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
0.13UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.11UNLIKELY
Fear
0.11UNLIKELY
Joy
0.52LIKELY
Sadness
0.56LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.65LIKELY
Confident
0.1UNLIKELY
Tentative
0UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.79LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.9LIKELY
Extraversion
0.38UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.76LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.75LIKELY

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
March 26, 2012
By: John Barnett
Read, print or listen to this resource on our website www.DiscoverTheBook.org
As we have been challenged this weekend, the great commission is actually our “every day” commission as believers.
We are all to be disciple-making by lifestyle.
To help us all get closer to that goal, I would like to direct your attention to the 29th chapter of Acts.
As you notice from your Bibles, it isn’t there, YET.
The last chapter of Acts is still being written.
It is being written tonight here and across the world.
It is being written in blood, sweat, tears, and prayers.
And it is exactly what God left us here on earth to accomplish for Him.
*WHAT IS GOD’S REPORT ON YOUR LIFE?*
What will be written by the Lord in Acts 29, about you and me?
That is what this entire conference, and in fact all of Calvary Bible Church is really all about!
This year our Missions Conference Team has prayerfully prepared a wonderful event.
They have chosen the theme “Global Impact”.
This is a focus upon all of us being a part of what God left us to do to the uttermost parts of the earth.
This is the great fall seasons with all the football games and the crisp cool weather.
It is a time of memories for me.
I have been telling my boys about my early days when I was on the Haslett (Michigan) football team.
Over the years various coaches would address us on the teams and try to get us “fired up” for the game.
That was always and exciting time because we were quite committed already.
We had already shown our dedication by joining the team, working out most of the summer in the heat, running endless gut wrenching cross country miles, practicing plays until we were able to do them instinctively and so on.
But now at the moment of the actual game “fired up” meant that we were to get even more fully engaged in the game, commit to again play our best, sacrifice our strength and even comfort by playing even harder, commit there in the locker room to not lose focus, to remember the plays we had been taught, to unselfishly work together as a team and so on.
That is team athletics or team sports – whether football, basketball, wrestling or whatever.
Later in college days I moved to a new kind of sports involvement.
I was a spectator and a fan.
Again we in the stands were encouraged to get “fired up” for the game.
This involved wearing team colors, getting season passes, scheduling Friday nights or Saturdays so as to not miss any games, actually coming to all the games, sitting together with our side, paying attention to the game, knowing the team members, cheering at the right times and in a loud and supportive way.
Some of the more “on fire” folks would not only do all that but they went further by really dressing up, painting their faces wit team colors and symbols, bringing big banners, getting there early, and generally be everywhere cheering and carrying on.
That is quite a familiar setting for most of us.
In fact the majority of sports and athletic events are pursued by the minority (the athletes) as they are cheered on by the majority (the fans).
*Two Questions*
This evening as we end a great conference on missions I ask you these two questions:
• First, *“Where are you in the game tonight?”* Are you *on the team* and actually working out, practicing, playing and “on fire” for the game?
Or are you *in the stands* and “on fire” for the team?
• And secondly:* “Where did the Coach, the God of the Universe through His Son our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, ask us to be?”*
Most of us I would guess are in the stands as spectators.
We are quite committed and zealous.
• We pay for our ticket to the game (that means we give in the church offerings);
• We come to home games (that means we attend church faithfully); and
• We annually go to an Home Coming game (that means the missions conference).
• Some of us even go see the team away at training camp (that means going on short term missions trips); and
• We encourage the players (that means we support missionaries and collect their cards with their pictures and stats);
• Thus, we are good fans as we: wear the colors, support the team, yell and cheer for them, and so on.
*WHAT DOES YOUR Coach (and the Team Owner) WANT?*
Now for the hard part, in this team and fan comparison, I ask again which of those two places did the Coach, the God of the Universe through His Son our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ who purchased us with His own blood, ask us to be?
• Which group is the one Jesus outlines, demonstrates and sets up in His Ministry?
• Which location is explained in the New Testament?
• Where did everyone who actually met Jesus on earth end up?
• What did Jesus intend for us to do and to be?
• Did He set up a Team and fans or just a Team; and we have split it into team and fans?
I think many of you know where I am going with this.
