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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Agreeableness
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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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Hook
Who here likes movies?
Show of hands.
What is a movie you recently watched?
QP2
What about TV Shows?
Show of hands, whats a show you watch?
I’ve started watching some shows from my childhood again.
Looney Tunes
Courage
Dexter’s Lab
I used to watch The Office a lot.
In 2020 in 2020, The Office was streamed for 57 billion minutes on Netflix.
That is the equivalent to 108.5 years.
Who here plays video games?
Minecraft?
Fortnite?
Halo?
CoD?
STATISTIC: How much time do people spend watching/playing entertainment?
NY Post says the average person will spend 78,705 hours in front of a screen
That’s 3,279 days (Additive)
Almost 9 years (Additive)
Average adult will spend 2,943 hours deciding what to watch
That’s over 122 days spent just deciding what to watch
So tonight’s question is this: How do I know what to watch?
Turn with me to Colossians 3.
There’s going to be four takeaways today.
If you have a handout, you can take notes.
Book
Look
First takeaway is this: What we watch matters!
You should have a verse on your handout.
Does someone want to read it for me?
Everyone stand up really quick and stretch your arms up.
***Put hands in pockets, then fold arms***
Psychology tells us that through Movies and Shows and any other media, whoever controls them can change attitudes towards certain groups of people and cause newly formed opinions on various issues.
We mirror things.
Did you know that?
You mirror things.
You will reflect what you see.
So because you mirror things, our second point is Be aware of the rating of what you’re watching.
So there’s this thing called the Entertainment Software Rating Board, or the ESRB.
They rate your video games.
Early Childhood, Everyone, Everyone 10+, Teen, Mature, Adult.
There’s also people who rate your movies.
General Audiences (G), Parental Guidance Suggested (PG), Parents Strongly Cautioned (PG-13), Restricted (R, must have a parent for anyone under 18), No children under 18 permitted (NC-17).
Like the passage in Colossians says, set our minds on things above, not on earthly things.
Can I say something bold without getting political?
1.
If there’s a stance that is popular to the world but Christians are against it, there’s usually a reason why.
2. If someone thinks Christianity is supposed to progress, their idea of God is that He changes His moral standard to please people.
3. If you think Christianity has ever been on the wrong side of history, it’s because either someone is teaching you wrong, or the historical sect of Christians were hijacking God to fulfill their purpose (which is horrible).
How do I know these things?
Third point: Know that what you watch is shaping you.
What was the phrase we learned last week?
GIGO.
What does it mean?
Garbage in, Garbage out.
Everything you watch is shaping you.
Think about that when you go to watch something.
What is this saying?
Am I letting this teach me something?
Last point: Don’t be afraid to WALK OUT or TURN IT OFF or UNSUBSCRIBE.
If you feel convicted by something, there is absolutely no reason you have to sit there and endure it.
There is no point in sitting through something and feeling the conviction of the Holy Spirit within you the entire time.
Nothing is holding you back from cutting something off.
One last thought: Don’t let your screens DEFINE YOUR CHARACTER.
Let your character and love for Jesus shape your choices.
We do not make our choices to please others.
Rather, like we’ll be talking about for the Midsummer Lock-In, we evaluate our choices and ask WWJD.
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