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.
Emotion Tone
Anger
0.48UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.14UNLIKELY
Fear
0.15UNLIKELY
Joy
0.51LIKELY
Sadness
0.52LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.74LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.34UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.94LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.7LIKELY
Extraversion
0.2UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.32UNLIKELY
Emotional Range
0.74LIKELY

Tone of specific sentences

Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9
You have heard the term pseudo used in our English language.
Pseudonym is a fictitious name that authors use to disguise themselves when they write.
Psuedo scientist is referred to when a person refers to himself/herself as a scientist when in fact they are not.
Pseudoscorpion is an arachnid with pincers like a scorpion but without the elongated abdomen and the ability to sting.
All of these terms contain the prefix pseudo meaning fake or false.
In the GK pseudo actually means to lie, or a falsehood.
It is important to our study today because we are looking at false teachers.
The term in the GK is pseudo(false) and didaskolos(teachers).
This phrase is rooted not in those who are confused as their role as teachers but instead those who lie and create falsehood as they teach others.
Our text today is found in 2 Peter, which is the second letter the apostle Peter wrote to the persecuted church.
Peter’s first letter to the churches were to encourage those being persecuted in the church but his second was to warn about the false teachers among them.
We should applaud Peter for his resilience in writing on such a danger and we should learn great lessons of warning about our own susceptibility of falling prey to false teaching.
No one knows they are under such false teaching until the Lord reveals it to them personally through their own discovery or through the aid of others.
What makes a person a false teacher?
Well in the OT, they were called false prophets and their designation was built upon their failure to speak rightly for God.
They would declare “thus says the Lord” but they never received such a word from Him.
Turn with me to Deut 13:1-10, Deut 18:20-22
Notice how the people of God are warned in these section about false teachers.
First, the identification of false prophets are helpful even for us as he church today.
They speak for God when God did not speak to them nor authorize them speaking (ch 18).
Moses declared they are false prophets when their words do not come to pass.
This is verification process of God’s people to be able to identify what is spoken by God and what was not.
They perform a sign to grab the attention but only lead people away from worship and honor of the Lord, not towards them.
The sign itself has no effect if the word is not accurate and sent from God.
In both cases, the focus is the accurate delivery of God’s words to the people.
To do otherwise, was an abomination and that person deserved to die (18:20, 13:5)
This is the final statement from Paul to the Galatians from our passage last week.
The word anathema is the GK word for condemnation before God.
It is Paul stating that those false teachers who preach a distorted gospel, leading people astray, should be turned over to the judicial wrath of Almighty God.
This is how we all feel when someone we love is legally violated or offended by someone.
We want the full extent of the punishment of the law to fall on them.
Paul is calling for that condemnation from God to fall on false teachers and Moses is calling that condemnation on false prophets.
So returning to Peter then, he is warning the church of these false teachers, and lets focus on a few observation about false teachers so that you and I can be warned and be alert to Satan’s schemes to lead others astray towards destruction.
Deceptive Intrusion: v.1a
“Rose Among the People”
First, Peter tells us that false teachers come from within.
It doesn’t mean that they grow up in a particular congregation and grow into that role.
He is saying that the infiltrate certain peoples first.
It is their practice to first get their proverbial foot in the door.
It makes logical sense for any decent church to have some hoops to jump through before they let a person teach others.
If there are no safeguards in place, then that church leadership should be removed…based on this warning right here.
False teachers lie and deceive to enter pulpits undetected.
Paul uses the word “disguse” in 2 Cor 11 which means to change ones outward appearance.
2 Corinthians 11:13 (ESV)
13 For such men are false apostles, deceitful workmen, disguising themselves as apostles of Christ.
Jesus says the same thing in Matthew 7 but in a more analogical way as he warns the disciples that false teachers are ravenous wolves ....in sheep clothing.
Boy that paints a scary picture right there for wolves are hunters and to have a wolf enter a sheep fold dressed like a sheep is intentional deceptive hunting with intent to kill.
