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
0.12UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.08UNLIKELY
Fear
0.13UNLIKELY
Joy
0.6LIKELY
Sadness
0.58LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.56LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.27UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.72LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.96LIKELY
Extraversion
0.12UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.64LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.79LIKELY

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
Every year, around 45 percent of us in America seize upon the desire for a fresh start at New Year’s and make one or more resolutions.
Now we all know what a resolution is.
It is a commitment that we make to ourselves regarding a project or a habit that usually calls for some kind of lifestyle change.
We want to lose weight, exercise more, quit smoking or drinking, get out of debt.
These make the top 10 resolves annually.
We feel determined.
We join a fitness center or a 12-step program or buy a book.
We create a plan for change
Yet every year, 97 percent of us with firm resolve fail.
We mean well but in the end, we don’t lose weight, exercise more, stop smoking or drinking, or get out of debt.
Usually by February, it’s over and we are left unchanged.
Why is that?
Even more significant, there are scores of people who claim Christ as their personal Lord and Savior, but whose lifestyle shows little difference from those who make no such claim.
It’s so common, we no longer think it all that strange that someone who says they are Christians, talks like the world, live together before marriage, struggles with addictions like the world, divorces at the same rate as the world, and does business like the world, yet all the while saying and believing that Jesus has delivered them from this world
What’s more incredulous is that there is no remorse for the sins they are persisting in, they claim they are forgiven are heaven-bound.
This isn’t an isolated event either
Teaching through discipleship on Wed.
night to try and implement change in our own families, church, workplace and communities
Why?
We want to be changed and marked by Christ
Marked – set apart, identified, we want His name on our boot!
In Exodus 12, God makes a distinction between the Egyptians and the Israelites
Throughout all that’s been done through the plagues, the Israelites have been on the sidelines watching but now they’re going to have to get into the game.
God is bringing about a change in their situation and they must do their part.
Exodus 12:1-13
Exodus has been showing us the history of God’s people.
We began in Genesis 15 where God promised Abram that he would deliver his descendants from bondage
In the time that we’ve been looking at this book, history has been unfolding,
Through it all, God has remained in control.
Even when the people of Israel have found themselves in slavery in Egypt, God has not forgotten His promises to His people.
In fact, God has already been fulfilling His promise to make a great nation from Abraham.
The Israelites now number in the millions
Exodus 12 marks a turning point because God will now continue to fulfill His promise by delivering them from the slavery of Egypt and taking them toward the land of promise.
The LORD was coming to Egypt in judgment.
The death of the firstborn had been foretold and would soon come to pass.
The Egyptians were in danger, but the Israelites were safe and secure from his judgment because of His grace to them through the provision of the Passover lamb,
A lamb whose blood would be the mark on them.
For the Israelites to be ready for their new life of deliverance from Egypt and freedom, they needed to get ready for the change that was going to take place
Thousands of years later, you and I have the opportunity, to take our place in the history of God’s people.
God is still in the business of delivering His people from slavery
Not from some evil Egyptian task master – something worse – sin
Our Theme: We have been saved for a purpose but we must trust God
Do you believe that God has a purpose for you?
Do you believe that the sacrifice of His Son was done so that you could be a part of His family, taking part in His mission?
Or are you sitting on the sidelines, watching this life pass you by, missing out on what God is doing because you’d rather do it your way?
God wants to deliver you and offer you freedom from sin, the temptations of this world and even from yourself.
But there are some requirements to receiving and obtaining that freedom
Just as the Egyptians had to prepare for the change that was about to take place
You and I must prepare for the change that God wants to do in our life
Sacrifice – vs. 3-6
Sacrifice is a word we’re familiar with but it’s not something we like to participate in.
No one understands sacrifice quite like a mother – she sacrifices her body to give birth, time to teach & raise, privacy, careers, etc.
Why would she do this?
Obligation?
Requirement?
Mandate?
Love, devotion, commitment, compassion
When we think about sacrifice in the spiritual sense, our thoughts should naturally turn to Christ, the lamb of God, who sacrificed His sinless life for our spiritually dead life.
We can’t fully understand what that means without the explanation that God gives us in Exodus 12
God was going to bring about deliverance and salvation through the death of a lamb but it was going to be a lamb of their own possession
We have hobby farmers now but during this time, livestock were literally all you had
You didn’t go to Food Lion and pick up what you need – you wanted meat, you raised it, killed it, butchered it and then you could eat.
God was going to require of them to sacrifice something that was near to them
Yes, the lamb is a picture of Jesus who would come and be the spotless lamb of God sacrificed for all
But here, the lamb is a sacrifice of the owner and most importantly it’s an act of obedience.
God makes the requirement and they’re to follow through – there was no other option
If you want your firstborn to live, if you want to be delivered from Egypt and Pharoah, then you will sacrifice what is costly to you
A sacrifice is still needed today – it just looks a little different –
Jesus spelled it out for us in Luke’s gospel (Luke 14:26-27)
26 “If anyone comes to me and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be my disciple.
27 Whoever does not bear his own cross and come after me cannot be my disciple.
If we really do believe God, He has saved us for a purpose, then we must trust Him and give up what we hold most dear
Our lives
That’s all that He requires
That we put His desires ahead of our own – that we go where He leads – that we live our lives in obedience to His word
Is that a sacrifice?
If it weren’t, we would have no problem doing so
However, we are more intent on what we want, when we want it and how we want to get it/there
For the Israelites, their act of obedience in sacrificing their lamb was a sign that they valued what God wanted for them more than what they wanted for themselves
It’s the same for us.
When we sacrifice our preferences, our choices, our commitments to Christ, it’s an act of obedience showing Christ that we believe Him at His Word and we’re willing to follow Him.
Readiness – vs.11
If sacrificing ourselves is an act of obedience proving our trust in God, then you also must be ready to move
When we moved from GA to NC, we didn’t make the move in one day or in one trip – we spent months preparing: throwing stuff away, giving stuff away, selling things
When we got to NC, we didn’t really have a place to live so we had to prepare that as well
Looking back it seems crazy but we knew God was leading us to NC, so we wanted to be prepared
We do this for other things as well – going on vacation, going fishing, etc.
The preparation signifies something – not only do you intend to go but you are going
BTW - In vs. 8-10 God instructs them to prepare the meat from the sacrifice and to do so in a particular way
God directed that they roast it.
Why?
Because it was the way of nomads
The nomads of this day were known for their grilling skills.
You traveled from place to place – there wasn’t much opportunity to preserve and prepare meat for storage – you threw those lamb chops on a skewer and you roasted them over a fire
The common way of pagans who ate sacrificial meat was to eat it raw
They were not to boil the lamb either (v.
9).
When you boiled it, you cut and divided it into smaller parts to cook it in a pot or cauldron
Roasting enabled you to cook the lamb whole, undivided and unchanged in its appearance.
The point: this wasn’t another meal, it was a sacrifice – it was meant to look and feel different
Notice vs. 11 that when they were to eat the meat they were to do it in a certain way
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9