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
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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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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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Long week
Long week
Always learning.
Sometimes from books.
Sometimes from real life.
Sometimes that’s not fun.
Sometimes it is cheaper and less painful to learn from the book than from real life experience.
Much help, many thanks.
responsibilities spread around but stressful nonetheless
I imagine the disciples felt even worse the week that Jesus died.
Things got out of hand from the moment they set foot in Jerusalem, and the Jesus they could never quite control, went way beyond their comfort zone - kicking the merchants out of the temple and saying things that really stirred up trouble with the leaders in Jerusalem.
It was not so much what He said, but how He said it - particularly, without an army standing beside Him.
By the time the Last Supper came about and Jesus took off his outer garment and began washing their feet - they had no control of the situation any longer.
It was all His show from that point on and the best they could do was sit back and watch.
It must have been frustrating.
It must have been frustrating for Jesus as well - having spent 3 years with most of these men and women and they still didn’t believe what He taught them.
They had seen miracles, but kept thinking that somehow this death on the cross thing was a metaphor for something else.
When they found out it was not a symbol for something else, but that a cross was a cross - they all abandoned Him in mass confusion.
Jesus worked all Holy Week, while His team did all the worrying, and that is probably the best way to describe my week as well.
I didn’t do all the work, but I did quite a bit of the worrying.
The Mess of Easter
Have you been in those messy places in life where you can’t understand why everything all seems to happen on the same day?
It would make more sense and probably make us all a little saner if we could spread out some of the stressful events in our life more evenly across the weeks and months each year.
But life doesn’t work that way.
Even the events that were planned from the foundation of the world seem to all fall on the same few days.
Life is a mess and it often leaves us a mess, leaving us like the bad thief on the cross saying -
“If you really are God, why don’t you come down and save us instead of hanging up their dying and taking us with you.!”
We want saved and we want saved now.
But we don’t want to be a disciple and we certainly don’t want a cross with our name on it - one that we will have to die on ourselves someday.
All of this mess makes an empty tomb often seem more confusing than joyful.
Where’s Jesus?
Now, not only has He died, but now He’s gone!
What does this all mean anyway?
The Empty Tomb
God
If we think back through the many miracles of Jesus, they seem to build up upon each other.
The power of God they show and the truths they reveal about Jesus and ourselves may vary slightly, but it seems that each one is shown to a slightly larger audience each time.
Here they are:
1. Changing water into wine:
2. Healing the Nobleman’s Son:
3. Healing the Man at the Pool of Bethesda:
4. Feeding the Five Thousand:
5. Walking on the Water:
6. Healing the Man Born Blind:
7. Raising Lazarus from the Dead:
1.
No one noticed the wine incident other than the servants and Mary, the mother of Jesus
2. No one saw the healing of the Nobleman's son except the nobleman and his household
3. The man by the pool would have been seen by the other sick there who knew him, plus the disciples
4. The feeding of the 5,000 could have included that many if they were all paying attention to how much food they started with... probably though it was mostly seen by the disciples and the boy who brought lunch that day.
5.
The disciples all saw Jesus walking on water (this is one place their may have been fewer people around than the previous miracle)
6.
The blind man was seen by the disciples and probably a few onlookers... but then he was brought before all the Pharisees and religious leaders so he actually got a pretty big audience
7. Lastly, Lazarus had a big funeral crowd, as the Bible says many Jews from Judea had come to visit.
Not only would this be a bigger crowd, but this would have involved some influential leaders from Jerusalem.
In each case though, Jesus only does each miracle once.
The resurrection is different though.
Jesus could have just appeared once and headed back to heaven.
He could have trusted a few disciples to witness His return from the dead and share it with everyone else, the way He did with the transfiguration.
But no.
Easter is different.
Everyone needs an Easter and they need one of their own.
The empty tomb is not enough.
Oddly enough, when confronted by evidence that Jesus has raised from the dead, just as He promised, the first inclinations Mary, Peter, and John had was not that God fulfills His promises, but that someone had robbed the body.
Even in the face of all the evidence against that idea: the guards, the huge stone… there is just confusion and sadness.
The resurrection for the disciples was about meeting Jesus again for the first time.
It was about re-hearing everything He taught from the very beginning - but this time paying attention as though they really believed it instead of thinking this kingdom of God stuff was all symbolic of bringing back the good old days.
Those good old days were gone for good.
Jesus was bringing in something new and something so much better so that the past would pale and fade away in comparison.
Those who knew the Law and traditions of Jewish worship well would find it fulfilled in Christ, but it would look completely different so that those who were just participants and not teachers would think it was an entirely new thing altogether.
But this was not just about changing worship styles or rules to follow.
That is superficial stuff.
The change that Jesus brought was in the lives of the disciples themselves.
After they met the risen Christ, they were no longer the same people.
Paul writes:
Paul was not there at the resurrection, but he too needed an Easter, an encounter with the risen Christ to change his life.
He too needed that personal, life-changing miracle that picked him up where he was and moved him somewhere else entirely.
He believed that so much that his writing suggests that we have never really lived until we have found our life in Christ.
What does that mean?
What Easter means to you
It's not like Christmas, where we celebrate a gift given for us 2000 years ago.
Easter we celebrate a victory that we have been invited to walk in ourselves.
It is bigger than having your favorite team win a basketball championship.
It like more like, as they are winning, being invited to join the team yourself and stepping out on the floor in the final minutes of the game.
It's not like Christmas, where we celebrate a gift given for us 2000 years ago.
Easter we celebrate a victory that we have been invited to walk in ourselves.
It is bigger than having your favorite team win a basketball championship.
It like more like, as they are winning, being invited to join the team yourself and stepping out on the floor in the final minutes of the game.
Jesus wins.
Love wins.
Mercy wins.
Righteousness wins.
And you will win too if you join the team.
We have a jersey for you today, (although to be fair, in church we call them choir robes).
We would love for you to be part of our church, but you may already have a church home... or perhaps God is simply calling you to serve elsewhere.
It's all the same team when you are serving Jesus and we will celebrate that today with you as well as when Jesus returns in His final victory.
Just know you are welcome here.
The game is not over, but time draws short.
Will you join the team and join in the victory dance or will you refuse the offer and settle for being an observer of the faith?
Will you allow Jesus to raise you to new life today or are you going to satisfy yourself watching others live out their life instead?
Don't settle for just watching.
Step up and take part yourself.
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