Sermon Tone Analysis

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As we head into the year 2020, I want to take the next several Sundays and step back from a typical sermon that’s based upon a particular passage of Scripture and just share what’s on my mind and heart regarding our mission, our vision, our purpose.
As we look at our mission, the tendency may be to hear only the negative - what we’re not doing right.
We need fight against that.
Sunnyside is a wonderful church.
God is moving in many ways.
This is not about how bad we are - it’s about become all that God desires.
So the next several Sundays will be about heading into the places where God wants us to go.
Over time, Christians and consequently congregations tend to become complacent, comfortable, inward focused and we forget about the Gospel.
We forget about the lost, the unsaved.
We’ll just hang out until Jesus comes back.
We must resist that mentality.
It’s unbiblical.
In his book, Canoeing the Mountains, Tod Bolsinger compares today’s church with Lewis and Clark.
Lewis and Clark and the Corps of Discovery were commissioned to find a waterway that connected the East Coast with the West Coast.
When they finally made it to Lemhi Pass on what is now the Montana/Idaho border, they discovered there is no such waterway.
All they saw before them were mountains unlike anything they had ever seen - the Rocky Mountains.
They weren’t trained for mountains - they were trained for rivers.
Thus, they had a choice - quit and go home, quit and stay put or adventure forward and discover new country.
I truly believe that as our culture rapidly changes, as evil forces gnaw at our country, Sunnyside is standing at a Lemhi Pass and we have a choice.
We can quit and hide and wait until Jesus comes back.
We can stay where we are, keep doing the same things or we can adventure forward and discover new ways of being the church, new ways of reaching people for Christ.
I’m not interested in quitting and I’m not interested in staying put.
Our mission is to help people reach their full potential in Christ - physically, emotionally and spiritually.
Now that sounds great - but unless we own it and put it into practice, it means nothing and consequently we will either quit or stay put.
I don’t want a mission statement that’s just words.
I want a mission statement that calls us into action.
Not busyness - but action - Kingdom, Gospel-centered action.
Our mission needs to become a call to action
a tool that helps us reach our potential in Christ so we can help others reach their potential in Christ.
As we move forward and head over the mountains, we will need to make necessary adjustments in our church, in our activities and in our personal lives that will enable us to become a very Gospel-centered church - to become a church that not only takes care of its own, but a church that also reaches unsaved people with the life transforming truth of gospel of Jesus Christ.
Over the next several Sundays, I hope to challenge us to evaluate ourselves and our church regarding our mission.
Three questions we need to be asking:
1) What am I doing to reach my potential in Christ?
2) What am I doing to help others reach their potential in Christ?
3) What am I doing to help Sunnyside reach its potential in Christ?
Those three questions, however, need to be filtered through the Great Commandment and the Great Commission.
See, reaching our potential in Christ and heading over the mountains, if you will has everything to do with fully loving God in surrender, obedience and relationship.
And, reaching our potential has everything to do with loving our neighbors and introducing people to Jesus Christ.
Every person who claims Jesus as Savior is to be a disciple and to help make disciples.
And as disciples, we are called to mature in our faith, we are called to holiness, we are called to transformation and we are called to build each other up.
One of the best ways to learn how to love God and love others - to learn how to share Christ with a lost world, to grow in holiness and maturity is through consistent Christian fellowship in addition to corporate worship.
One of the best ways to be a disciple and make disciples is through small groups or home fellowships.
What I mean by a small group is a group of people who gather together each week to pray together, to encourage one another, to study the Word of God, to hold one another accountable, care for one another and to spur one other toward Christ-likeness.
Now, we won’t find a verse in the Bible that says, “Thou shalt attend a small group!”
But we do know that for thousands of years Believers met in homes, in marketplaces, in temples - underground - they met anywhere and everywhere - to gather for prayer, for teaching and encouragement.
Small groups, Bible studies … have been the backbone of Judeo-Christian
discipleship for thousands and thousands of years.
So, meeting together outside of a corporate worship service is traditional, but also biblical and necessary and
One of the most effective means of being the Church and expanding the Church.
We know that many of the first Christians gathered in homes - they didn’t have church buildings.
Think about that when Paul wrote this -
That was done in a home.
One of the most effective ways to see people saved and be transformed is through Christians who engage in consistent biblical fellowship.
As I look back on my Christian journey, home groups and Bible studies were the key to my spiritual growth.
A home fellowship was key to saving my marriage.
A home Bible study was key to me forgiving myself.
We put out a church survey last year.
The response was clear - we want more discipleship and more fellowship.
So here it is - starting the first week of February and going through the end of April - we’re starting two Connection Groups - Craig will lead one and I’ll led the other.
We hope to have more in the future.
We are at Lemhi Pass - and one of the ways we’re going to move forward over the mountains is through Connection Groups.
So I hope that you will be a part of one or perhaps even lead one.
Some of you will be tempted to look in the past and say we tried that, or we had a bad experience or whatever and you will be tempted to stay put.
Forget the past - this is a different day; a different time and we need to head over the mountains.
Before I close - If you have never received Christ as Savior - you need to.
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