Sermon Tone Analysis

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Emotion
Anger
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Joy
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Analytical
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Intro
Good evening my Name is Junior, I’m so happy that you have chosen to be here, we go through many lengths to create an atmosphere where you can feel welcomed and loved but most importantly we want to see you be discipled.
That means the content and setting is geared towards helping you grow and develop into the person God wants you to be.
In order for this to happen we provide the right environment, relationships, and knowledge.
But this is a team effort, and a mutual motivation.
As leaders we sacrifice our time, talents, and treasure to ensure that we do our best, and our expectation is for you to appreciate that by your presence, participation, and progress.
We
Why this Series?
We live in a technological age, and wisdom in it’s use is very important.
God’s design for everything is that it be used for His glory.
Our role as Leaders is to help disciple students, and that includes helping them to master their possessions and not vice versa.
Stats to keep in mind:
What’s a smartphone?
A smartphone is a handheld personal computer with a mobile operating system and an integrated mobile broadband cellular network connection for voice, SMS, and Internet data communication; most if not all smartphones also support Wi-Fi.
Smartphones are typically pocket-sized, as opposed to tablets, which are much larger in size.
They are able to run a variety of software components, known as “apps”.
Most basic apps (e.g.
event calendar, camera, web browser) come pre-installed with the system, while others are available for download from places like the Google Play Store or Apple App Store.
Apps can receive bug fixes and gain additional functionality through software updates; similarly, operating systems are able to update.
Modern smartphones have a touchscreen color display with a graphical user interface that covers the front surface and enables the user to use a virtual keyboard to type and press onscreen icons to activate "app" features.
Mobile payment is now a common theme amongst most smartphones.
Today, smartphones largely fulfill most people's needs for a telephone, digital camera and video camera, GPS navigation, a media player, clock, news, calculator, web browser, handheld video game player, flashlight, compass, an address book, note-taking, digital messaging, an event calendar, etc.
Typical smartphones will include one or more of the following sensors: magnetometer, proximity sensor, barometer, gyroscope, or accelerometer.
Since 2010, smartphones adopted integrated virtual assistants, such as Apple Siri, Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant, Microsoft Cortana, BlackBerry Assistant and Samsung Bixby.
Most smartphones produced from 2012 onward have high-speed mobile broadband 4G LTE capability.
Introduced: in the early 90s
So as we begin this series today, it is a certainty that technology and more specifically the Smartphone has been a great benefit to us “Our lives are surrounded by our time on our phones: our calendars, our cameras, our pictures, our work, our workouts, our reading, our writing, our credit cards, our maps, our news, our weather, our email, our shopping— all of it can be managed with state-of-the-art apps in powerful little devices we carry everywhere.”
With all of these benefits, it’s no wonder our phones get more attention than anything else in our lives.
So what are the 12 ways that this piece of technology is changing our lives?
Reinke, Tony.
12 Ways Your Phone Is Changing You (p.
41).
Crossway.
Kindle Edition.
Reinke, Tony.
12 Ways Your Phone Is Changing You (p.
41).
Crossway.
Kindle Edition.
So what are
We will
No 1.
We are addicted to distractions
Some data from this book highlights that we check our smartphones about 81,500 times each year, or once every 4.3 minutes of our waking lives, which means you will be tempted to check your phone three times before we finish this presentation.
By a show of hands; how many of you have a smartphone/Cell phone?
How many of you check your phone within the first 20 minutes in the time you wake up in the morning?
Were you more likely to check social media before or after spiritual disciplines on a typical morning?
Ofir Turel, a psychologist at California State University-Fullerton, warns that Facebook addicts, unlike compulsive drug abusers, “have the ability to control their behavior, but they don’t have the motivation to control this behavior because they don’t see the consequences to be that severe.”
Reinke, Tony.
12 Ways Your Phone Is Changing You (p.
42).
Crossway.
Kindle Edition.
behavioral scientists and psychologists offer statistical proof in study after study: the more addicted you become to your phone, the more prone you are to depression and anxiety, and the less able you are to concentrate at work and sleep at night.
Reinke, Tony.
12 Ways Your Phone Is Changing You (p.
42).
Crossway.
Kindle Edition.
Why are we lured to distractions?
What do you mean when you say distraction?
Anything that preoccupies our attention with this world and life.
It is something that diverts our minds and hearts from what is most significant.
Reinke, Tony.
12 Ways Your Phone Is Changing You (p.
47).
Crossway.
Kindle Edition.
They can come in the form of a new amusement, a persistent worry, or a vain aspiration.
worldly worries, anxieties, and pursuits of wealth.
True distractions include anything (even a good thing) that veils our spiritual eyes from the shortness of time.
Reinke, Tony.
12 Ways Your Phone Is Changing You (p.
43).
Crossway.
Kindle Edition.
So how are we addicted to distractions?
Reinke, Tony.
12 Ways Your Phone Is Changing You (p.
47).
Crossway.
Kindle Edition.
Reinke, Tony.
12 Ways Your Phone Is Changing You (p.
48).
Crossway.
Kindle Edition.
Reinke, Tony.
12 Ways Your Phone Is Changing You (p.
49).
Crossway.
Kindle Edition.
we use digital distractions to keep work away.
Sometimes Facebook and other social media sites are a way for us to escape from the pressures of work (job, chores, school work).
E.g. when things get too challenging we just “rock back” and chill, indulging in all of the amusements and other distractions that the media has to offer (games, videos, chatting).
I am not opposed to taking a much needed break from a tiring task but sometimes i think about that person who tries to escape school research to just taking in the all the information your page and status has to offer.
tells us that we were created for good works, meaning although work can be difficult, because our mind and body was built for it, we can find lots of pleasure in doing and completing work.
Reinke, Tony.
12 Ways Your Phone Is Changing You (p.
43).
Crossway.
Kindle Edition.
we use digital distractions to keep people away.
God has called us to love our neighbors, yet we turn to our phones to withdraw from our neighbors and to let everyone know we’d rather be somewhere else.
E.g. if my phone is put away, I am more likely to be perceived as engaged.
If my phone is not in use, but is face up on the table, I present myself as engaged for the moment, but possibly disengaged if someone more important outside the room needs me.
And if my phone is in my hand, and I am responding to texts and scrolling social media, I project open dismissiveness, because “dividing attention is a typical expression of disdain.
Jesus said that we must love our neighbors, 4 Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant 5 or rude.
It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; 6 it does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but rejoices with the truth.
7 Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.
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