Let us be reminded by the way that false teachers who seek to hunt a kill by lying about their appearance and by corrupting the biblical doctrines of God are only doing so because they serve Satan.
Satan is a deceiver and the father of lies and therefore he seeks to disrupt the work of God’s kingdom by leading people to false conversions, to distort God’s word and by delivering those attacks by false teachers.
This marks the motives of a false teacher not as good or wholesome because they serve sin and Satan, not holiness and the Lord.
Warning leads to action
Because of such a wicked intrusion in the church, then the church must man the gates and leave up their defenses.
We must be alert to who is teaching and what are they saying.
Here at RCC, our elders are the primary teachers with occasionally others like our interns are allowed to teach the church.
We do not allow just anyone to teach you from this pulpit because we acknowledge the responsibility before us.
But we cannot be in your homes, watching every youtube preacher or podcast you listen to.
Its concerning to us because we know the charlatans that are uploading those vile distortions of God’s truth every day.
Church you must be aware!
Be alert to what God’s word teaches and what they are saying to you.
If they claim to have found a new and different interpretation, separate from centuries of church theologians and scholars, then you need to question such a discovery.
How could it have gone unnoticed for so long with the illumination of the Holy Spirit?
It could not so be aware.
Deviating Loyalty: 1c
“Even Denying their Master who bought them”
The second observation is their position in the church.
Much like the previous sermons I shared with you, these false teachers are from within because they are disguised as born again but corrupt in their spirit.
This is a problematic verse because it seems as if Peter is stating that these false teachers were bought by the redemptive work of Christ.
Being purchased by the Master is salvific language throughout the NT and built upon the language of the OT.
The idea is that Jesus purchased a people from the slave market of sin with his work on the cross.
The ransom was paid so that slaves could be liberated and the price paid was the very life of Christ.
Being “bought with a price” is language designated for the true church and yet here Peter uses it in relationship to false teachers.
What does this mean?
Did Jesus ransom false teachers as well?
To understand this passage more clearly, we need to continue on with these verses below to see more of Peter’s description of them.
He refers to them as unrighteous (v.
9b)
They indulge in lust of defiling passion
They despise authority (v 10)
They blaspheme about matters to which they are ignorant (v 12)
They are reveling in their deceptions (14)
They have eyes full of adultery, insatiable for sin (14)
They entice unsteady souls (14)
Now these are some of the descriptive pictures of these false teachers that Peter clearly views as unregenerate.
They have not truly trusted in Christ and therefore they are dead in their sin and without salvation.
So why does Peter say that their Master bought them?
Some interpreters use these verses to teach a universal atonement.
A Universal Atonement is the belief that when Jesus came into the world as a sacrifice for sin, his death was a sacrifice that effectually paid for all the sins of every person in the world.
The thought is that Jesus made it possible for everyone to be saved but a person believing in Him upon salvation, actually activates that redemption, therefore making his atonement applied upon their behalf.
One major proponent of this view was the opponent to John Calvin, Jacob Arminius.
Arminius and his followers believed and taught such a universal atonement.
After his death, his followers crafted this statement,
Jesus Christ, the Savior of the world, died for all men and for every man, so that he has obtained for them all, by his death on the cross, redemption and the forgiveness of sins; yet that no one actually enjoys this forgiveness of sins except the believer, according to the word of the Gospel of John 3:16: “God so loved the world that he gave his only-begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.”
Problems with these views:
1.
If Jesus died for the sins of the whole world, but only those who believe in Him activate his redemptive work in their lives, then logically, people who reject Christ actually have theirs sins paid for and it is in man’s power as to whether that activation occurs or not.
This speaks contrary to any part of our salvation being by works.
“not of works so no man may boast.”
2. In addition, if their sins are paid for but not activated, then there is a reservoir of the blood of Christ or the work of Christ that goes unused and discarded, like the left overs after a large Thanksgiving meal.
This is blasphemous to consider that any of the work Christ accomplished in his death is discarded or thrown away.
Charles Spurgeon said,
Heritage of Great Evangelical Teaching (Christ’s Limited Atonement)
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9