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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Anger
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Analytical
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Social Tone
Openness
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Conscientiousness
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Extraversion
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Agreeableness
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On our way to the Grand Canyon, the map on our phone gave us two options for our journey.
One was quicker, showed no signs of traffic, and was pretty much all interstate—meaning we could test the limits of our new van.
The alternate route that was presented was a little bit longer, showed a portion of the route that had significant traffic, and barely any of it was interstate.
Given the options, which way would you have gone?
Well, we chose to go the longer way.
It was far more difficult of a drive, we were at a dead stop in traffic, but the view was unbeatable.
(Insert photo here)
For every person, a choice is laid before you—a way that leads to destruction and a way that leads to life, there are no other alternative routes.
Today, you must ask yourself this question...
Which way will I choose to go?
In the closing remarks of Jesus’ sermon, he brings to a head the point that He is trying to make, there are only two options, and you have to pick one—fading treasure on earth or eternal treasure in heaven, the cold cruel master that is money or the gracious loving Master that is God, and depending on what you choose determines the path that you will take.
(Insert OT Scripture Examples)
Jesus again presents His audience with the obvious fact that He is demanding from them to make decision.
Here He describes two gates, two ways, two destinations, and two crowds.
Jesus again presents His audience with the obvious fact that He is demanding from them to make decision.
Here He describes two gates, two ways, two destinations, and two crowds.
Not All Roads Lead to Heaven—in Fact, Only One Does.
As we look at the gates, one narrow and the other wide, we look at the entry point to the path that leads the crowd to the appropriate destination.
Yet, Jesus says “Enter the narrow gate.”
This command is an invitation by Jesus, and He is issuing that same invitation today— how will you choose to respond to it?
You see, if Jesus must tell us to enter through the narrow gate, we must then assume that we have not done so already.
We then need to realize that we did not instinctively walk through the narrow gate that He beckons us to.
And if we have not already entered the narrow gate, and there are only two ways, then what gate have we all already walked through?
The wide.
And if we have not already entered the narrow gate, and there are only two ways, then what gate have we all already walked through?
The wide.
We Have Already Made Our Choice, and Didn’t Even Realize it.
Broad Way
We have naturally walked through the broad gate and we did so with great ease.
By the broad gate are we able to seek our personal pleasure, our personal goals, and our bear with us our personal baggage.
As we enter through this gate, we carry with us no thought of our neighbor, but inevitably recognize that all people are potentially an enemy.
Anyone could very well be a threat to me and my personal happiness, but fortunately the wide gate leads to the roomy way.
The word that is used here to describe the way has by some translations been translated “broad” as read in the HCSB, NIV, NASB, KJV, and even the NLT.
Yet, what is meant by the term “broad,” but that the broad way is a spacious way as translated by the NET, and the spacious way is also the “easy” way as translated by the ESV.
So you and I have already entered through the wide gate, and because the way is roomy, each of us can pursue our own personal pleasures, truths, ideologies, methods, and the like in order to see that we are fully satisfied in our lives.
We live in a world where we believe everyone deserves to be happy, and we should allow everyone to pursue happiness by whatever means necessary.
This means that we find a wide range of lifestyles and patterns of living.
Each person is striving for the same goal, and while we might believe we are taking various paths to achieve that goal, in reality, the road we are on is wide enough to accommodate the traffic.
Some people are pursuing happiness by means of relationships.
Perhaps finding “the one” can bring meaning and purpose into their lives.
Today we see many marriages fall apart due to the common theme that their spouse no longer made them happy.
Similarly, we see people chasing after happiness in friendships, in sexuality, and family, but the end result is remains the same—emptiness.
Others today are pursuing happiness by means of achievement.
Just maybe another degree, a new business, a greater title will satisfy their thirst for happiness.
“More money equals more joy,” that’s how the saying goes right?
But what tends to happen when money is earned, homes are purchased, and greater status is achieved?
Worry.
What will happen to what is gained if the stock market crashes, a storm comes through or thief breaks in, or a new up-and-coming talent enters the workforce?
Happiness gives way to worry when money is our master and earthly treasures are our desire.
Still, some pursue happiness in faith, but faith in what?
Perhaps if they are religious enough they will find a satisfaction that will outweigh the parts they loathe within themselves—a spiritual morphine.
Then they can begin to critically evaluate and judge the flaws of others around them in order to enhance their sense of spiritual maturity.
They go to church, they serve, they even occasionally give to the offering, as these practices seem to fulfill the hole within the happiness they find lacking in life.
