Sermon Tone Analysis
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Emotion Tone
Anger
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Disgust
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Fear
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Analytical
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Openness
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Conscientiousness
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Extraversion
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Tone of specific sentences
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Anger
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Title- How to Ruin Your Marriage in Three Easy Steps
Passage-
Attention- I have titled this message “How to Ruin Your Marriage In Three Easy Steps”
Introduction
The Guniess Book of record records two of the longes marriages ever.
One of 80 years and one of 85 years
They were both interviewed and their responses were encouraging.
1-At the end of bad relationship day, what is the most important thing to remind yourselves?......Remember marriage is not a contest, never keep a score.
God has put the two of you together on the same team to win.
2- What advice would you leave
Remember marriage is not a contest, never keep a score.
God has put the two of you together on the same team to win.
Her- “You must never go to sleep bad friends.
If you’ve had a quarrel, you make it up.
Never be afraid to say, ‘sorry’.”
Him- “Yes dear”
Not like the married couple I read about that had a quarrel and ended up giving each other the silent treatment.
Two days into their mute argument, the man realized he needed his wife’s help.
In order to catch a flight to Chicago for a business meeting, he had to get up at 5 a.m.
Not wanting to be the first to break the silence, he wrote on a piece of paper, “Please wake me at 5 a.m.”
The next morning the man woke up only to discover his wife was already out of bed, it was 9 a.m., and his flight had long since departed.
He was about to find his wife and demand an answer for her failings when he noticed a piece of paper by the bed.
He read, “It’s 5 a.m.
Wake up.”
What is the main driving point (CPS)?
There are characteristics in
Friends, when we live this life in our own power we will respond in our emotions and desires and that is harmful not only to us but to our marriages, families, and our testimony
Why does the CPS matter, what is the consequence?
When we respond in our emotions and in our desires we hurt others and damage our testimony
Transition
In the life of Nabal we will see several character traits that cause marriages to at best be difficult and at worst be destroyed.
I. Anger (2-3)
Explain
So, lets get this straight…
The guy is rich…the text says not that he was rich but that he was really rich
Before we go further, lets clear this up quickly
-We sometimes fall into this trap that more money will solve our problems.
But more money will not solve relational problems, it often causes more.
Nabal has plenty of material resources and even from the start of this account we find a miserable man
Not only is he rich, he has a great wife
We read that she was “of a beautiful countenance”…her appearance was beautiful
Not only that, she had a disposition that was delightful
She was intelligent
Discerning
Insightful
Pleasant to be around
Not only that but we might overlook the fact that he was from the family of Caleb…this was a prominent family in Israel.
A family that seems to have been responsible for the founding of David’s hometown of Bethlehem.
You do some further study and you come to realize that he and David are
It sounds like Nabal has it all going for him...
How does Nabal communicate?
How is Nabal described?
Churlish and evil…Evil we get but what in the world is churlish
This is one of the unique things about the KJV, it has some very memorable words.
Like churlish
Some people are rude unintentionally…due to ignorance
Nabal was rude in a mean spirited way…thats the sense of this word
His purpose in life was to be mean and angry
To make others as miserable as himself
We are not told why he is so miserable…but we are just told that he is more or less an angry man
In spite of the fact that he seems to have everything going for him he is a horrible person to be around
And from what we read there is no circumstances that dictate him being like this
Bridge to today
I had a boss like that once.
We started work well before he showed up....
If you didn’t see his car, or truck, or suv, or sportscar, whichever he chose to drive....pull up you never knew when you would hear his voice boom over the noise of the machinery in that building
Screaming at people…tearing them down
Your biggest hope was that when he walked by he had his golfing glove in his back pocket so you knew he would only bee there a few hours before t-time.
Relevance
I remember often wonder, what does his wife see in him besides the money
Did she know him before he had money?
Besides the money, why stay with such a miserable person?
Why does this matter?
Friends, marriage was created by God...
Marriage was created BEFORE sin entered the world, and at the end of creation God looked at all he created, including marriage and declared it not just good but VERY good
I understand that marriage can be difficult…every marriage has difficult days or periods but when you step back you ought to be able to see some level of joy.
God did not create us to be angry people or to respond to our spouses in anger
We are instead to respond in gentleness
I think that this kind of anger and misery comes from what we will see next in the life of Nabal
The next two points will give us the roots of is churlishness
Transition
The first root of his churlishness is that he was
II.
Selfish (4-12)
Explain
In verses 4-9 we see David doing a kind thing for Nabal
He noticed that Nabal’s men were in the area shearing their sheep and David and his men give protection to the shepherds and shearers
Now to us this may seem presumptuous that David, or anyone for that matter, would assume that they could expect food or lodging or anything for just doing something they weren't asked to do.
This is where a cultural understanding of Scripture comes in…it was apparently common for a man of Nabal’s wealth to assume that someone would protect a part of his wealth and respond by at least caring for their physical needs.
Especially in a culture driven by hospitality
What is Nabal’s response?
David who? Am I suppose to know who this David is?
He could be a run away slave for all I know
And what does he expect me to do?
Take MY bread and MY water and My flesh that I killed for MY shearers and give it to THEM when I don’t even know who THEY are!!!!
He was being selfish!!
Along with a few other things…most of all living up to the reputation that we already read about
Seven times in one verse Nabal uses the personal pronouns “I” and “my”
Bridge to today
This transitions nicely into a question for us this morning.
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