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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Anger
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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
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Extraversion
Agreeableness
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Anger
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Introduction
Open the session by painting the relevance of the questions introduced in the book about the reasons for suffering and evil, God’s justice, and our ability to trust him.
Intro to the Book of Job
Authorship
Date written
Genre
Purpose of the Book
Structure / Outline
About this study
Goal: 4 week overview, flying down into some verses, flying back up to a high level view to see what the meaning and application of Job is for our lives.
Format: Read, Observe, Interpret, Apply
Each week, I want to give you the opportunity to actually interact with Job for yourself.
So you will have time to read a portion of text, observe key words and ideas, and then together we will begin to interpret its meaning.
That’s where I will teach.
READ: Job 1:1-5 | Meet Job
OBSERVE: Job 1:1-5
Take a few moments around your tables to discuss what stands out to you.
What key words or characters are there?
What ideas seem important that the author wants you to see? Underline and circle and mark up your sheets.
Have people share observations for a few moments.
INTERPRET: Job 1:1-5
This is where we’ll jump into teaching.
What we learn:
Job is not an Israelite, and does not live in Israel, yet he knows and worships the God of Israel
Job is righteous
Asserted in how he is blameless and upright, fears God and turns away from evil
Job is wealthy — really wealthy
How his family indicates material blessing
How his possessions translate, wealth-wise
Job is devout in his faith
Demonstrated in how he intercedes for his children
Did this come at a cost for his children?
APPLY: Job 1:1-5
Application will become more apparent as we go week by week, but we might make the following applications:
True greatness is defined not by your possessions, but by the integrity of your life.
Godly parents act as priests for their children, regularly and urgently interceding for them before the Lord.
Conclusion
Gospel connection: In Job we are introduced to a righteous sufferer.
It can’t help but to draw our attention back to the only truly righteous sufferer — the one who came to earth from a far away country, the heavenly places; the one who was truly great — the owner of all things in the universe, the sovereign ruler over all things in existence; the one who would suffer great personal cost to atone for the sins of His Father’s children, in order to bring them back in relationship with Him again.
The Book of Job begins, “There was a man.”
Next week we will move into verse 6, where it moves from “there was a man,” to, “Now, there was a day.”
A day that, unbeknownst to Job, would change his life forever.
Pray to close.
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