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.
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Tone of specific sentences

Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
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Social Tendencies
Openness
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Anger
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What it is that the Swiss are known for?
Among other things, Switzerland is known for being neutral in twentieth Century world wars.
They are known for their international banking industry.
Perhaps the Swiss are known for a delicious cheese that is perfect on a ham sandwich or with a glass of wine.
Or maybe they are known for making tiny pocket knives.
Maybe you didn't know that my favorite theologian, John Calvin, spent the better part of his pastoring life in the city of Geneva, Switzerland.
But the Swiss are also known for clocks.
As it turns out, the dispersed population in the mountainous country of Switzerland meant clockmaking was a bit of a cottage industry of various skilled craftsmen, and the Swiss became very good at it.
For many years, clockmaking was an elite trade.
This is primarily because the craftsmanship required to make clocks that actually kept accurate time was very precise.
So there developed in Switzerland a rather elite industry of making watches and clocks using a very precise technology of gears and resistors to ensure the most accurate products.
Then came along Max Hetzel.
Max Hetzel was a Swiss Engineer who worked for a watchmaking company in Neuchatel Switzerland.
In 1954, Hetzel discovered quartz technology.
This enabled Hetzel to develop an entirely new internal mechanism for timekeeping.
Hetzel replaced the old system of intricate gears and resistors with a single miniature tuning fork that resonated an exact frequency of 360hz.
By 1960, Hetzel honed this device to power the gears of a wristwatch that kept accurate time within a margin of 12 seconds per year.
The watch was easier to make, required less battery power, and was infinitely more accurate than any timekeeping device ever invented (except maybe the sundial).
Max Hetzel discovered something that would forever change clockmaking.
By the twentieth century, global competition for watches and clocks was becoming tight.
Max had found a solution to an obstacle that was becoming more persistent for Swiss clockmakers.
With Max’s discovery of quartz technology to power clocks and watches, the longstanding tradition of Swiss clockmaking had found a path to competitive dominance.
The Swiss could preserve their place as the best clockmakers in the world and continue to produce far superior timepieces than anybody else.
And now they could keep doing this in a way that would ensure they could also be competitive in a global market.
An obstacle of global competition produced a new way forward.
Max gave the Swiss clockmaking industry and ‘up next’ moment.
Sometimes obstacles do that.
Barriers can interrupt the regular routine of our daily lives and force our attention to find and ‘up next’ moment.
But, barriers and obstacles can also be frustrating.
Life would be so much easier if we didn’t have to keep bumping up into obstacles in our path.
It is both an opportunity and an obstruction to our way forward.
Detours and Dead Ends
Let’s deal with that.
I started this series a few weeks ago with the challenge to start thinking about whatever it is that God is placing right in front of you as a next step forward in your walk of faith.
And you don’t get too far down that track until some kind of obstacle gets in the way and you have to start asking yourself some questions.
Is this really the next step that God wants me to take?
Is God placing this barrier in front of me to tell me I’m doing the wrong thing?
Or is this barrier a work of Satan’s demons trying to dissuade me because I AM in fact doing the right thing?
Is this a detour that needs a corrective run-around to stay on course?
Or is this a dead end telling me to turn back?
How do you know?
I’ve asked you to start thinking about what your ‘up next’ moment might be.
How do you know if the next step you see in front of you is the right thing?
Or to put the question into something a little more precise, what happens when some kind of obstacles start getting in the way?
What does my ‘up next’ moment look like?
What are the obstacles and barriers keeping me from it?
Bring it back to the story from 1 Kings.
Elijah is coming off a huge win.
God has just demonstrated a show of force on Mount Carmel that annihilates all the false prophets of the false god Baal.
God showed up in his iconic fashion with fire and power.
God showed up in a way that made it certain to all the Israelites there on Mount Carmel that YAHWEH alone is supreme in all the universe.
This showdown of the gods was a complete one-sided victory.
This is the scene that Elijah has just walked away from.
And now, only a few short verses later, he is running for his life.
What happened?
God had won the contest on Mount Carmel.
God was now sending rains back on the farmlands after years of drought.
This ought to be the victory lap moment, not the run and hide moment.
So what happened?
How did Elijah get so turned around?
What got in his way?
I suppose the preacher answer is that he stopped trusting God for a moment.
But that’s moralizing an answer in a way that takes away from the story.
So let’s stick with what the story tells us because this is where God reveals something of his message for our lives as well.
Wicked queen Jezebel hears about what has happened on Mount Carmel.
She hears about the way in which her god, Baal, did not even show up for the fight.
She hears about the way that YAHWEH, the God of the Israelites undeniably shows who is ruler of the universe.
She hears about the way that Elijah commands the Israelites to put all of Baal’s prophets to the sword.
You would think that Jezebel might come to repentance in this moment and realize that Baal is a phony.
But no.
Instead she comes down twice as hard of Elijah with an imminent death threat.
She wants Elijah dead by the next day.
Does that count as an obstacle?
Someone with royal authority is trying to kill me.
Is this a detour or is this a dead end?
Is God giving me a course correction or is this a sign that I should abandon ship and a get out of town?
The threat from Jezebel is not really the obstacle here.
She is not the barrier getting in the way of Elijah taking the next step forward.
The actual obstacle is in verse three.
The author of 1 Kings lays out the barrier between Elijah and his next steps from God with three words.
Elijah was afraid.
That’s’ the obstacle getting in the way of Elijah moving on to his ‘up next’ moment.
Fear is what is keeping Elijah from taking the next step forward.
Fear is what pushed Elijah to turn completely around and run clear out of the country.
It’s actually a pretty common obstacle.
Of all the commands that God gives in the Bible, the most repeated command from God is to not be afraid; to be bold; to be strong; to have courage.
Fear is still a pretty common obstacle.
Chances are that at some point in your walk of faith there has been an opportunity of some kind to take a step forward into an ‘up next’ moment that has passed you by because we find ourselves too afraid to take that step.
It can be a fear of the unknown, a fear of what I might lose along the way, a fear of failure in my efforts to take a step forward.
Narrow the list for a moment.
Let’s think about the opportunities to take a next step right here at this church.
Maybe it’s an opportunity to sign up to be a mentor, maybe you know that you are ready to make public profession of faith, maybe you are a regular visitor who has never made the move to join and become a member, maybe you stay away from joining a small group or a Bible study, maybe you have never signed up to participate in our choir or some other volunteer service.
In any of those examples right here at this church, what is it that is holding you back?
Is there a fear of some kind that is getting in the way?
Is there an obstacle to that next step which—in all honesty—is a barrier of your own making?
We cannot confront and work around the barriers in front of us if we will not first of all be honest to identify and admit what those obstacles are and where they come from.
I can say over and over again, God I am just not sure it is the right time for me to join a small group or for me to make public profession of faith.
But I cannot fool God when the thing that holds me back is not a question of timing, but that I am simply afraid to do it.
Removing Barriers
What do we do about that?
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