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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The Common Salvation
“Common” (Gr.
koinees).
Not the English meaning of “ordinary, everyday.”
Something held in common or shared by all.
Salvation is available to all and denied to none who accept it according to the terms of the New Covenant.
; , ;
There are five “common” elements connected with the “common salvation.”
The Common Need
The common need of salvation can be seen in .
Men are without strength.
Men are ungodly.
Men are sinners.
Men are enemies of God.
All have sinned ().
Sin separates man from God (, ).
All men have the common problem of sin and, therefore, have the common need of salvation.
The Common Remedy
To address the common need of mankind for salvation, God provided a common remedy.
The once-for-all sacrifice of Jesus was that remedy (, ).
The common remedy is available to all sinners ().
It “hath appeared to all men” ().
The Common Access
Jesus Christ is the common access to obtain the common remedy for man’s common need ().
He is the only way to the Father ().
It is Jesus that brings peace between man and God ().
The author of our salvation (, ).
It is in him that we are children of God ().
The Common Task
Christians must seek those things which are above ().
Christians must glorify the Father ().
Christians must defend the faith ().
God has set a common task before all the saved ().
The Common Reward
A crown of life awaits the faithful child of God ().
Christians have an eternal heavenly home ().
Christians have an incorruptible inheritance reserved in heaven (; ).
Christians have confidence of their reward in heaven (, ).
[1] Adapted from “The Common Salvation” by Felton Spraggins
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