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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Analytical
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Confident
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Tentative
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Social Tone
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
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Anger
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Not in his worst nightmares could he have ever envisioned that he would end up here.
If you could go back in time and make different decisions he would do it in a second.
His parents had turned their back on him.
His friends were no longer his friends.
He was even disgusted at himself.
The people considered him worse than a sinner.
Guys like Matthew were worse, he was a “Tax Collectors.”
One day Matthew was sitting at his post and a crowd of people were hovering in the area.
Not to see him, but to see some guy called Jesus of Nazereth.
He tried to listen to what this Jesus was saying.
People were interrupting Him, and Jesus saw a man who was paralyzed.
He looked at the man and his friends and Jesus saw their faith.
He told the man “Your sins are forgiven.”
One day Matthew was sitting at his post and a crowd of people were hovering in the area.
Not to see him, but to see some guy called Jesus of Nazereth.
He tried to listen to what this Jesus was saying.
People were interrupting Him, and Jesus saw a man who was paralyzed.
He looked at the man and his friends and Jesus saw their faith.
He told the man “Your sins are forgiven.”
People laughed and people started yelling at Jesus that He had no right to forgive the man’s sins.
Then Jesus did the remarkable, the unthinkable.
He told this paralyzed man, not only are your sins forgiven, but get up and walk and go home.
At once the paralyzed man was paralyzed no more.
He got up and started to walk home.
The people were astonished and many glorified God.
As Matthew watched what was happening, Jesus began to walk towards his booth.
It was like Jesus was walking right at him.
Finally, Jesus was standing right in front of him, and Jesus simply said, “Follow me.”
It was like Matthew didn’t even think, he just got up and started to follow Jesus.
He simply got up and walked away from his tax collecting booth.
Matthew knew this was life changing, but he still didn’t realize what he was really doing.
Matthew was invited by God to join Him in ministry, to serve God and others.
We are all called by God and when we accept that call, our lives can be transformed.
Today we are starting a new series titled Made for Mission.
I believe the invitation that God is going to give us equally has the potential to be transforming for our lives.
Do you know the significance of the number 3900-4000?
That’s the estimated numbers of weeks you will spend on planet earth.
Don’t you think it may be worth taking 6 of those weeks to figure out if you were made for a mission?
I do hope you take the time to be apart of this series and discover the mission you where called for.
I believe God has a mission for each person’s life.
There’s a purpose and a plan.
I believe God has a mission for each person’s life.
There’s a purpose and a plan.
Sometimes we ignore that plan, we don’t like it, or we don’t hear it, so we miss out.
Others will kind of flirt with God’s plan and purpose.
They dip their toes into the water, but don’t get in the water.
Then there are those who hear the message and just jump into the water and swim away with God.
I believe we’re all seeking purpose, we’re seeking something bigger in our lives.
We all want to have a purpose for what we’re doing in our lives.
We want it to be more than just getting up and going to work everyday . . .
ultimately, we want it to be more than going through the motions of life and just simply existing.
We want to make a significant difference in this world.
I believe that’s part of the cause for so much restlessness in this world.
Ultimately, we were created to serve, for missions!
As we begin this series to see how we are made for mission, that we are called, we’re going to look at the story about Jesus calling Matthew.
After Jesus healed the paralyzed man, Matthew tells us –
9 As Jesus passed on from there, He saw a man called Matthew sitting at the tax booth, and He said to him, “Follow me.”
And he rose and followed Jesus.
The fact that Jesus, a Jewish man even approached Matthew, the worst of the sinners was astonishing.
Understand that Matthew was a tax collector and he was Jewish.
He had sold out his own people in order to become wealthy.
People hated him.
You would think these would be the last people Jesus would choose to be part of His inner circle.
Who would want to hang out with a tax collector?
I believe this is really important for us because some of us think God would never want me to do anything for Him.
I’m not good enough.
I’ve done too many bad things, I’m a really bad person.
We come up with all kinds of reasons to justify not being involved.
BUT, if God called Matthew to serve Him, why not you?
In his book Gaining by Losing, J.D. Greer, the Southern Baptist Convention, president wrote, “There is a widespread myth in the church that “calling into ministry” is a secondary experience that happens to only a few Christians.
Their job is to do the ministry and everyone elses job is to just show up and foot the bill.
Few lies cripple the mission more than that one.
Each believer is called to leverage his or her life for the spread of the gospel.
The question is no longer whether we are called, only where and how.”
With that in mind, know that you are called by God!
He has chosen you to be an active part of His mission.
Since your called, you need to start asking some big questions.
If you’re working — why did God make you good at doing what you do?
Surely not just to fill up your life with all kinds of comforts so you can spend the last 20 years of your life on vacation.
God has given you your talents as a means of blessing others and as a platform to spread the message of the Gospel - which is the mission the purpose and the plan of God for your life.
If you’re a stay-at-home mom, ask yourself: What role do I play in advancing the mission as I raise my kids?
The same question applies if you’re in the military, fire department, teacher or a student.
You may not be a pastor, but God has put you on the front lines of ministry.
The word “vocation” actually comes from the Latin word voca, which means “to call.”
What if you started seeing your job as an actual calling from God.
Everyday we have a new opportunity to serve God.
You can wake up and go through the motions.
Or you could see yourself, believe that God has called you to do something significant.
It could be a simple “Hello” to someone who needed a friend.
It could be a word of encouragement.
It could be a number of things because there is no limit to what God can do through you for His glory and purpose.
God has called us to make a difference every day.
It begins with God Calling Us…Calling us to a relationship with Him
A Call to Relationship
A Call to Relationship
When Matthew was called it wasn’t through an assignment, it was through the start of a relationship with Jesus.
When Matthew was called it wasn’t through an assignment, it was through the start of a relationship with Jesus.
Whatever we do, is the same, we’re called firstly, into a relationship with Jesus, so that we just don’t do stuff for God, but we are present with God.
God is the one who begins a good work in us.
And that good work is bring us into a relationship with Jesus.
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