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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Tone of specific sentences

Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
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Are you like Chippie?
Who is chippie?
I met chippie in Max Lucado book In the Eye of the Storm, (Word Publishing, 1991, p. 11.)
Chippie the parakeet never saw it coming.
One second he was peacefully perched in his cage.
The next he was sucked in, washed up, and blown over.
The problems began when Chippie’s owner decided to clean Chippie’’s cage with a vacuum cleaner.
She removed the attachment from the end of the hose and stuck it in the cage.
The phone rang, and she turned to pick it up.
She’’d barely said "hello" when "ssssopp!" Chippie got sucked in.
The bird owner gasped, put down the phone, turned off the vacuum, and opened the bag.
There was Chippie -- still alive, but stunned.
Since the bird was covered with dust and soot, she grabbed him and raced to the bathroom, turned on the faucet, and held Chippie under the running water.
Then, realizing that Chippie was soaked and shivering, she did what any compassionate bird owner would do . . .
she reached for the hair dryer and blasted the pet with hot air.
Poor Chippie never knew what hit him.
A few days after the trauma, the reporter who’’d initially written about the event contacted Chippie’’s owner to see how the bird was recovering.
"Well," she replied, "Chippie doesn’’t sing much anymore -- he just sits and stares."
It’’s hard not to see why.
Sucked in, washed up, and blown over . . .
That’’s enough to steal the song from the stoutest heart.
“Sucked in, washed up, and Blown over” That about sums up how many of us feel at times isn’t?
James understood what it feels like to be sucked in, washed, and blown over.
He realized we will all feel that way in life, that is why he begins his book the way he does.
What book is that, you ask, why the book named after him.
James.
James has been called by all all a lot of different names.
But the one I like best is:
A Practical manual of Christian living
It tells us how Christians are to face life, how to relate to one another, and how to live with compassion..
So, you ask who is giving this advice.
Great question.
You want to make sure you get your advice from someone qualified to give it.
I am a part-time writer.
When I first started writing I listened to everyone.
But as I have grown in the craft, now I make sure I listening and reading only people who are successful authors.
Who is James?
The brother of Jesus
Leader of the early church
Bond-Slave of God
Take your Bibles and turn to James 1:1 “James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ, To the twelve tribes scattered among the nations: Greetings.”
We don’t need to march to the drumbeat of daily life or analyze its melody for very long before we realize that much of life’s music is played in a minor key.
Hurts, heartaches, pain, problems, disappointments, discouragements, sicknesses, suffering, disease, and death form a jarring bass line for what everybody wishes were an upbeat chorus.
How would James suggest you and face face the tests and trials of life?
First, he would say...
BE steadfast.
James wrote about trails of many kinds.
David Plat said in his book exalting Jesus in James.
Notice that James refers to “various trials” in verse 2. “Various” includes small trials, big trials, minor trials, and major trials.
Sometimes we wonder why the little trials are there, and then when the big trials come, the tragedies and the difficulties that make the everyday trials seem so small, we wonder what James is thinking when he tells us to count all of these things as “great joy.”
How can the Bible be serious about this?
Realize that James is not telling us to rejoice in the trials themselves.
We are not stupid.
Pain is painful.
No one wants to experience suffering, small pains, or the large overwheling, wrenching, moments of our lives.
Those trials that are just to painful to talk about.
No one is saying send me more, I can take it.
If you are saying that to God, you need help.
Normal people what to avoid trials.
But what James is saying here is that trails will come to us all, the only aspect of them we can control is how to view them.
James is suggesting no, commanding, us to view the trials differently.
To stop seeing the negative only, instead to look for how God is planning to use them to shape and form you. Someone has said, every experience will go through in life is preparing for the day we will stand before God, and hear him say, “Well done my good and faithful servant.”
Now don’t misunderstand me, I am not implying God is infecting you with trials and temptation.
James warns us:
James 1:13
Some Trials come from life, while some temptations come from Satan.
Just as he tempted Jesus, the Devil is going to tempt and test us, but for different results.
God uses our trials and temptations to grow us as Christians.
Let me see if I can illustrate this.
A consumer protection group will test a new car to find its flaws, while the car‘s manufacturer tests a car to find its strengths.
Both we put the car through the same tests, but for different reasons.
In the same way, Satan tempts us to bring out the bad (James 1:13–18), while God tests us to bring out the good (James 1:1–12).
Nothing tests the perseverance of our faith like our response to temptation.
James 1:3
In a survey of 710 inventors, perseverance was the most frequently mentioned characteristic needed for success.
In line with this result, Nathaniel Wyeth, the inventor of the plastic soda bottle, speaks of how he was able to utilize his initial failures and achieve multiple insights because he persevered:
“You have to have a tremendous amount of patience and not give up easily.
Even when a problem has been bugging me for weeks or months, I would go to work every morning with a good, clean slate and feel that I was starting fresh-using my failures and the knowledge of things that wouldn’t work, as a springboard to new approaches.
If I hadn’t used those mistakes as stepping stones, I would never have invented anything.
I would have said, ‘Well, if it doesn’t work the first time, forget it’” (quoted in Brown, 1988).
-- Robert J. Sternberg and Todd I. Lubart, Defying the Crowd: Cultivating Creativity in a Culture of Conformity (New York: The Free Press, 1995), p. 210.
Let me share with you the rules of perseverance.
The Rules of Perseverance
Rule #1:
Take one more step.
Rule #2:
When you don’t think you can, take one more step,
Rule #3 refer to Rule #1.
-- (Weyerhaeuser, February 1997, “Health Wise” Vol.
XVII, No. 2.)
James would not only tell us to be steadfast and preserve.
He would tell is to...
BE wise.
The word James uses is...
σοφία [sophia] (4678) or “wisdom”
“Wisdom” has a rich meaning in the Hebrew Scriptures as well as in early Jewish Christianity.
Wisdom involves far more than mere knowledge of facts and advances even beyond skillful living or the emphasis on practical virtue seen in Greek philosophy.
Rather, “wisdom” in the Christian sense is a gift from God closely associated with the presence and working of the Holy Spirit, producing supernatural discernment and prudence.
This explains why God, not human beings, is the ultimate source of true wisdom, which James repeatedly emphasizes (James 1:5; 3:13, 15, 17).
UNDERSTAND Generosity
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