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.
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Emotion Tone
Anger
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Analytical
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Openness
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Conscientiousness
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Extraversion
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Tone of specific sentences

Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
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Agreeableness
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Anger
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Devotion
Prayer
Announcements
2 Samuel chapter 7 and I Chronicles chapter 17
Contents: David’s desire to build the Lord’s house.
The Davidic covenant.
Characters: God, David, Nathan.
Conclusion: We need no more to make us happy than to have God for a Father to us.
If He is our Father, we must be dutiful children, or expect His chastisements, which are an article of the covenant and which flow from His father-love.
Key Word: Established (kingdom), v. 16, (confirmed, v. 24).
Strong Verses: 14, 22, 25.
Striking Facts: The covenant confirmed to David by the oath of Jehovah and renewed to Mary by the angel Gabriel, is immutable, and God will yet give to the thorn-crowned King the throne of His Father David forever.
Luke 1:31–33; Acts 2:29–33, 15:1–17.
Keith Brooks, Summarized Bible: Complete Summary of the Old Testament (Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2009), 65–66.
Psalm number 1
Father, You have said that I will be in a state of happiness when I do not live according to the counsel or advice of unbelievers when it comes to living for You.
Lord, You gave me this life through Christ (John 10:10) and I need Your Spirit’s counsel in living it (1 Corinthians 2:12).
LORD, You also said that I will be happy when I do not remain in the way of sinners live life.
I know that I will be happy when I refuse to sit with the congregation of the disrespectful because my delight is found in meditating on Your Word day and night.
My way is cleansed by Your Word (Psalm 119:9).
Your testimonies are my delight and advisors (Psalm 119:24) and my desire is to be in the congregation of the LORD (Psalm 149:1).
I acknowledge that Your Word is true and accept that this is Your ordained way for me to be happy.
Change my passions so that I love and appreciate Your Word over any other books.
Change my practice so that I read, memorize, and study it daily.
Amen!
Psalm number 2
Contents: The psalm of the king; rejected, established and finally reigning.
Characters: God, Christ, kings of earth.
Conclusion: The kings of earth are ever setting themselves in array against God and His Anointed King, but in the day when He comes those who will not bend will be broken.
Infinitely wise is he who yields his life to Jesus now and dreadful is the folly of those who continue in enmity to Him.
Key Word: God’s King, v. 6.
Strong Verses: 8, 12.
Keith Brooks, Summarized Bible: Complete Summary of the Old Testament (Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2009), 111.
Striking Facts: v. 12.
The yoke of Christ is intolerable to a graceless neck but to the sinner, saved by His precious blood, it is easy and light.
Matt.
11:29.
Psalm number 33
Contents: Praise of God’s wisdom and power.
Conclusion: The righteous who know the goodness of God should never be empty of His praises.
Though the residence of God’s glory is in the highest heavens, yet His eye is upon every inhabitant of earth and no detail of their lives escapes His observation.
Striking Facts: v. 6.
The three persons of the Godhead united in the creation of all things.
Christ is the Word, (Jn.
1:1) without whom nothing was made.
The Holy Spirit is the breath.
God made the world, as He rules it and redeems it, by His Son and Spirit.
Keith Brooks, Summarized Bible: Complete Summary of the Old Testament (Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2009), 118.
After contemplating the LORD’s control over nations, the psalmist changes his focus on individuals.
He stated that God looks and sees all men from heaven.
God observes all the inhabitants of the earth.
He fashions or forms their hearts individually.
Here the psalmist is highlighting that God is Creator and that He continues to form either through circumstance, experiences, or His Word.
God also observes all their works.
The psalmist concluded that no king is saved by how big his army is nor is a strong man delivered by tremendous strength.
Security and deliverance are not found in the number of horses.
Security and deliverance are found in the LORD.
Psalm number 127
Contents: The vanity of worldly care and the wisdom of dependence on God for all things in the home.
Characters: God.
Conclusion: The best designed home will be a failure unless God crowns it with His favor.
He would have us keep our eyes upon Him in all the affairs of the family that we might avoid excessive care.
He would have us realize that our children are a trust from Him and will be most our honor and comfort if they are dedicated to Him.
Key Word: Home, v. 1.
Strong Verses: 2, 3.
Keith Brooks, Summarized Bible: Complete Summary of the Old Testament (Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2009), 137.
Psalm number 132
Contents: A pleading of the divine covenant and its promises.
Characters: God, David, Christ.
Conclusion: Those who have the immutable promises of God for their foundation stand upon a sure rock.
God has given us His promises that our faith might have strong confidence at all times, and that we might know that His Anointed will sit upon the throne of earth to reign eternally.
Key Word: Remember David, vv. 1, 10.
Striking Facts: v. 11.
Peter applies this to Christ and tells us that David himself so understood it.
Acts 2:30 Christ fulfilled all the conditions and the Father has given Him the throne of his father David.
Luke 1:32.
He is now at the right hand of His Father’s throne and when the fullness of the Gentiles is gathered in, the promise of the Davidic throne will be made good, and He will come to reign over all.
The saints shall sit with Him upon this eternal throne.
Rev. 3:21.
Keith Brooks, Summarized Bible: Complete Summary of the Old Testament (Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2009), 138.
2 Samuel chapter 8 and 1 Chronicles chapter 18
Contents: Full establishment of David’s kingdom.
Characters: God, David, Hadadezer, Joram, Toi.
The writer of 2 Samuel stated that David defeated the Philistines, the Moabites, King Hadadezer of Zobah, Arameans of Damascus who came to assist Zobah, and the Edomites were subject to him.
David put all of these nations under tribute.
The writer revealed the cause of David’s victories.
The LORD made David victorious wherever he went.
David could do nothing without the LORD, and he was only victorious in completing God’s will.
Deuteronomy 11:24 (CSB) 24 “Every place the sole of your foot treads will be yours.
Your territory will extend from the wilderness to Lebanon and from the Euphrates River to the Mediterranean Sea.
Striking Facts: The Son of David shall at length put down all principality and power and take the throne.
He has, as David had, a line to kill and a line to save.
The Gospel is to some a savor of life unto life and to others a savor of death unto death.
2 Samuel chapter 9
Contents: David’s kindness to Mephibosheth.
Characters: God, David, Mephibosheth, Ziba, Machir, Micha.
Conclusion: Kindness is one of the laws of Christianity and the Christian should seek opportunity of doing good.
The most necessitous are generally the least clamorous and the best objects of our kindness and charity are such as will be discovered only through our inquiry.
Striking Facts: The story gives us a picture of salvation by God’s grace in Christ.
Grace comes to the helpless, those “sold under sin;” invites us to the place of peace and satisfaction; feasts us at God’s table; keeps our lame feet out of sight.
2 Samuel chapter 10 and 1 Chronicles chapter 19
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