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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Joy
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Openness
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Conscientiousness
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Extraversion
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Agreeableness
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Emotional Range
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Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
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Anticipation
When you buy a house in most cases there is a delay between making an offer, having the offer received and then finally getting to settlement day.
It can be a funny time.
Maybe a month or more, knowing you sort of own this place, but yet knowing it’s not yet yours.
And in that time you probably spend ages driving past your knew place, imaging what life will be like there.
You picture your furniture in the new place.
It’s a time of great anticipation.
As we come to the part of the story of Scripture today, post the coming of Christ.
Post his Ascension into heaven.
The time we live in today.
There’s a sense of anticipation.
Of what’s next.
But like with a house settlement, we also know something about what the future will be like.
Jesus brings fulfilment
Bit of a recap:
Big story - God’s Kingdom
God’s people, in God’s place, under God’s rule and blessing.
The big story of the Bible, seen in the garden of Eden and promised to Abraham is the story of the Kingdom of God.
The story of Israel and Judah in the OT is one of partial fulfilment of those promises.
And in the gospels we have the coming of Jesus who fulfils all the promises of God.
He is the one to whom the whole OT points.
He is the one who brings God’s kingdom to bear.
He is God’s people, in God’s place, under God’s rule and blessing.
Last week we saw how Jesus is the fulfilment of these promises.
Jesus is God’s person
True Adam, True Israel… without sin!
Jesus is God’s place
Tabernacle.
God’s presence with us
Jesus brings God’s rule and blessing
New Covenant and Holy Spirit.
don’t mention the title there for printing only
Proclaiming the Kingdom
Why are we still here then?
Why is there more to the story?
Peter tells us we are still here because of God’s grace.
We are still here because God has called us to proclaim the good news and he hasn’t come back because God wants as many people as possible to hear the good news and repent and believe the gospel.
That’s our job.
Jesus described his job in Luke 19:10
And he commissions his disciples with the same job
Why are we here?
Living in the world post the coming of the kingdom in Jesus?
To seek and save the lost.
To make disciples.
To see God’s kingdom spread as far and as wide as possible.
That’s our job.
Sound exciting?
Maybe.
Actually it’s rather daunting!
Especially when we see the cost some people pay for being willing to talk about their faith.
That’s why God doesn’t leave us on our own.
The sending of the Spirit
The Spirit comes at Pentecost with the gift of tongues or languages in Acts 2.
This is a sign of the purpose of the Spirit.
It comes to empower God’s people for their missionary task of proclaiming the kingdom and inviting people to enter it.
Some in fact call the period of time we live in now the ‘age of the Spirit’.
Because the Spirit now dwells in not just Kings or Prophets or Priests, as He did in the OT, but in all believers.
The work of the Spirit
Brings new birth
If you think Jesus is who the Bible says he is that’s the Holy Spirit.
Doesn’t stop there.
Makes us more like Jesus
John 16:7-11 - Jesus tells us that the work of the Holy Spirit is to convict us of sin.
And in doing so to lead us into repentance.
When the Holy Spirit comes, Paul says:
The Holy Spirit comes powerful convicting us of sin and making us more like Jesus.
One of the ways The Spirit does this is He cause us to bear fruit:
Equips us to serve
Take Peter for example
The Spirit makes him bold to speak about Jesus when things were looking dicey!
Likewise as we saw in our reading today from 2 Cor 4, we are like weak jars of clay, but the Spirit empowers the Christian to do the work of Christ.
How does this all fit in the unfolding story of the Bible?
The Last Days
We can both enter the Kingdom of God now through faith in Jesus, but we also must wait for it.
For Jesus’ return.
We live in a fallen world which bears the marks of sin and of God’s judgment against it.
Yet we know the blessings of the kingdom in the new creation that are to come.
In these last days.
In this now but not yet time:
God’s people is the church.
God’s place is the believer indwelt by the Holy Spirit
God’s rule and blessing comes with the Spirit helping us to live up to God’s standards and enjoy his blessing.
Awaiting the Perfected Kingdom of God
How to best describe the age we now live in?
Like when you’re cooking a delicious dinner.
The house fills with the aroma.
You taste some of the sauce you’ve got your slow cooked meat simmering in and it’s just devine.
But you can’t enjoy the full joy of the entire meal until all the guests arrive.
So in the meantime as guests arrive, or as you run into people you tell them in your great excitement about how good dinner smells and tastes.
You share your joy and invite them to come smell, taste and see and be with you at the end.
When dinner finally arrives.
We’re waiting for dinner.
But gee whizz it smells good!
Let’s get on with the job of inviting others to dinner!
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