavery, but that price had to be paid, for when wrong is strong, right must fight, and pay the cost however high.
Ever since, America has been a nation that says freedom is a value worth dying for.
It is true that more people die on the highway of our land than in the battlefields defending our freedoms, but those who die on the battlefield die for a purpose.
That is why there is a holiday to commemorate such deaths.
It is only purposeful death that we memorialize.
That is why we also have frequent communion, for it is a remembering of a death with ultimate purpose, for it saves all who put their trust in Jesus from the final death and separation from God.
It gives us eternal freedom to live and enjoy all God made us for.
It is the ultimate purposeful death.
But Memorial Day is a day of remembrance of those who died for our temporal freedom, and these were also significant purposeful deaths.
Over a portal of a cemetery in North Assam where many American soldiers lie, who fought in India and Berma in World War II, stands these words, "Tell them we gave our todays for their tomorrows."
Today is that tomorrow that was purchased for us by their deaths.
If we appreciate the freedoms and the opportunities to enjoy life in America, because of the sacrifice of others, then we can say, "Precious in the sight of Americans is the death of her soldiers."
This does not mean that we are glad that they died, or that we rejoice in their death, but that we recognize the values for which they died, and, thus, see the preciousness of the purpose for which they died.
We need to keep in mind that those who fought and lived also fought for our freedoms.
Most fighting men did not die.
They lived to enjoy the values they fought to preserve.
Thank God not all had to die, for it is their living that makes those who died, not to have died in vain.
That was Lincoln's great commitment, and his words are in the marble behind the tomb of the unknown soldier.
They read, "We here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain."
Only the living can make sure the dead have not died in vain, and so we thank God for survivors It is great to be alive, and that is what Psalm 116 is all about.
It is about being a survivor, and being alive when, except for the grace of God, the author would be dead.
He was delivered from death, and this is his song of thanksgiving.
Back in 1951, when open heart surgery had been performed less than fifty times, Doris Sillimon entered a Boston hospital without much hope.
Two weeks later she was so enthused about her dramatic recovery from her heart surgery that she made a vow to tell others, and encourage them as they face the same dreaded ordeal.
She got her doctor to contact other heart patients, and an organization was formed called, Mended Hearts.
Doris was elected president, and her wonderful idea became a visible reality.
It met so great a need that Mended Hearts chapters were formed from coast to coast.
Dedicated people, who had been through it, took fifteen hours of study to learn all about the heart, and what open heart surgery was all about.
Then they spent hours explaining it to waiting loved ones as the surgery was being performed.
They have helped thousands bear the burden.
Their theme is, "It's great to be alive and help others."
This is also the theme of Psalm 116.
We do not know who the author of this Psalm was, but we do know he came very near dying, but was then spared, and this Psalm is his song of praise and thanksgiving for that deliverance.
He rejoices in verse 9 that he walks before the Lord in the land of the living, and he wants to pay his vows, he says twice, in the presence of all God's people.
He wants his testimony to be a help to others.
His message here can be summed up, "It's great to alive and to help others."
The mended hearts idea goes way back to this Old Testament saint who had been through the valley, and wanted to encourage others who had to face the same journey.
That, of course, means all of us, for all of us have a terminal illness, and that is life.It is deadly to be alive in a fallen world, for it is only that which is alive that dies.
For all practical purposes life is always fatal.
The few exceptions where men by-pass death to go directly to heaven are not relevant to us, for that detour has long been closed.
When Christ returns, the Rapture Road will be opened, which also by-passes death, but until that day all of God's people must go the regular route.
The Psalmist had to take this road also, but this song is about his joy because the original trip was rescheduled.
He was about to die but, like Hezekiah, he cried out for the Lord to save him, and God did it.
He had to die later, but he was so grateful for the chance to stay in the land for the living a while longer.
We want to examine his testimony to learn about what a believers attitude ought to be when he faces death.
The first thing we see in this song is-
I. HIS HONESTY OF EXPRESSION.
He did not pretend that death was a welcome visitor, but expressed his honest feelings that its presence made him suffer distress and anguish.
The Living Bible puts it, " I was frightened and sad."
That is an excellent rendering, for modern studies show that the two most common reactions to death are fear and sadness.
It is often assumed that a believer does not face death with these negative emotions, but the facts of scripture, and life's experience prove otherwise.
The Psalmist makes it clear that he wept in deep depression as he faced the loss of his life.
As an Old Testament saint he did not have the New Testament hope of the Christian, but his emotions are not that much, if any, different from what Christians go through as they face death.
Billy Graham, in what I consider his best book, Hope For The Troubled Heart writes, "I have faced death many times, and my reactions have not always been the same.
One time I had an operation that almost ended me.
I knew this could be serious, so before they wheeled me in the operating room I called two of my closest friends and gave them instructions about my wife, my family, and my ministry.
Ruth had gone to be with the children, and I tried to keep the seriousness of the situation from her.
Whether this was right or wrong, I don't know.
At least I am living to tell the story."
"I remember alternating between two feelings.
First, the complete peace I had, knowing that I would be with my Lord Jesus Christ, and second, the fear of leaving my loved ones.
I certainly thought I was going to die."
The Bible does not anywhere encourage us to put on a mask and deny the reality of the negative emotions that are inevitable.
No one ever lived that had more faith and hope than the apostle Paul, yet he expressed the same honest emotions as did the Psalmist, when he praised God for sparing his friend Epaphroditus from death, lest he have sorrow upon sorrow.
In other words, even perfect assurance that death leads a Christian directly into the presence of Christ does not eliminate the negative emotions.
There are circumstances when death is a welcome release, and the Christian does not suffer these negative emotions, but in the majority of cases Christians cannot escape the reality that death is an enemy.
Peter Kreeft in, Love Is Stronger Than Death, is extremely blunt and honest in his expression of the fact.
He writes, "Death is loss, loss of life.
Life is good.
Loss of a good is an evil.
Therefore, death is an evil.
Loss of a great good is a great evil.
Life is a great good.
Therefore, death is a great evil.
Not to see this is a great blindness.
Blindness is a great evil.
Therefore, not to see death as a great evil is a great evil."
"Death is.........the undoing of creation.
Death is the most uncreative thing there is.
It literally uncreates creation, whether it is the creation of man or God, whether it is a painting destroyed by fire, or a nation destroyed by war, a soul destroyed by vice, or a body destroyed by cancer.
Death is the enemy of God.
It undoes the divine work, creation."
The emotions of both the Old Testament and New Testament saints support this view of death as an enemy.
You usually do not become hilarious in your expression of joy at being delivered from a friend.
It is obvious that death is an enemy to motivate such strong joy and gratitude when one is spared from it.
Verse 15 of this Psalm does seem to contradict this conclusion, and has lead to a great deal of confusion on the issue of death.
It says, "Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His saints."
Much of the false thinking about death can be traced back to this verse.
It is usually quoted in total disregard of the context.
The context is a song, not in praise of death, but in praise of God who has delivered from death.
This verse cannot mean what it is usually quoted to mean-that God delights in the death of His saints.
If that is what it meant, the Psalmist would be saying I am so happy I didn't die, but God would be happier if I did.
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