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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Joy
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Language Tone
Analytical
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Tentative
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Openness
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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
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
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Big Idea: Jesus meets + calls sinners to discipleship [=mission + repentance]
Jesus transforms sinners into disciples
Jesus calls sinners to discipleship
Jesus
Big Idea: Jesus meets + calls sinners to discipleship [=mission + repentance]
Intro
Big Applications:
(1 non-C) we're all sick + need Jesus
(2 Christian) Jesus calls us to repentance [leaving, turning]
(2 Christian) Jesus calls us to repentance
(3 Christian) Jesus call us to join his mission
(3 Christian) Jesus' mission means mixing with the sick (like us)
(3a Christian) Jesus' mission means mixing with the sick (like us)
Outline
0:00 Introduce me
If I asked you to think of moments that changed your life forever, I wonder what you’d come up with?
Go on - have a think just now.
What moments are you conscious of that have changed your life forever?
PAUSE
For me, I think having kids is one.
So we started with twins.
“Double the blessing,” as one of our friends who already had kids told us - with a slightly terrified face.
For those of you who don’t yet have kids, those of you who are kids, there’s not really any point in me trying to get over to you just how massively it changes your life.
I think God has put a sort of total information barrier in place so it’s actually impossible for you to grasp this.
To ensure the survival of the human race.
Because if you could actually get your heads around how much having kids will mess up your life you’d probably not bother!
1:15 America; big time off; Road trip plans; R parents’ response.
Sometimes just a moment can change your whole life.
Context
2:30 Working our way through Luke’s telling of the life of Jesus, Luke’s gospel.
leper cleansed + restored; paralytic surprised + forgiven
Jesus is on a mission to restore, to save - what does today’s story add?
Words up on screen; in these blue bibles page xxxxx; ch 5 v 27; chapters are the big numbers.
4:00 READING:
5:00 Jesus doesn’t just save + wave (“go home” v24), leaving us to get on with our own life “now all that spiritual stuff is sorted”; Jesus saves + calls - like he does to Levi here (v27b “follow me”) - and it’s a call that will change our whole life.
But what is this call to?
Call to what?
5:45 a new way of life
Consider Levi’s first move: v28b he “left everything” (begins the phrase in the original language).
Now, to keep us from taking this too literally, notice Levi still has a house in v29.
So what does it mean?
Well, right then and there, he walked off the job - that much is clear.
We’re invited to picture him getting up from his little tax booth, I can’t help but imagine he’s a little plump.
He adjusts his robes, and to the astonishment of everyone around him, he just walks away from it, following after Jesus.
And as far as we know, he never went back.
But before you think I’m suggesting a Christianity totally incompatible with real life, it’s not the case that when Jesus calls to each one of us “follow me”, he means for all of us to walk off of our jobs.
The apostle Paul, one of Jesus’ first followers is completely clear about that in his letter to the Thessalonian church.
We’re to work so we can provide for ourselves and have something to share with those in need.
The reason Levi walks away from his job isn’t because real followers of Jesus don’t do jobs - he’s not a literal pattern for us in that way.
He walks away from his job because Jesus has called him to follow Jesus into a totally new way of life - one radically different from the way he’s lived up to now.
And that, that’s a picture for us.
“Leaving everything” is being ready to enter into a radically different way of life — no matter what the cost.
So what is this new way of life?
What can we learn about that here?
not stuff (see v29) but way of life
tax collectors notorious for wrong conduct?
7:15 a new purpose for life
Next step: throw a huge party for Jesus (v29 “he held a great banquet”).
emphatic language - the only one that takes place in the NT outside of a story.
What’s that got to do with following Jesus?
Following Jesus and sharing the good news about him are inexorably connected.
If you’re following Jesus, you’re following him in what he’s up to - and like he told us a few pages back, what he’s up to is announcing the good news of the Kingdom of God, that it’s coming, and it’s coming in Jesus himself.
So if you’re following Jesus, you’re sharing Jesus.
I want to show you three things about
This party’s all about sharing Jesus - and if you’re following Jesus and you want to share Jesus, let me quickly show you three things it teaches about how we can be a part of doing that:
Sharing Jesus by investing his resources (v29 “a great banquet at his house”)
8:00 This is a big party, right?
A huge one.
And just like the language for the party is emphatic, so’s the language for the guest list.
A “large crowd” are going to be there.
This isn’t a quiet night in for two - or even twelve.
This sounds more like a hundred people.
If you’ve had the chance to show hospitality to others in any significant number you’ll start to have a sense for the work involved here!
This isn’t the sort of thing you could just pull together at a moment’s notice - or even overnight - particularly back then.
It must have taken some serious preparation.
It must have taken a bunch of time and thought from Levi to pull it off.
And you know what, it must have had some pretty serious costs, too.
The words used for the feast make it sound like it’s going to be pretty fancy - not just a TV dinner.
But it’s not just the food, it’s the drink too.
And getting all the invites out.
And finding enough tables and plates and cups and people to cook and to serve… and a million other things.
Levi shows sharing Jesus is something which is going to demand some of our resources; our money, yes, but also our time, our energy, our creativity - perhaps even a lot of our resources.
Levi is footing a pretty serious bill for this party - and he seems to be delighted to do that as a part of following his new master, as a part of sharing Jesus and his good news with others.
So, first thing Levi teaches us about sharing Jesus is that it’s something to invest our resources in.
And it’s right for us to stop and examine ourselves as we see these things: Let me ask you: what’s the most you’ve ever thrown into planning and running an event for others?
Much more to the point if you’re following Jesus: what’s the most you’ve ever thrown into trying help other people meet him?
Don’t just think money; think time, energy, creativity - all of your resources, whether they’re many or few; whether you’re young or old.
All of us have resoureces.
All of us have opportunities.
Levi’s setting a high bar here.
So first thing, Levi teaches us about sharing Jesus is that it’s something to invest our resources in.
PAUSE
Sharing Jesus by connecting his friends (v29 “a large crowd of tax collectors and others”)
10:00 What’s the second thing to learn about sharing Jesus here?
Levi sets out to share Jesus by connecting with his friends.
Remember we started with those moments which change your whole life?
Well Levi has had one of those moments as Jesus calls him to “follow me”.
It’s going to change his whole life - and we saw this begin suddenly in v28 when Levi “left everything” -- meaning leaving behind his old way of life.
Now Levi was a tax collector.
Don’t know quite what you think of tax collectors today?
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