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.
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Emotion Tone
Anger
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Disgust
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Fear
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Joy
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Sadness
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Analytical
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Confident
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Tentative
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Openness
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Conscientiousness
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Extraversion
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Agreeableness
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Emotional Range
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Tone of specific sentences

Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
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Our kids
Part 4
The Parent they Need.
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\\ * *1 Kings 1:5 Now /b/Adonijah the son of Haggith exalted himself, saying, “I will be king.”
/c/And he prepared for himself chariots and horsemen, and fifty men to run before him.
*6 *His father had never at any time displeased him by asking, “Why have you done thus and so?”
He was also a very handsome man, /d/and he was born next after Absalom.[1]
Displeased- rebuked, reprimanded, corrected, disciplined,  pained, crossed, interfered, repressed, restrained, or checked.”
The root word- formed, shaped, or craved as in sculpting something from stone or wood.
*6 */s/Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right.
*2 */t/ “Honor your father and mother” (this is the first commandment with a promise), *3 *“that it may go well with you and that you may live long in the land.”
*4 *Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, /u/but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord.
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Col.
*21 *Fathers, do not provoke your children, lest they become discouraged.[3]
21 Fathers, do not vex your children, to the end that they be not disheartened.
(ii) There was the custom of child exposure.
When a child was born, it was placed before its father’s feet, and, if the father stooped and lifted the child, that meant that he acknowledged it and wished it to be kept.
If he turned and walked away, it meant that he refused to acknowledge it and the child could quite literally be thrown out.
There is a letter whose date is 1 B. C. from a man called Hilarion to his wife Alis.
He has gone to Alexandria and he writes home on domestic affairs:
“Hilarion to Alis his wife heartiest greetings, and to my dear Berous and Apollonarion.
Know that we are still even now in Alexandria.
Do not worry if when all others return I remain in Alexandria.
I beg and beseech of you to take care of the little child, and, as soon as we receive wages, I will send them to you.
If—good luck to you!—you have a child, if it is a boy, let it live; if it is a girl, throw it out.
You told Aphrodisias to tell me: ‘Do not forget me.’
How can I forget you?
I beg you therefore not to worry.”
It is a strange letter, so full of affection and yet so callous towards the child who may be born.
A Roman baby always ran the risk of being repudiated and exposed.
In the time of Paul that risk was even greater.
We have seen how the marriage bond had collapsed and how men and women changed their partners with bewildering rapidity.
Under such circumstances a child was a misfortune.
So few children were born that the Roman government actually passed legislation that the amount of any legacy that a childless couple could receive was limited.
Unwanted children were commonly left in the Roman forum.
There they became the property of anyone who cared to pick them up.
They were collected at nights by people who nourished them in order to sell them as slaves or to stock the brothels of Rome.
(iii) Ancient civilization was merciless to the sickly or deformed child.
Seneca writes, “We slaughter a fierce ox; we strangle a mad dog; we plunge the knife into sickly cattle lest they taint the herd; children who are born weakly and deformed we drown.”
The child who was a weakling or imperfectly formed had little hope of survival.
It was against this situation that Paul wrote his advice to children and parents.
If ever we are asked what good Christianity has done to the world, we need but point to the change effected in the status of women and of children.
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addressed to /fathers/, says that mothers have a kind of divine patience but “fathers are more liable to be carried away by wrath.”
It is a strange thing that Paul repeats this injunction even more fully in Colossians 3:21.
“Fathers,” he says, “do not provoke your children, /lest they become discouraged/.”
Bengel says that the plaque of youth is a “broken spirit,” discouraged by continuous criticism and rebuke and too strict discipline.
David Smith thinks that Paul wrote out of bitter personal experience.
He writes: “There is here a quivering note of personal emotion, and it seems as though the heart of the aged captive had been reverting to the past and recalling the loveless years of his own childhood.
Nurtured in the austere atmosphere of traditional orthodoxy, he had experienced scant tenderness and much severity, and had known that ‘plaque of youth, a broken spirit.’”
There are three ways in which we can do injustice to our children.
(i) We can forget that things do change and that the customs of one generation are not the customs of another.
Elinor Mordaunt tells how once she stopped her little daughter from doing something by saying, “I was never allowed to do that when I was your age.”
And the child answered, “But you must remember, mother, that you were /then/, and I’m /now/.”
(ii) We can exercise such a control that it is an insult to our upbringing of our children.
To keep a child too long in leading-strings is simply to say that we do not trust him which is simply to say that we have no confidence in the way in which we have trained him.
It is better to make the mistake of too much trust than of too much control.
(iii) We can forget the duty of encouragement.
Luther’s father was very strict, strict to the point of cruelty.
Luther used to say: “Spare the rod and spoil the child—that is true; but beside the rod keep and apple to give him when he has done well.”
Benjamin West tells how he became a painter.
One day his mother went out leaving him in charge of his little sister Sally.
In his mother’s absence he discovered some bottles of coloured ink and began to paint Sally’s portrait.
In doing so he made a considerable mess of things with ink blots all over.
His mother came back.
She saw the mess but said nothing.
She picked up the piece of paper and saw the drawing.
“Why,” she said, “it’s Sally!” and she stooped and kissed him.
Ever after Benjamin West used to say: “My mother’s kiss made me a painter.”
Encouragement did more than rebuke could ever do.
Anna Buchan tells how her grandmother had a favourite phrase even when she was very old: “Never daunton youth.”
As Paul sees it, children must honour their parents and parents must never discourage their children.
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Introduciton:
 
Note these muilti-generational verses that as Parents , grand parents …step partents Uncles and aunts.. influnceers over litter people we must release on the children we love.
Ps.
145:4
 
Prov.
13:22
 
 
Prov.
4:3-4
 
 
Stewardship of Potential—The Possiblity of providing good, positive, spiritual, healthy and worthy blessing to our children.
\\ Ex. 20:5-6
 
 
 
 
The role of angels.
\\ Ps. 91:11
Heb.
1:14
 
Matt.
2:13
Acts 12:7
Acts 27:23
 
 
Giving your children- a Long and fruitful life.
\\ Ex. 20:12
 
Eph.
6:1-3
 
Jer.
29:11
 
 
Blessing though  insstruction and correction.
“It is one thing to open the good times by taking them fishing, but only a fool will leave them in the boat by themselves.”
/Children obey  (parents) \\ To hearken at the door,”/
/to listen, to harken.
//1a of one who on the knock at the door comes to listen who it is, (the duty of a porter).
/*/2/*/ to harken to a command.
//2a to obey, be obedient to, submit to./
/  /
/WE have to get them to open the door to us.. is not a given./
/Come make your self welcome./
/ /
Cultivating Honor
Worth-honor is the knowedge of the weightness of the position.
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