Sermon Tone Analysis

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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
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Anger
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The essence of the secret lies in a change of mental attitude.
One must learn to live on a different thought basis, and even though thought change requires effort, it is much easier than to continue living as you are.
The life of strain is difficult.
The life of inner peace, being harmonious and without stress, is the easiest type of existence.
The chief struggle then in gaining mental peace is the effort of revamping your thinking to the relaxed attitude of acceptance of God’s gift of peace.
At intervals during the day practise thinking a carefully selected series of peaceful thoughts.
Let mental pictures of the most peaceful scenes you have ever witnessed pass across your mind, as, for example, some beautiful valley filled with the hush of evening-time, as the shadows lengthen and the sun sinks to rest.
Or recall the silvery light of the moon falling upon rippling waters, or remember the sea washing gently upon soft shores of sand.
Such peaceful thought images will work upon your mind as a healing medicine.
So now and then during every day allow motion pictures of peace slowly to cross your mind.
It is also helpful to use lines from poetry or passages from the Scriptures.
A man of my acquaintance who achieved a remarkable peace of mind has the habit of writing on cards unusual quotations expressing peacefulness.
He carries one of the cards in his wallet at all times, referring to it frequently until each quotation is committed to memory.
He says that each such idea dropped into the subconscious ‘lubricates’ his mind with peace.
A peaceful concept is indeed oil on troubled thoughts.
One of the quotations which he used is from a sixteenth-century mystic: “Let nothing disturb you.
Let nothing frighten you.
Everything passes away except God.
God alone is sufficient.”
The words of the Bible have a particularly strong therapeutic value.
Drop them into your mind, allowing them to ‘dissolve’ in consciousness, and they will spread a healing balm over your entire mental structure.
This is one of the simplest processes to perform and also one of the most effective in attaining peace of mind.
In the circumstances of modern life, with its acceleration of pace, the practice of silence is admittedly not so simple as it was in the days of our forefathers.
A vast number of noise-producing gadgets exist that they did not know, and our daily programme is more hectic.
Space has been annihilated in the modern world, and apparently we are also attempting to annihilate the factor of time.
It is only rarely possible for an individual to walk in deep woods or sit by the sea or meditate on a mountain-top or on the deck of a vessel in the midst of the ocean.
But when we do have such experiences, we can print on the mind the picture of the silent place and the feel of the moment and return to it in memory to live it over again just as truly as when we were actually in that scene.
Peale, Norman Vincent,.
The Power of Positive Thinking (pp.
17-18).
Samaira Book Publishers.
Kindle Edition.
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