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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Language Tone
Analytical
0.54LIKELY
Confident
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Tentative
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Social Tone
Openness
0.69LIKELY
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
Language
Social Tendencies
Anger
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*/DOES GOD HAVE FEELINGS?/*
*/ /*
#.
There is an experience from my childhood that remains
indelibly imprinted on my memory.
It has to do with me,
the baby of the family, and my three older brothers
attending a Christmas function which was intended for my
older teenage cousins…afterwards I was threatened to
within an inch of life never to act so childish, so out of
control, so embarrassing to my older brothers, ever again.
* *
*/B.
/*Many of us have been taught that a part of maturing was to
learn to control our emotions.
Emotions like: happiness,
sadness, anger, outward affection.
If the truth be told, for
many of us this meant, not curbing our emotions, but
killing our emotions.
*/C.
/*But where we have experienced the strictest enforcement of
this code of conduct is in the church.
My earliest
recollections of church have to do with how solemn and
stern everyone seemed to be.
There was no laughter or even
smiles.
Worship, it seemed, was serious business.
Steven
Scoggins, the pastor of First Baptist Church in
Hendersonville, North Carolina illustrates through the
lyrics of a song entitled “Dancing Feet”just how sterile an
environment the church can be.
It goes like this: *Don’t get*
* excited, don’t let feelings out:~/ You’re not Pentecostal,*
* so don’t jump and shout!~/
We worship in order, we*
* don’t like a beat.~/
Why, the Devil is there when you see*
* dancing feet.*
* *
*/D.
/*But maybe keeping our emotions pent up inside is the way
it should be.
After all, if that is what God is like should we
not be like Him?
But what is God like?
Does He have
emotions?
If He does, would He ever express them?
If God
were to score a winning touch down, would he calmly hand
the ball to the referee, or would he do a celebration dance
with his teammates in the end zone?
*/I.
/**GOD IS AN EMOTIONAL GOD**/./*
*/ /*
*A.
He does happiness.*
* *
*1. *When you begin reading in the first chapter of the Bible you discover that God expresses great delight in what he does *(…God saw that it was good…God saw that it was very good…then he gave himself a holiday because he was so delighted with what he had created.)*
* *
*2. *Throughout the rest of Scripture we see repeated examples of God showing happiness when he sees people acting in ways that honor Him.
The prophet Zephaniah says regarding God,* “He will rejoice over you with gladness~/ He will quiet you with His love,~/He will rejoice over you with singing.”*
* *
3. If God can let loose in expressions of happiness, should we not also?
4.
But God is also referred to in Scripture as a “man of sorrows.”
* *
* B.
He does sadness.*
* *
1.
When we look at God as He is reflected to us through
the life of Jesus, we see that when Jesus walked up to
his dead friend Lazarus’ tomb, he didn’t put on a
brace face – he wept.
2.
As Jesus looked upon his beloved city of Jerusalem and
saw people wandering around wasting their lives, He
cried bitter tears and lamented,*/ “They’re like sheep/*
*/ without a shepherd.
They’re lost.”/*
* *
*3. *As Jesus was being arrested in the Garden of Gethsemane, and He knew what awaited Him, He tried to explain his sadness to His disciples,* “My soul is exceedingly sorrowful, even to death.”
*Another version says, *“My soul is crushed with horror and sadness.”*
* *
4. What does this suggest to us as to how we should handle painful experiences?
Put on a “happy” face or disclose our agony?
5.
But God also does anger.
* *
*C. **God does anger.*
* *
1.
We see that God gets angry through the actions of Jesus when He enters the temple to see dishonest businessmen jacking up prices for animals that were required as sacrifices for God.
2.
While some of us find it hard even to think about God loosing His temper, others of us are caught in the trap of thinking that anger is God’s only emotion.
We must remember the Scripture teaches that *“…The Lord is…slow to anger.”*
3.
How do we get God angry?
When we intentionally sin by ignoring the Savior.
In the NIRV Hebrews 10:26 says, *“If we keep sinning on purpose…if we do it even after we know the truth…then there is no offering for our sins.
All we can do is to wait in fear for God to judge.
His blazing fire will burn up His enemies.”*
4.
But, fortunately, God also does gentleness.
* *
*D. **God does gentleness.*
* *
*1. *We are told in Isaiah 42:3 that* “…He will not break the bruised reed, nor quench the dimly burning flame.”*
* *
2. Jesus was gentle with pesky children, with deceased lepers, down-and-out people – he touched them – he healed them.
*3.
*God has a gentleness that we need.
Some of us need it because we’ve only known harshness from people in our lives.
Whether it was a cruel parent, an unfair boss, a abusive husband, or even a rigid pastor or church, all some of us have known is judgement, derision, chastisement, and ridicule.
And God says to us, *“In a relationship with Me, you’ll know a kind gentleness that will meet the need of even a bruised reed and a flickering flame.”*
*/ /*
*/ /*
*/II.
/**BECAUSE GOD HAS EMOTIONS WE CAN MOVE*
* HIM.*
*/ /*
A. By our responsiveness and openness, by our trust, by our
faith and by our obedience *we can move God and send a*
* smile of delight across His eternal face*.
/ /
B. On the other hand, of course, *we also can break God’s heart - *in Christianity, we don’t just break a rule – we break God’s heart.
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