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.
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Tone of specific sentences

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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
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Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
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Intro
Opening Story/Illustration:
Last words are important.
There’s a saying, “Famous last words.”
Here are some famous last words:
Text Background:
The last words of Jesus to his disciples are important.
His last words set out what I believe to be the mission of the Church.
Text:
Bridge to Points:
Jesus here lays out the mission of the Church - Go and make disciples.
That begs a few questions
What is a disciple?
How does one make a disciple?
What is the goal of discipleship?
Points
What is a disciple?
How does one make a disciples?
Discipleship is to be Educational
Discipleship is to be Relational
Discipleship is to be Educational
Jesus says here, “Teach these new disciples to obey all the commands I have given you.”
There’s a teaching element to discipleship
We need to learn what it means to follows Jesus
We need to learn what what the Bible says and how to live it out.
This is Jesus’ Model - He spends 3 years with 12 guys teaching them.
We cannot accomplish this on our own.
There are 3 things we need in order to effectively grow in our faith:
There are 3 things we need in order to effectivly grow in our faith
We need the Word of God
We need the Church
We need the Holy Spirit
When we only let one of those come into play, we grow in a way that can become imbalanced and unhealthy!
Illustration:
God has given the Church Apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers that we might grow up into the people God wants us to be.
The Holy Spirit works through the Church and the Scriptures in order to educate us and help us grow into the men and women that God desires us to be.
This growth doesn’t just take place on Sunday mornings in this service.
If you’re missing out on a Sunday School class you’re missing out on a vital part of your growth as a believer.
Sunday school classes provide opportunity for you to dive deeper into God’s word.
They provide a smaller context for you to ask questions and time for you to dig for the answers.
You might say well, I’ve been going to Church all my life, I’m pretty educated in this thing.
GREAT!
Then see me after service, we need you to teach!
If you don’t want to teach, we need you in a class so you can sit beside others and help them learn!
If you think you’re mature enough that you’ve got it all figured out, then I expect that you’re also mature enough to realize It’s not about you!
If you think that it is, perhaps you’re not as mature as you think.
Discipleship is to be Relational
You cannot be effectively discipled if you’re simply attending Sunday morning services and listening to the pastor preach.
Effective discipleship means life-on-life contact with others.
This happens best, not in a crowd, but in a smaller group.
Sociologists tell us that you can only really get to know about…(How many people?)
Coming on Sunday mornings and being with the crowd is great - But if you really want to grow in your faith, you need a small group of people where you can ask questions together, share your struggles together, work through your doubts together, pray together, eat together, and grow in Jesus together.
This was the model Jesus used - He picked 12 men and he spent 3 years with them.
His discipleship model was relational.
He didn’t simply set them down and teach them
He did life with them
They watched his example in the real world.
It was relational!
What’s the goal of discipleship?
To be like Jesus!
Paul lays out the goal here in Ephesians: That you and I would reach a point of maturity!
No longer tossed back and forth by the waves of life and doctrine
Learning to speak the truth in love
Growing up into Christ
Conclusion
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