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
0.15UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.13UNLIKELY
Fear
0.21UNLIKELY
Joy
0.13UNLIKELY
Sadness
0.57LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.82LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.33UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.59LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.87LIKELY
Extraversion
0.01UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.84LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.66LIKELY

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
If we could list all the things we’ve forgotten, can you imagine how long that list would be?
From where we put something, to when we were supposed to meet someone, to what we were supposed to do for someone, we forget, forget, forget.
Forgetting must be one of the most dreadful consequences of sin.
To have this brain, and yet have it act so insubordinately so often.
To have this brain, and yet forget things we desperately want to remember.
Think of the various stages of forgetting.
There’s that terror when you first realize you’ve forgotten something.
Then you furiously comb through your memory banks.
Then there’s the guilt.
You must face what you’ve forgotten and then you have to confess your forgetfulness.
Now, for a moment, be the one forgotten by someone else.
You wonder, “Have they forgotten our appointment?”
You grant them a few minutes grace because you assume that they’re only running late.
As the clock ticks and they don’t arrive, or no phone call or text comes begging pardon for being late, you begin to think, “They forgot.”
Now it’s disappointment.
Now anger.
“Do they care for me that little?
Do they respect me that little?
Do they feel that little?
What if I did this to them?”
Try to think of God as someone who forgets.
It’s hard to do, because it’s so ingrained in our minds that God is all-knowing and all-seeing, in other words, all-remembering.
And yet, we come across the word “remember” in the Bible, especially in the Old Testament, and many times the subject of that verb is “God,” as in, “God remembered.”
It makes you stop and think.
“How can God remember?
It’s not as if He forgets.”
And He doesn’t.
And yet.
And yet think of Noah in the ark.
That hand of God shut the door as the rains came down and then nothing for weeks, for months, for nearly half a year.
Noah receives no more messages from the Lord.
He sees the rain come, the waters rise, the mountains themselves disappear.
He watches the animals get restless.
He watches his family get restless.
He gets restless.
He fields the question, “Now what?” more times than he can count and replies, “Wait and see,” more often than he cares.
Think of Abraham begging the LORD to spare Sodom and Gomorrah.
The LORD agrees to spare the cities for ten righteous people.
Abraham passes a long night.
He hears and sees nothing, no report from the Lord or His angels.
The first news he gets is smoke in the distance.
Think of Israel laboring in slavery in Egypt.
For four hundred years they toiled and died.
For four hundred years the descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob cried out to the Lord for help and mercy and salvation, for release from Pharaoh’s oppression, for the fulfillment of the promises God made to their long-ago fathers Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
And they’ve heard nothing.
Think of the barren wanting-to-be-a-mother, Hannah.
Mocked by her rival wife, she begs the Lord in prayer for just one son.
One.
Sure, she hears the priest Eli say, “May the Lord grant you your prayer,” but how many priests and pastors haven’t said such a thing?
What power do they have to grant it?
None.
If only the Lord would come and speak to her, “I will grant your request.”
Did God forget?
Does God forget?
We read the Scriptures and they say God doesn’t forget.
But we also read the Scriptures and it most certainly seems like he does.
And it’s not too hard for us to think of God as absent-minded and forgetful.
Of course, that’s when we’re being charitable.
More often we think of God as forsaking and ignoring, willfully ignorant.
His silences are deafening.
His failures are colossal.
Where are his answers?
Where are his interventions?
Where is He?
What do you do when you want to remember something?
You write it down, don’t you?
I have my daily planner in which I make to-do lists and schedule events.
We have calendars, iPads, smartphones and tablets.
We use them to help us not forget.
Writing something down reinforces in our minds what we want to remember.
It also gives us something to look at later when we need it.
“What do I have to do tomorrow?”
“When was that doctor’s appointment?”
“When is her birthday?”
We trust these record-keeping things.
Sometimes they are all we have.
Our brains fail us, but these written records saves us.
And what about God?
What about when I think He’s forgotten?
Those are dark and desperate times aren’t they?
When God stands silent.
When the pressure rises.
When the answers aren’t forthcoming.
When the waiting goes on.
“Where are you God?
What are you doing up there?
Are you late?
Are you on your way?
Have you forgotten?
What’s your plan?”
He won’t even give us a hint, it seems!
No.
He remembers.
God always remembers.
The flood stopped.
The ark came to rest.
Noah and his family came forth.
The smoke rose from Sodom and Gomorrah, but Lot and his daughters God rescued.
God raised up Moses and behind Moses Israel marched out of Egypt.
God heard the prayer of Hannah and soon she bore a son, Samuel.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9