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.
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Emotion Tone
Anger
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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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Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
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Review
We are continuing our series titled “ Change Clothes”.
If you haven’t been here the past few weeks we’ve been talking about this idea of changing into the new, New year new you, putting on that Jesus swag, or whatever way you want to express renewing your mind from
.
Week one- We talked about in some ways our hearts have been hardened to the idea of being worthy, or not being good enough or it just isn’t my style or flat out disbelief.
“God looks good on them” but not me because of...( enter your reason here)
We looked at Where Paul is talking to the Ephesians about the misery of our hearts apart from saving grace.
Week two - We talked about this metaphor of the “The Dressing Room”.
This idea that once you have come to a place where you’ve been doing some shopping trying to figure out who you are or what would it look like to really live Jesus out.
You want to try it on first to see if it fits.
We looked at Ephesians 17-24 to explain how Paul is writing about changing your conduct through transformation and not information.
Information is great but it cannot take the place of renewing of your mind.
I can’t
God Can
Let God
Look within
Admit Wrongs
Ready yourself for change
Seek God’s help
Week 3- The idea of When the Master says, "Change your clothes," they adjust their collars or shine their shoes, or tuck in their shirts, but they won't take off those cherished habits.
We looked at
Become willing
Make Amends
Daily Inventory
Pray and Reflect
Give it away.
Week 3
We talked about the stage when you begin to change your style… You thought man that looks good on them, you’ve tried it on in the dressing room and now you’ve wore it a few times and you trying to figure out.
What else can I wear with this?
How can I live like this at school, work, around my non christian friends, in places where I’m the only one dressing like this?
We looked at
Paul gives us some contrast of what doesn’t look good with Jesus and gives us some examples that we should always wear with our Jesus swag.
Paul is talking about putting away falsehood and speaking truth.
While it seems elementary for many of us we are not always honest with who we are.
We are giving our family or friends the waterdown version.
These things don’t good look with Jesus.
Paul urges us to be angry but do not sin, He encourages us to work instead of stealing, watch our mouths because words reflect our hearts.
Finally he tells us to avoid grieving the holy spirit and put away harsh traits that dont look right while wearing Jesus.
This week we are going to talk about the point in the process of changing styles or putting on Jesus where doubt enters.
You seen the outfit on someone else, decided to try it on, you wore it a few times and you’ve even found some different things that looks good with this new look and then somebody says something, or self doubt starts to creep in and you have a setback with a sin or desire you thought you were over.
So you wonder…..
Am I a Fraud
We usually start to ask ourselves this question when we find ourselves dipping in some of those old ways or we hang out with someone who doesn’t know God and make us feel weird or stupid cause we are doing something new.
The emotional feeling is over and we become disconnected and we start to wonder… Am I a fraud… is this really me… Can I keep this up….Do I really believe this stuff?
Your swagger starts to fade and this enlightened feeling disappears.
So how do we handle this?
New International Version (NIV)
For today’s message I want to dive a bit deeper into the book of Ephesians to give us some context of what we have been covering the last few weeks.
For today’s message I want to dive a bit deeper into the book of Ephesians to give us some context of what we have been covering the last few weeks.
Who wrote the book?
Paul
When was it written?
Believed to be around 60 AD when Paul was prison
Who was it written to?
Ephesians is primarily written to Gentile (non-Jewish) followers of Christ—most likely the church in Ephesus.
Why was it written?
Paul wrote this letter to encourage Gentile believers, and to make it clear that Jews and Gentiles have been brought together as part of one body in Christ.
Paul is also concerned that his audience be made aware of the moral laws they may have been lax in following (or that they were unaware of).
What does it say?
Ephesians is first and foremost an encouraging letter.
Because of Christianity’s strong roots in Jewish history and religion, it was natural for early Christians to wonder if Christ’s gospel was limited to Jews, or if Jewish Christians held a special status because of their ethnic heritage.
Paul clearly wants his Gentile brothers and sisters to know that in God’s kingdom, they are first-class citizens alongside their Jewish brethren.
Paul also reminds his audience that since they now belong to Christ, they must start living their lives differently.
They need to distance themselves from immorality and strive for spiritual purity.
What can we learn?
this letter would have been tremendously encouraging to the non-Jewish believers who received it—and its message that Christianity is not bound by ethnicity is important for readers today, no matter our nationality or ethnic heritage.
Paul’s letter to the Ephesians is filled with reminders that God’s kingdom is open to all those who put their faith and trust in Him.
Before Christ
Verse 1- 3
2 jAnd you were kdead in the trespasses and sins 2 lin which you once walked, following the course of this world, following mthe prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work in nthe sons of disobedience— 3 among whom we all once lived in othe passions of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body1 and the mind, and pwere by nature qchildren of wrath, like the rest of mankind.
Before Christ we were a lot like this mouse.. Living with an empty purpose turning here turning there running into dead ends, retracing ending up in the same place sometimes chasing the cheese in hopes of satisfying your hunger for a sign that you are alive, chasing temporary fulfilment.
Paul is reminding us that the first blessing with changing clothes was redemption.
See he is speaking to the gentiles who had some doubts if Jesus message was just for the Jewish or “ religious” people.
He says, Jesus looks good on you and don’t let no one tell you you are not apart of the body of Christ.
We would all be considered gentiles because we are not jewish.
Some of us might feel like we don’t belong… so we can relate to not feeling accepted.
Paul’s conversion on the Damascus Road also represented his calling to serve as a missionary to the nations.
The Lord made it clear when Paul was converted that he was “a chosen instrument of mine to carry my name before the Gentiles and kings and the children of Israel” ().
Paul’s role as a missionary is captured by the words Jesus spoke to him on the Damascus Road according to : “…to open their eyes, so that they may turn from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins and a place among those who are sanctified by faith in me.”
Paul was God’s chosen instrument to bring God’s saving message to the ends of the earth.
Paul was dead before Christ.
We were all dead living a life of never ending sin following the world to every dark water it would take you with no coming up for air.. Just hitting another wall, another complication, another battle another struggle..
We all have lived there before… Some of us are still there..
We are running to the darkness because of anxiety, pressure, trying to live up to someone else’s standards.
Allowing other people to tell us what is acceptable and not.
We are running from our problems into another problem.
We are dead!!
Sort of like the scary movie scenes you know the one where the power goes out and they end up in the basement.
We are all like “ Don’t go down there” or the scene where they stick to their plan hide somewhere and bang they hit the enemy and he goes down and they have to go and check to see if he’s dead… cmon run get out of there.
Paul goes on to talk about how by nature we deserve death.
Why? Examine your heart for a second.
Think of some the things you have wished on people even your own family out of anger or some of the lines you have crossed.
You on your own make tons of bad decisions we are faulty.
We get emotional, We tell ourself lies, we say stuff out of anger..
We have tainted perceptions of others intentions.. Apart from God We are in a world of trouble.
BUT>>>
We are God’s creation.
He loves us.
Think of the way you love your family.
God loves us even more so than your capable of loving.
No matter where we have been, how many times we turn our backs even when we were living in darkness he loved us still.
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