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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Anger
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What did I learn?
Intro
—> My class in England was great!
I learned about early Methodist, about the Wesley Family, about the cultural religious structures, and traditions, but most of all I learned about me.
—> I went in knowing 4 of the 19 people on the trip 1 of those being the prof.
and if I’m being honest I thought that’s where I would end up.
—> I didn’t expect on the 3rd night in to be wrapped up in deep theological and cultural conversation with 3 guys I had just met 72 hours ago.
—> I didn’t expect a week later at a pub in Oxford over looking the River Thames (Tim’s) to be talking about the future of the church, the future of my ministry, and my deepest fears, doubts, and hopes, yet there I sat laughing, crying, hoping that the people sitting around that table with me would realize their full potential and be the Christians and leaders God needs them to be.
—> That became my prayer for myself, my family, and you, for the remainder of the trip, and I began to really search to find out where we lost our focus on our goal being the best Christians we could be.
Where are your roots? and What kind of tree are you becoming?
Col 2:
Paul uses this root metaphor only one other time in the New Testament.
Only once more does he compare the Christian walk to trees and roots but it is a very apt thought.
If you will think back to a few weeks ago we heard 2 or 3 sermons on the doctrine of The UMC.
This is not going to be one of those sermons.
—>
While I enjoy being United Methodist and I still think that’s where I belong.
I realized these past 2 weeks that we have lost sight of what is really important.
We have in the words of Paul, become captive to philosophy and human traditions.
What I learned was while John Wesley is given credit for being the “founder” of Methodism, the father of a denomination that wasn’t the goal.
He was part of a movement.
A movement that would connect people to Christ and to each other and to their community.
John Wesley did not want to start a denomination, in fact John Wesley never stopped being a clergyman in the Church of England, that was his denomination affiliation until he died.
The Methodist denomination was birthed out of the revolutionary war here in America because all of the Church of England Clergyman went back to England.
Had they not left I would argue we would be Anglican or Episcopal today and not United Methodist.
John Wesley and his coworkers only wanted people to love Christ and love each other.
—> But that’s what happens the world tries to move you away from Christ.
-shifts our focus to other people, other things, theologians, denominations, etc.
Col 2:
—> Christ fills us up to resist the things of this world
—> When we are connected to Christ we are made whole.
—> Things we do as Christians in the Church and with the Church help us to resist the world.
—> Our faith is not tied to legalism, it is tied to Christ.
—> vrs 11.
Paul is still fighting the idea in the Jewish Christian communities that people (gentiles) have to become Jews before they become Christians hence the circumcision.
—> Paul says its not the circumcision of the body that is needed only that of the heart or spirit.
—> For Paul Baptism is now the sign that one has entered the community and recieved this circumcision so to speak.
It is symbolic a dying to self to live with Christ and to be strengthened by Christ and the community of Christians you are in.
—> We still hold this true today.
When you are baptized you aren’t baptized into this local church but into the family of God and the entire Christian community supports you and lifts you up.
—>When we are connected to Christ, rooted in him, we have nothing holding us back
Col
—> Christ clear the field so you can grow.
He takes away the sin and the shame that chocked you out by His work on the cross.
There is nothing that can stop you from coming to Him and planting your roots deep in his love.
In the last 4-6 months, I’m not sure exactly where it happened I forgot where my roots were.
When we moved to Texas to take a job in the Methodist Church alot of people at my home church which is a church of the Nazarene asked my mom if she was mad I had switched denominations.
My mom said, “I didn’t raise him to serve a denomination, only Jesus.”
Friends, those are my roots and those are the roots I am striving to get back to.
I love the Methodist Church I love being Wesleyan but I love Jesus Christ more.
Let’s make sure we know where we are rooted and grow from there.
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