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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Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
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Do you remember being tested in school?
Why did the teachers make us take those tests?
Was it because they didn’t know the answers and wanted to learn from us?
I don’t think so.
It was to help us see what we knew and what we still needed to learn.
In the call of Abraham God was beginning His plan to start a new nation.
Part of the call was the promise to provide a multitude of descendants for Abraham, but Abraham had to wait about 25 years before the son, Isaac, was born who would be the one this multitude would come from.
You can imagine how important Isaac was, how loved.
Now God tells Abraham to sacrifice that son.
We aren’t told Abraham’s thoughts, but they may have been not different from what our would have been.
Questioning God, wanting to know the reason, anger that God would make such a demand.
It went against common sense, human affection, and lifelong ambition; in fact against everything earthly.
Whatever he was feeling, we are told that he obeyed, and that at the end God stopped him from sacrificing Isaac and provided a substitute instead.
While God’s request challenges our faith as it did Abraham’s, I believe we can see several reason for it.
Instruction for Abraham
Nothing and no one is to be more important to us than God
Abraham’s faith
“We will return …”
“God will provide”
He trusted that God would fulfill His promises
Isaac’s faith
He was probably stronger and faster – yet he allowed his father to bind him and lay him on the altar.
Abraham had to be willing to lose Isaac in order to receive all God’s blessings
Isaac had to be willing to be sacrificed – trusted his father
Teaching him the blessing that comes from having faith
Inspiration for us
We will be tested
These tests can strengthen our faith and teach us more about God’s faithfulness if we are obedient to God’s commands.
Growth in faith often requires us to be tested.
They also call us to be willing to let go of things that will keep us from receiving better from God.
Trusting that God will provide
Whatever test we face we will be given the strength we need to stand up under it
Obeying God’s command - Abraham’s obedience
Early the next morning
His response gives us an example to follow, no matter we may be feeling, not to delay or try to put God off.
Be willing to let go of whatever holds us back, keeps us from reaching our goal
On August 11, 1978, Double Eagle II, a large helium balloon, and her crew of three eased into an almost windless sky above the potato fields of Maine.
Their destination was Paris, France.
The aerodynamics of ballooning are somewhat complex, but one thing is certain.
In order for the balloon to stay aloft as the journey progressed, ballast (that which is used to add weight) had to be expelled.
As they approached continental Europe six days later, one of the crew wrote, “We have been expending ballast wisely, but as we neared land, not cheaply … over went such gear as tape recorders, radios, film magazines, sleeping bag, lawn chairs, most of our water, food, and the cooler it was in.”
Following Christ is the wisest choice a man can make, but it does not come cheap.
Just as for these balloonists many important things had to be abandoned because they weighed them down, so for the believer.
Image of Jesus’ sacrifice
The lamb God provided
Your only son – In Jesus God made the sacrifice that Abraham didn’t have to
Isaac carried the wood, as Jesus carried the cross
Mt.
Moriah, where God told Abraham to take Isaac, is the area where the Temple was later built, and near where Jesus was crucified.
We remember this sacrifice as we come to the Lord’s table this morning.
We remember Jesus’ prayer, “Not my will but Yours be done”.
May we also remember that we are not called to give something to God, we are called to give everything.
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