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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Analytical
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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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Entice: It can be perilous to preach a text which is well known to virtually everyone present.
We must deal with that issue the next couple of weeks.
Some preachers are tempted to skip the more difficult texts, for me the issue has been how to avoid turning familiar texts into cookie-cutter, ambiguous, feel-good exercises in reinforcing what we already believe.
That is unfair, unfocused, and ultimately futile.
God's Word, when we take the time to exegete it carefully always has a clear, compelling message, and speaks to us with God's own authority.
It's immediate affect will not always be charming and idyllic.
It should also be challenging and thought-provoking.
Engage: We all know the names of the principles and the nature of their discussion.
Don't we? Surely, we do?
Right?
A great many of us could pass an examination about the subjects Jesus and Nicodemus discuss, the questions they explore, and the conclusions they draw.
However, the only real way to determine whether or not you have understood this passage of Scripture is to take inventory of your own faithful obedience.
Expand: What did Nicodemus and his comrades know, and when did they know it?
If they were already drawing correct conclusions, why did they continue to keep Jesus at arm’s length?
If their conclusions were wrong, why didn't they change?
As it became more and more apparent that Jesus was more than just a prophet, or wiseman, or miracle worker, why did their hesitancy so quickly become hostility?
Often the thing we pursue most ardently repulses us when we achieve it.
It is often the thing we desire the most which frightens us the most.
The hoped-for reality is not the same as reality realized.
That's one of the keys to this story...we are all Nicodemus' at one time or another.
Excite: It's not just information.
It's not just a matter of "getting it.
It goes beyond understanding the concepts discussed.
New Birth is God's work.
We spend way too much time trying to do God's part while ignoring ours.
All we need to do is to have faith...It's about as hard as you want to make it.
My friend Greg Payne and I used to stand near the time clock when we worked at Rockwell automation.
We were both part of the generation that arrived for a 5.00 start @ 4.35-40.
We would stand in amazement at 4.57 as a line of sleepy-eyed youngsters rushed and then waited to clock in.
He’d often say “Getting up on the morning is about as hard as you want to make it.”
I thought of that when reading this text.
Believing…is as hard as you want to make it.
Understanding the concepts and yielding in faith…much of the choosing is up to us.
Explore:
Faith is about as hard as you want to make it.
Explain: Jesus nudges Nicodemus through the process of understanding a step at a time...
Body of Sermon: First, Jesus reminds us to...
Address the obvious question.
The dynamics in this text are interesting because Nicodemus begins with what seems to be a statement and Jesus responds with His own
statement which answers Nicodemus' unasked questions.
Questions like,
"Who exactly are you?
"What must I do to be kingdom person?"
Not a question of
credentials
Not what I do.
Or say.
Or my background.
Not my degree or specific congregational affiliation.
But rather it is a question of
origins.
Kingdom people are born again.
Jesus continues the conversation by
Anticipating objections
Whenever we begin discussing faith people will voice a number of objections.
Nicodemus, a leader and teacher within Judaism objected.
It should not surprise us when we hear our contemporaries say some of the same things.
Things like...
I don't understand.
This is too good to be true.
It is easy for us to be way too hard on Nick.
He was there we are not.
I have found in my life that most objections to Christian faith fall somewhere into those two basic categories.
So, Jesus reminds us that the answers come from
Acknowledging God's work.
To answer Nicodemus' objections Jesus uses pairs of seemingly unrelated concepts some of them that are expressed in a single word...
Above and Again
Water and Spirit
Unseen cause and seen effect.
Yes the information contributes.
We all want to know that our questions are answered and that we can clearly see the difference between God’s work and our own.
In the end Jesus explains faith as...
Accepting the Witness.
Testimony offered and accepted.
When it is not accepted it may be thought of as
ineffective.
It does not have the impact hoped for.
That does not make it
invalid.
Because...
Understanding and believing are not exactly the same thing.
Saving Faith is IN the saving Son lifted up.
Shut Down:
I've know a lot of Nicodemus's They thought they understood.
They were ready for the test.
Quiz me Jesus!
There is really only one question.
And a single answer...
Jesus
The brilliance of the Gospel of John is that he weaves the words and the deeds of Jesus into a beautiful story the plot of which is Jesus, the tension is Jesus, the central character is Jesus, the question asked is Jesus, the answer given is Jesus.
The beginning and end is Jesus.
What a Word God has for us today!
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