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
0.16UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.1UNLIKELY
Fear
0.1UNLIKELY
Joy
0.59LIKELY
Sadness
0.51LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.87LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.51LIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.36UNLIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.73LIKELY
Extraversion
0.45UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.69LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.6LIKELY

Tone of specific sentences

Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9
QUESTIONS LEADERS ASK ME
Dr. John C. Maxwell
 
In my years of teaching on leadership, a few questions seem to arise over and over from pastors.
I recently had a round-table discussion with some pastors, and I picked out some of what I considered the best questions—questions I thought were particularly applicable to church leaders.
I hope it will help you address some of the issues you and your church might be facing.
*Question 1:  How do I keep my focus with so many distractions?*
Being busy does not always mean real work.
The object of all work is productive accomplishment.
To either of these ends there must be forethought, systematic planning, intelligence, and honest purpose, as well as perspiration.
Seeming to do is not doing.
So how do you keep focused with so many distractions?
Hire a top-notch assistant.
This isn’t /one of/ the most important roles in your organization; it is the /most important hire in your whole organization/.
My assistant, Linda Eggers, is my most valuable player, period.
The assistant who will change your life is one who is relational and knows how to handle people, but also knows how to keep people off your back, to keep you focused, keep you clear, and who will do all the other stuff that you don’t want to do or are unable to do.
Let me share with you some things that I determined many years ago would help me stay focused:
/ /
/I determined not to know everything./
It isn’t important for me to be the Encyclopedia Britannica.
It’s the difference between Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan:  Jimmy Carter would stay up in the wee hours of the morning reading minutia as president, trying to consume all the facts.
Ronald Reagan insisted on only knowing the most important things.
He had people around him to know all the other stuff.
/I determined not to know everything first./
Some leaders say, “I want to be the first to know everything.”
I like to be the last to know.
In fact, I would only like to know if someone else in my organization can’t fix the problem.
I believe problems should be settled at the lowest level possible, not the highest level.
I believe the people who should be fixing the problems are those who are closest to it.
In fact, my goal is that by the time I find out about it, it’s already been fixed.
The only thing that should come to me are things that nobody else can handle.
/I determined not to be the primary source of communication./
I’m not going to be the person who everybody comes to and says, “Hey, John, what do you think?”  “What’s your take on this matter?”
Any meeting I’m in, my assistant is in there with me.
Why?
Because I don’t carry anything out—she carries it out.
If memos are to be produced, she produces the memos.
If meetings are to be had, she sets up the meetings.
However—if you’re going to do this, it is important to not only tell your assistant decisions that you’re making, but tell them /why/ you are making those decisions.
If you tell a person the “why” behind the decision-making process, they will begin to be able to make your decisions for you.
/I determined to let someone else represent me./
I don’t attend most meetings.
Why?
Because Linda is in those meetings.
I say, “Linda, go to those meetings.
If there’s something I should know, you come out and tell me what I need to know.
You can come out of an hour and a half meeting and give me two minutes and I’ve got it all figured out.”
/I determined not to let someone else determine what should have my attention or take my time./
That was a major decision for me, because as a pastor, I began pastoring thinking that my goal was to meet everybody’s need.
It didn’t take me long to realize I could never do that.
There are too many needs, and there are a whole bunch of people who have needs.
I determined not to let someone else determine my agenda, because if someone else determines my agenda, I’m no longer leading, I’m responding.
There are five things I had to sacrifice to make this commitment: 
1.
Privacy \\ I have no privacy.
Linda knows everything—she runs my finances, runs my calendar, runs my life.
2.      Personal importance \\ People don’t check with John, they check with Linda.
3.
Knowledge \\ I don’t know everything; I don’t plan on knowing everything.
4.      Doing it “my way” \\ When you have other people doing your stuff, it’s not done your way; it’s done their way.
5.      “The 2% factor” \\ These are things that could have been done just a little bit better if I’d done them myself, but I didn’t do them myself, I delegated them.
On the contrary, I gained several things from this commitment as well:
1.      Better leaders
2.      Better teammates
3.      Better results
4.      Better skills
5.
More productive time
6.
A higher return on my gifts
 
 
*Question 2:  How do I effectively lead people who are much older than me and sometimes lack respect for me because of this generation gap?*
When I was 22 years old, I had graduated from college one Saturday, the next Saturday I got married, and two Sundays later I was at my first church – where the average age was 52.
The people were 30 years older than me.
Now that you understand that I’ve been there, here are four things I /didn’t/ do:
1.      Demand respect
2.      Worry about my youth or inexperience
3.      Try to lead the congregation immediately
4.      Play the positional leadership card (i.e.
“Respect me because I’m the pastor.”)
I /did/ do four things:
1.
I listened to people and became a consensus leader.
2.      I developed a solid relationship with influencers.
3.      I became a catalyst for growth.
If you can grow the church, all the new people will let you lead them because you’re the only leader they’ve ever known.
So, to get the leadership reins of a church, grow it.
4.
I borrowed the influence of the leaders.
I went to the influencers and got their opinions, and then I would say, “Here’s what we have been talking about, and (the influencer) thinks this would be a good idea.”
They didn’t think it was a good idea because I said it, they thought it was a good idea because that influencer said it.
*Question 3:  What is the single greatest personal challenge to my ministry effectiveness?*
The answer is very simple—me.
D.
L. Moody once said, “If I kicked the person responsible for most of my problems, I wouldn’t be able to sit down for weeks.”
What are my personal challenges?
1.      Success \\ The greatest hindrance to tomorrow’s success is today’s success.
Once you become successful doing something, you try to hold on to it.
2.
Satisfaction \\ The feeling of “I’ve arrived.
I’ve made it.”
3.
Motives \\ This is the number one failure in all leaders’ lives.
Why do I do what I do? 
4.
Possessions \\ Do I own them or do they own me?
When you’re generous, possessions don’t own you, you own them and purposely pass them on.
5.      Independence \\ After a while you get the feeling you don’t need anybody, and I have found that when you lose accountability, you lose anointing.
6.
Recognition \\ You’ve got to get over it.
In the beginning, I wasn’t as bad as people thought I was; today I’m not as good as people think I am.
Keep that balance in your life.
*Question 4:  Since the **Inner Circle** is so important, who should be there?*
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9