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
0.13UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.1UNLIKELY
Fear
0.08UNLIKELY
Joy
0.61LIKELY
Sadness
0.47UNLIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.69LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.59LIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.79LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.82LIKELY
Extraversion
0.15UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.65LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.78LIKELY

Tone of specific sentences

Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9
Today’s passage is a serious but practical one about forgiveness and follows on from the story of the seeking out of the one out of hundred sheet that went astray.
If a brother, and this also means sister, sins against you go and sort it out mano a mano.
This expression, normally said as mono e mono which is a mishearing of mano a mano that is thought to mean ‘man to man’ is incorrect.
In fact it is a Spanish term meaning hand to hand.
This is more like how it is.
You are to go and convince, not just tell your brother that they are in the wrong.
You are to show them that what they have done is not right.
Not in a vindictive way but in order for there to be restoration.
Hand to hand means to get to grips with the issue.
If, then, they recognise their fault then you have won back your brother or sister.
Well, maybe they are stubborn and do not want to resolve the issue or don’t accept they have done wrong, so you are then, still in private, mind you, to take along one or two others to witness what you have said.
The other one or two would plainly be agreeing that you are showing forth the truth of the matter or you do not have any witness to back you up - this also stops any excess accusation and moderates the way you would handle this.
Hopefully, this will be enough then to convince the brother or sister of their fault.
We do not always take the word of one person but with two or three it starts to be hard to justify yourself.
But, even then, it maybe that they are not convinced enough to change their way and be reconciled.
It is only at this point it becomes public.
Here, in our Bible it says, tell it to the Church.
This cannot be the case as the Church does not exist at this point in time, but the word used is ‘ecclesia’ which literally means, the assembly.
The whole assembly then have to agree with the accuser and the witnesses that the brother or sister is in the wrong.
If then, despite all the weight of evidence presented by the whole assembly, that brother or sister still does not sort it out then you treat that person as if they are not part of you.
This on its own may induce the right response or it may not.
Either way there is no reconciliation with the original person who had been wronged and therefore there is no reconciliation with the rest of the brothers or sisters either until there is repentance.
It should always start one to one before it goes anywhere else.
Note that this is not about public shaming until the first two options have been exhausted and even in the later it is only within the congregation, it is not on full display to the world.
We have to be careful not to be the one who falls into the category of unrepentance.
This person has been given three opportunities to get it sorted.
Some things do not fall into this category, for instance, if it is already a public sin which then demands a public response.
Heresy, for instance is not included here and should be called out for what it is for the sake of all.
In all cases, though, it is not to condemn but to bring reconciliation to God and each other in the household of God.
There is no room for gossip about what one person has done to you.
In fact, it is strictly forbidden.
I’ll say that again: we are not putting on display to everyone everyone’s faults, there is to be discretion, there is to be no talking behind our brother and sister’s backs.
The binding and loosing mentioned here has its history in rabbinical sayings which mean to forbid or permit.
We can see the discipline side, the binding side, the forbidding side, very well when Peter spoke to Ananias and Sapphira and both died before him due to their unrepentance.
Perhaps the loosing side, the permitting side can be seen in the man outside the temple who was lame in both feet and he got up and danced about.
Whatever the disciples permitted on earth was confirmed in Heaven or rather what was confirmed in Heaven was permitted on earth.
Then there is a promise that leads on from this and that is that if two or more agree on anything in prayer, the Father will answer.
For I am there, says Jesus.
Context is important here.
What is He talking about?
He is talking about discipline, of forbidding and permitting.
The text should not be read as a carte blanche assurance that God will provide “anything” that two or three agree upon.
Jesus is simply assuring the Christian community that God’s presence and his resources are available to a church that exhibits a united prayerful concern for the welfare of one of its members.
The reason that the Father will do what is asked if two agree is because Jesus is present when two or three come together in his name.
The sense may be that “if you gather in my name, I am there, and my presence will lead to the Father’s support of your requests.”
The whole of the process for being reconciled with our brother or sister should be completely bathed in prayer.
---
This whole conversation led straight into another and are plainly linked: how often should I forgive?
Seven times?
The rabbis, you see, permitted you to forgive three times, so Peter had already stretched under the influence of Jesus and His grace.
But no, seventy times seven.
This is an idiom which means: you should always extend forgiveness no matter how many times you are offended.
Jesus then gives us an illustration with a story of a King and his servants.
Each one who owed him money was brought before him until this one who owed him 10,000 talents.
Well, sell him and his family off and get what you can, says the King.
The servant on hearing these words, begs for more time; I will pay all.
Well, actually, this was impossible but nevertheless the king saw the desperate state of the man and was moved with compassion.
OK, your debts have been wiped clean.
He was now in a better position than many of the servants who owed the king small sums of money!
And all this happened before their very eyes.
Now, no sooner had he left the presence of the King that he found one of his peers, another servant, who owed him a hundred denarii, and under Roman law was allowed to take him by the throat and threaten him, pay me what you owe!
And this servant fell at his feet and begged him for more time.
Only this time the servant, if given time, could probably have paid it back.
But no!
He got the jailers to put him in prison until he found a way to pay the debt.
And this happened before the eyes of those same servants who had not been cleared of their debts to the King.
They were very upset and disappointed at this outcome.
It was hard enough if you owed the king a debt but you’d think there would be camaraderie and leniency among your fellow workers.
And this caused those same servants to report back to the king.
He was compelled to return to the royal court where the king laid into him.
I forgave you all that debt and you should have done the same for your fellow servant.
You wicked man!
I think that no matter how much the debt forgiven he should have taken example and forgiven.
But it is shocking just how much debt had been forgiven this man: 10,000 talents.
One talent, if it was silver, would be 15 years wage.
So, let’s get this right, the debt was not 1 talent but 10,000!
It would take 150,000 years of wages to pay it back.
150,000.
This was an impossible debt.
How did he get this far in debt in the first place?
Well, friends it is that same kind of impossible debt that we have with God who is King of kings.
We have a debt that can never be repaid.
Yet we have been forgiven all our debt.
We have been given freedom.
In our story the servant not only wanted to be free from debt he now wanted to be in credit.
He found the one who owed him 100 denarii.
This was not a small debt either. 1 denarii equals one day’s wage.
100 is just over 3 months of wages.
Herein lies the problem: He had owed 150,000 years of wages and his colleague owed him 3 months.
Quite a difference.
What is being said here?
The debt we owed God can never compare to the debt owed to us by another.
We may indeed think we have every right to hold a grudge for the worst evils done to us but, in comparison to what we are owed, nothing can come close.
It is also why one of the key phrases in the Disciple’s prayer is: “Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.”
The only way for there to be freedom is to forgive now.
Forgiveness itself brings liberty to one’s heart and soul.
Bitterness is released.
This is why it is important to go and be reconciled to your brother or sister and sort it out, as far as it is possible with you.
There is no room for keeping others under the thumb or making others feel guilty, which is more to do with power.
Forgiveness and reconciliation is needed.
The process of going alone, then taking one or two others and then telling the congregation is the process.
If, then, there is no reconciliation, then that person can no longer be a member of that assembly until they put it right.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9