The History of the Game and the Rule Book (God's Word) has a clear answer.
Jesus Christ our Lord only set up a Team that actually practiced, worked out together, played in all the games and so on.
There was ONLY A TEAM, there were no non-participating, non-players who could just cheer, come and watch, and enjoy the games.
In other words there were no 1st Century spectators, everyone was on the Team and they all cheered each other on from the field, not from in the stands!
*Everyone Played At the Start*
Look with me at Christ's last words and the impact they had on that 1st generation of our family.
Matthew 28:19-20; Mark 16:15; Luke 24:47; Acts 1:8, 8:4.
Wow they heard and they obeyed!
Sharing the good news of Jesus Christ with the world is the theme of the book of Acts.
Chapters 1–7 tell of its spread “in Jerusalem”; then chapters 8–11describe the witness “in all Judea and Samaria”; and chapters 12–28 “to the ends of the earth.”
So intense was the flame of the gospel that soon Christians could be found in all parts of the Empire.
“The comprehensiveness of the early church’s outreach—from their homeland and on out to the ends of the world—forbids the evangelistic schizophrenia to which we so easily fall prey—lavishing our attention on foreign missions while neglecting our neighbors, or attending to the immediate needs around us while millions overseas have never heard about Jesus.
We need balance.
We must reach our neighbors and the world with our gospel witness, our social witness, our money, our time, ourselves, our offspring.
We must put all we have and are in the hands of Christ and allow him to use it all in his way, in his time, for others’ salvation, for his glory.”
*Believers Shared God's Word *
Thirty-one different words are used to explain the over 160 scenes in the Book of Acts where Christians verbally communicate the Gospel.
Of these, the words “evangelize or preach the Gospel proclaim, announce, testify, speak boldly, speak freely, and prophesy” suggest what might be thought of as formal delivery.
Yet they represent less than a third of all the usages of speaking words.
The other terms are “teach, reason, exhort, answer, speak, charge, ministrate, prove, confound, relate, expound, confirm, explain, persuade, confute utterly, greet, address, speak in defense, admonish, draw out, set forth, cry out, talk and say”.
Many words are used in references to both church leaders and unordained average, normal believers.
*Personal Witness Was the Norm*
There are at least a dozen examples of PERSONAL WITNESS IN ACTS:
1.
We first see the Apostles after Pentecost, represented by Peter and John out soul winning in Acts (3:1-16);
2. Then Peter is also witnessing in his exchange with Simon (8:9-24);
3. We find the personal soul winning account about Phillip in Acts (8:5, 26-40);
4. Paul is an effective soul winner in his exchange with To Lydia in Acts (16:13-15);
5. Paul even takes the spiritual challenge of witnessing to the Demonized Girl in Acts (16:16-18);
6.
Under great personal pain and peril we find Paul the soul winner leading the Jailer and his family to the Lord in Acts (16:19-40);
7.
After a violent confrontation Paul is undaunted and shares a witness with Sergius in Acts (18:6-12);
8. Paul wins a fellow Jew to the Lord named Crispus in Acts (18:7-8);
9. Paul patiently instructs, reasons, and then wins two seekers named Aquila and Priscilla in Acts (18:24-28);
10.
He goes on to win a mighty servant for the Lord named Apollos in acts (18:24-28);
11.
Then he leads to salvation some who were ready but only had gotten as far as being disciples of John the Baptist in Acts (19:1-7);
12. Finally, in spite of shipwreck, near execution, near drowning, snake bites, and criticism Paul has a witness to fellow passengers and Roman Sailors in Acts (27:9-44).
*What Stops Us Today?*
Why would anyone on the Team ever stay up in the stands and cheer for the TEAM instead of standing, playing, and winning with them?
Probably one of three reasons:
*1.
Being unsure you are on the TEAM.
*
• What is the Solution?
MAKE SURE.
Here is a prayer you can pray, a prayer that declares your desire to transfer your trust to Jesus Christ alone for your eternal salvation.
This prayer can be the link that will connect you to God.
And if you pray it in faith, God will receive you.
• HAVE YOU *COME TO CHRIST FOR SALVATION?*
If you are empty, call out to Christ.
Do not let yourself go through another day without coming to him.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9