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.
A score of 0.5 or higher indicates the tone is likely present.
Emotion Tone
Anger
0.11UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.11UNLIKELY
Fear
0.15UNLIKELY
Joy
0.61LIKELY
Sadness
0.57LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.69LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.54LIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.8LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.44UNLIKELY
Extraversion
0.12UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.72LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.64LIKELY

Tone of specific sentences

Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9
A Message of Hope - God’s Mercy
Running from God is not a race we want to be entered in.
For those who like to wager on the underdog, that’s not a safe bet.
God’s sure to win.
So far in the account of Jonah, we’ve seen a prophet with a call and a commission.
We’ve seen a decision to disobey and an attempt to run from God.
Last week we witnessed the compassion and commitment to God of the sailors and the consequences of Jonah’s disobedience.
This week we’ll begin to explore God’s mercy and the second chances He gives to His wayward prophet.
This in turn gives us hope!
Fishermen are known for their fish stories, right?
When fishermen catch a big fish they tend to exaggerate the size and story of how they caught the fish.
It seems every time they tell the story the fish gets a little bit bigger.
The battle gets a little bit tougher and the glory gets a little bit greater.
Fishermen love to tell the story of the big one that they caught.
It was a little different with Jonah.
Jonah didn’t tell about the big one that he caught, but about the big one that caught him.
Jonah was in the midst of God’s discipline in his life, even though he thought that his life would be over and he would not have to worry about going to Nineveh.
Christians out of the will of God and on the run from God can expect a storm of correction from God to drive them back to God! Jonah was in bad shape as he was heading down.
How do we respond to discipline?
How do we respond when God chastens us?
When we try to run from God, know this:
God’s in Control of Our Circumstances
God was in control of the winds, the water, the weather, the waves, and the fish.
I could have kept up the alliteration, but we’re not sure it was a whale.
Either way, it’s a whale of a story.
And the crowd groans.
Sorry, corny joke opportunity.
God prepared this fish especially for Jonah.
The word translated ‘prepared’ literally means appointed or assigned.
God prepared this fish for that specific time and that specific place so that he could discipline his prophet.
It has been well said, ‘Jonah was captured for correction.’
The fish was not there to save Jonah’s life; God could have saved Jonah by causing the storm to cease.
The fish was used by God to correct and discipline the prophet.
Jonah found himself in the belly of a great fish.
I want you to understand that I believe a fish literally swallowed a literal man named Jonah.
Many people have a hard time believing that a fish would or could swallow a man.
They have a hard time because they do not believe the Bible.
The Bible says it and that settles it.
Jesus believed that the fish swallowed Jonah and I believe Jesus.
Matthew 12:38–40 says,
God was in control of the circumstances in this wayward prophet’s life.
God is still in control of circumstances.
Jonah thought that if the mariners would throw him into the raging sea that his life and troubles would be over.
God was still at work in Jonah’s life even in the depths of the sea.
Can you look back on circumstances in your life and see that God was at work disciplining you in your waywardness?
Where does Jonah find himself?
It took a season of discipline to turn Jonah’s heart towards God.
It took being in a belly of a great fish to get Jonah’s attention.
Jonah faced change or he faced death.
Proverbs 15:10, “Harsh discipline is for him who forsakes the way, and he who hates correction will die.”
Jonah spent three days and three nights in the belly of a fish.
Jonah’s new abode was because of Jonah’s old attitude and actions.
How far do we have to go down until God gets our attention?
John Phillips wrote, “For a little while Jonah was allowed to reap what he had sowed.
He had rejoiced at the thought of God’s judgment being poured out on Nineveh.
Now he found out what it was like to be under God’s judgment.”
Great Bible Fact: When God calls us: He commissions us: when we refuse to go He corrects us.
Jonah was in a great dilemma because of his disobedience.
A dilemma is any situation requiring a choice between unpleasant alternatives or any serious problem.
To Jonah, dying in the belly of a fish was unpleasant, but going to Nineveh to preach to the lost was also unpleasant.
Jonah had spiritual and physical problems as he found himself out of the will of God and in the belly of a fish.
In chapter 1:17 we see that God is in control of our circumstances.
In the first nine verse of chapter two we notice:
The Despair of the Disobedient
We’ll probably only have time this morning to get to verse 2, but we’ll read Jonah’s entire prayer.
Where does Jonah pray?
God Sometimes Teaches Us in an Uncomfortable Classroom
Jonah’s despair in the belly of the fish brought him to the point where he called out to God in prayer.
There are several aspects about this prayer as we first look at the place of the prayer.
One commentator said, “We don’t use our sanctuaries for the sacred purpose for which they were intended.
They are designed to be houses of prayer, but we seldom pray.
Maybe they are too pretty; or maybe we haven’t had enough trouble yet.
Jonah prayed in a strange place, but he was in need.
That is enough reason to pray.”
Jonah’s prayer came from the belly of the fish.
Another said, “The belly of the fish is not a happy place to live, but it’s a healthy place to learn.”
That’s a good word!
God’s discipline is never easy or pleasant to go through, but it works to our benefit as it always makes us more like the Lord Jesus Christ.
Just like the prodigal son that had to get down to the point of feeding swine before he came to his senses, so too Jonah had to get down before he came to his senses.
It is estimated that Jonah’s classroom:
was between 108 to 115 degrees
it was totally dark
burning with digestive acids
slimy and filled with decomposed sea life
and was constantly in motion
and it was a smelly belly and a dirty classroom.
His classroom didn’t have state of the art computers, nice comfortable chairs, air-conditioned comfort, or good lighting.
Jonah came to his senses in the belly of the fish.
Jonah’s despair could have driven him further away from God, but we learn in verse one that his despair drove him to God.
After three days of discipline in the belly of the fish, Jonah had had enough.
Jonah prayed to the Lord his God.
This statement teaches us that Jonah was indeed a child of God and that he knew God as Lord.
This is a great reminder of the destructive power of sin.
Jonah, a child of God, had to be harshly disciplined before he cried out to God in prayer.
From Jonah’s perspective, he was in the place of the dead.
Jonah calls the place Sheol.
When we’re under the hand of God we may feel like Sheol is our home.
Jonah cried out from the place of despair.
Five men were entrapped in a deserted zinc mine in Salem, Kentucky, by falling rocks.
They had nothing to eat.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9