Notice now how easy it is to lay out a broad number of ways that we see our world pursuing happiness.
The gate is wide and the way is roomy, but each path leads to the same destination—destruction.
Grant Osborne says it like this,
The broad road is the way of the world, which accepts any pattern of life.
People can carry anything they wish along it, so “many” will travel this road.
The problem is that the final destination of such a road is eternal “destruction.”
It is no wonder we see so many suffering from sense of a lack of fulfillment and satisfaction.
Have you noticed that no one has come out and said, “This much money will make you happy,” “This kind of job fulfillment will give you the lasting sense of purpose you have been searching for,” and even the ones who have said, “You can find happiness in manner you love,” are also the ones who are in great distress and trouble because of their broken relationships.
In the end, we can pursue happiness in every form and every fashion, but all we can really accomplish is brief numbing of the pain we experience each and every day.
This is a path that we have all chosen to take.
Whether we’ve recognized it or not, we have already made our decision.
This path leads to an eternal destruction and separation from God in a place called hell.
It is no wonder we see so many suffering from sense of a lack of fulfillment and satisfaction.
Have you noticed that no one has come out and said, “This much money will make you happy,” “This kind of job fulfillment will give you the lasting sense of purpose you have been searching for,” and even the ones who have said, “You can find happiness in manner you love,” are also the ones who are in great distress and trouble because of their broken relationships.
In the end, we can pursue happiness in every form and every fashion, but all we can really accomplish is brief numbing of the pain we experience each and every day.
This is a path that we have all chosen to take.
Whether we’ve recognized it or not, we have already made our decision.
This path leads to an eternal destruction and separation from God in a place called hell.
In C.S. Lewis’ work Screwtape Letters, he describes this journey in this way—the way to hell does not have to be paved with spectacular wickedness, in fact, Lewis says,
Indeed the safest road to Hell is the gradual one—the gentle slope, soft underfoot, without sudden turnings, without milestones, without signposts.
So whether you have recognized it or not, you have made the decision to go down a path that ends in destruction, and some of you are still on that path not realizing the significant danger you are in.
But you do not have to live in danger or fear, and true happiness can be discovered, but not on the path that you are already taking—you must go a different way.
But you do not have to live in danger or fear, and true happiness can be discovered, but not on the path that you are already taking—you must go a different way.
Jesus Beckons Us to Make a Different Choice.
If the wide gate and the roomy way led to a satisfying destination, Jesus would not invite us to “Come.”
Yet, Jesus knows our fate should we continue the path we are on and implores us to go the other way.
Now the narrow gate is just that—narrow.
It provides no room for baggage, it provides no room for personal glory, or personal treasure.
No, those things must be left behind at the entry.
This entry is not one that we just so happen to stumble upon and the path one we wake up mysteriously walking on one day.
No, the entry way is clear, defined, and constricted.
In order to go to the path that leads to life, you must go to the cross that leads to death.
There is only one way to eternal life and that is through the crucified and risen Savior, Jesus Christ.
In , Jesus says that He is the door, and the only way we can find life, abundant life, is through Him.
Again He says in that “He is the way, the truth, and the life, no one comes to the Father, but by Him.”
The way to life is clearly marked, and as Grant Osborne says,
the entrance will entail great difficulty, restricting admission on those things Jesus has prohibited.
Such restriction though is hard for a world that longs for inclusivity.
We want to create a syncretistic world where all truths can be possible, even if they conflict, and every road lead to fulfillment, even if they are morally perverse.
The popular author of The Shack, William Paul Young, wrote in a recently authored book, Lies We Believe About God, that we do not need to be saved, and that sin does not separate us from God.
In fact, the cross was not even God’s idea, so Young claims.
Jesus has always been salvation, it just appeared when he did.
Yet, if Young is right what would the benefit be of Jesus’ death, other than to show us what obedience looks like?
And if we are in no danger of judgment and there is no need to repent of sin, why would Jesus go to the cross?
If destruction was not a real fate they everyone faces at the end of the wide gate and roomy way, why would Jesus implore us to enter by Him through the narrow gate?
The fact of the matter is according to , our sins do alienate us from God.
In our stubbornness we tread a path that is leading us to eternal separation from God, and no amount of copies sold of The Shack will diminish the reality that you and I need to be saved because our sin separates us from God, and so by His design and according to His plan, Jesus died on the cross, rose from the dead, and sits on the throne presenting the gate that we must pass through in order to gain eternal life.
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