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
0.56LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.67LIKELY
Confident
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Tentative
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Social Tone
Openness
0.89LIKELY
Conscientiousness
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Extraversion
0.55LIKELY
Agreeableness
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Emotional Range
0.79LIKELY
Tone of specific sentences
Tones
Emotion
Language
Social Tendencies
Anger
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When I was eight years old, some family friends gave me several boxes of football cards that belonged to their son who had left home to join the military.
It included a nearly complete 1986 Topps set, which included Jerry Rice’s rookie card.
And there were three of them.
I remember the card being worth about sixty dollars in the late 1980s and I dreamed of it turning me into a millionaire some day.
Unfortunately, football cards aren’t worth what they used to be, and I could probably sell it now for around 20 bucks.
It has actually lost value.
Sometimes words lose their value, and I fear that’s the case with the word Christian.
Over 80% of Americans identify themselves as Christians by religious preference, but less than 20% attend a church on a regular basis.
Church attendance is not the only identifying marker of a Christian, but it does indicate something about the person who claims to be a Christian.
Unfortunately, the name Christian has lost value and meaning, especially in light of how it was originally used.
In , the church grew rapidly in the metropolitan city of Antioch in Syria.
The followers of Jesus create such a splash that the pagans give them a nickname: Christians.
They are literally calling followers of Jesus “the Christ-people.”
Maybe they heard Christians speak so much of Christ that it was the only nickname they could create to identify these strange religious people.
But isn’t it powerful?
The word Christian wasn’t an option among many options on a religious preference survey; rather, it identified believers.
They were the Jesus-people.
How do our friends see us? Do we talk so much about Jesus and represent Him so well that they could legitimately call us “Christians,” or “the Christ-people?” Imagine the impact we could make on our communities if we legitimately portrayed Jesus in a way that others could think of no other way to identify us than to call us the Jesus-people.
Today, I will…pray that others will see Jesus in me so clearly that Christian will be my identity, not my religious preference.
One Word Devotion Book
When I was eight years old, some family friends gave me several boxes of football cards that belonged to their son who had left home to join the military.
It included a nearly complete 1986 Topps set, which included Jerry Rice’s rookie card.
And there were three of them.
I remember the card being worth about sixty dollars in the late 1980s and I dreamed of it turning me into a millionaire some day.
Unfortunately, football cards aren’t worth what they used to be, and I could probably sell it now for around 20 bucks.
It has actually lost value.
Sometimes words lose their value, and I fear that’s the case with the word Christian.
Over 80% of Americans identify themselves as Christians by religious preference, but less than 20% attend a church on a regular basis.
Church attendance is not the only identifying marker of a Christian, but it does indicate something about the person who claims to be a Christian.
Unfortunately, the name Christian has lost value and meaning, especially in light of how it was originally used.
Drinks
In , the church grew rapidly in the metropolitan city of Antioch in Syria.
The followers of Jesus create such a splash that the pagans give them a nickname: Christians.
They are literally calling followers of Jesus “the Christ-people.”
Maybe they heard Christians speak so much of Christ that it was the only nickname they could create to identify these strange religious people.
But isn’t it powerful?
The word Christian wasn’t an option among many options on a religious preference survey; rather, it identified believers.
They were the Jesus-people.
1. ____________________________
How do our friends see us? Do we talk so much about Jesus and represent Him so well that they could legitimately call us “Christians,” or “the Christ-people?” Imagine the impact we could make on our communities if we legitimately portrayed Jesus in a way that others could think of no other way to identify us than to call us the Jesus-people.
2. ____________________________
Today, I will…pray that others will see Jesus in me so clearly that Christian will be my identity, not my religious preference.
3. ____________________________
4. ____________________________
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