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
0.12UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.12UNLIKELY
Fear
0.1UNLIKELY
Joy
0.6LIKELY
Sadness
0.49UNLIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.58LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.3UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.87LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.9LIKELY
Extraversion
0.39UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.5LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.6LIKELY

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
Last week, we talked about being God’s Masterpiece.
Just so we all understand this, turn to your neighbor and remind them that they are a masterpiece.
Have you ever noticed that everyone tends to gravitate towards people who are like us?
People who look like us.
People who think like us.
People who believe like we do.
People who vote like we do.
People who are in the same socio-economic demographic as we are.
We like being with people that are essentially like us.
We say we want diversity.
We claim we want to be different.
We claim to be very anti-groupthink.
But the truth is, we really like to be like others.
Even the people in High School that claim to be ‘non-conformists.’
Think about it!
They all wore the same black clothes, had the same basic hair style.
They all listened to the same general type of music.
And they all hung out at the same places.
This group of people who all looked the same, acted the same, listened to the same music, etc., called themselves ‘Non-conformists.’
Ironically, to be a part of their group you had to conform to their standards.
And if you aren’t sure about this, look at most churches on any given Sunday.
Sunday morning has been called the most segregated hour of the week in America.
This isn’t necessarily because we seek to exclude others, but because we are naturally drawn towards sameness.
Churches marked by diversity are generally that way through lots of intentional effort.
Think about it this way.
Last week I talked about Masterpieces.
If yo have a building where the walls are all covered with the same masterpiece, over and over and over, it’s called wallpaper.
If you have a building where the walls are covered with masterpieces of varying size and color and shape, it’s called an art gallery.
Nobody plans a great heist to steal your wallpaper, but art galleries are targets because they have immeasurable value.
As a church, the body of Christ, when everything is the same, we cannot be a community of one that transforms the world.
We are NOT stronger When we are all the Same.
We ARE stronger when we are all different.
If you have your Bibles with you this morning go with me to the book of First Corinthians.
I want to read from chapter 12 beginning at verse 12.
First Corinthians is a letter written by Paul to a group of Jesus followers in a town where it was very tough to be a follower of Jesus.
It was a very diverse city.
There were people from all over the Roman Empire that lived there.
There were Jews, Greeks, Gauls, Germanic, African, slaves, free, ex-military, those conquered by the military, many different religious backgrounds, and many different socio-economic backgrounds.
They didn’t all get along because they were so different.
And the church in Corinth, the community of Jesus Followers, reflected the diversity of the community.
This meant sometimes the people in the church didn’t get along very well.
The differences weren’t simply about race, culture, economics and so on.
Some of the friction was caused by the fact that different people had different gifts and different roles in the church.
So, Paul wrote this let and he reminds them of three things that is also good for us as the church of today.
1.
We are One Body, Many Parts
Think of the human body for a moment.
There are 600 muscles that make up the human body.
There are 206 bones.
The average person has between 30 and 40 trillion cells.
In order for the human body to operate and function the way it is supposed to function it needs every part doing its part.
Paul assured the Corinthian church that it didn’t matter how many different types of people were in the church, because they were in Christ’s church they were now all one together no matter what background they came from.
I like vegetable soup.
Especially when fall rolls around and we get that first cold spell that comes.
Usually I go to the store because we don’t always have everything that I need to make my soup in the pantry.
I use 100% tomato juice as my base.
I put that in the pot to get it hot and while that is getting hot I cut up my potatoes and carrots.
I have to put those in first because it takes them longer to get ready.
I let them cook for a few minutes and then I add the can vegetables: peas, corn, green beans, tomatoes, rotel, and I’ll put some spices in for flavoring.
There are multiple ingredients but as that soup begins to cook with all the ingredients together, that soup becomes one.
That soup doesn’t taste the same without everything together.
If I didn’t put the spices in, it’s not the same.
If I didn’t put the tomato juice in , it’s not the same.
If I left the vegetables out, it’s not the same.
It takes all these ingredients to make my vegetable soup.
Each one of us is different, but because we are in the church, we are one.
We all act different.
We talk different.
We different opinions.
We have different political views.
We have different ways that we like to spend our free time.
We have different jobs.
But as the church we are one.
Our differences is what makes us great for God’s kingdom.
The next thing Paul tells them is...
2. Every Part Is Needed
Turn to your neighbor and tell them, we need you here.
I like all my parts.
I am blessed that I have not had to lose a part of my body.
Some of you have lost a toe or a finger.
My grandfather lost 2 fingers to a lawnmower.
We don’t realize how valuable something is until it is gone.
Your hand or eye may seem to be more important, and may have more “glamour” in its position, but it is not more necessary or important than other parts of the body.
The parts of our bodies normally covered by clothes are often considered less honorable, but we give them greater honor by clothing them so carefully.
The parts of the body work together.
The eyes and ears do not only serve themselves, but the whole body.
The hands do not only feed and defend themselves, but the whole body.
The heart does not only supply blood to itself, but serves the whole body.
Sometimes there is a part of our body that only lives to serve itself.
It doesn’t contribute anything to the rest of the body, and everything it gets it uses to feed and grow itself.
We call this cancer.
We are here to serve one another and love one another and rejoice with one another.
Here are two questions for you today.
What is your response when a fellow Christian is honored?
How do you respond when someone is suffering?
Too many times though we are jealous of those who rejoice and apathetic toward those who weep.
When that happens, we have overlooked our connection with them in Christ.
We are in this thing together.
There is no such thing as private Christianity.
Christ makes us one, even when we wish otherwise.
When we follow Christ, we find ourselves in mixed company.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9