Sermon Tone Analysis

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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
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Analytical
Confident
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Social Tendencies
Openness
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Anger
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Last week we began a series called The Path.
All of us are headed on a path in life.
The direction you are headed in always determines your destination.
If you are headed north, eventually you will get to Canada.
You may have all the intentions in the world to go to the Beach on the Pacific or the Atlantic Ocean, but unless you go a different direction than North you will not get there.
Sometimes, in our life, when we start to realize that we are going the wrong way, we need to take a Detour.
(Show slide of a Detour sign)
If you have your Bibles go with me to Proverbs chapter 27.
We read one verse today, number 12.
Before we read this verse, I want to read a few verses in Proverbs to help make my point today.
See if you can identify the word that appears twice in these two verses.
The word is
Prudent - to know what to do, to exercise good judgment or having common sense
We don’t use this word much, but the book of Proverbs uses it a lot.
Listen to these verses.
Now look at our text:
Did you see that?
It is the exact same proverb.
It is recorded a second time.
Why would God record this Proverb twice?
Here’s what I think.
Proverbs is a book about wisdom.
I believe that God put this verse in here twice because He felt like it was something important for you to hear.
Listen to it again.
Remember that our path is important.
The road that we choose in life will determine our destination.
The question is...
How do you choose the right path?
How do you figure out what path you should be on?
Or in some cases, how do you figure out what path to get off of?
What this Proverb is telling us is the primary difference between the prudent and the simple is not what they see but how they respond to what they see.
Look at it again.
Both of them see danger.
One responds by taking a detour and the other keeps going and hopes that the danger will never arrive.
It’s kind of like an ostrich who buries his head in the sand: “If I can’t see it, it can’t see me.
If I ignore what I know is out there, it can’t hurt me.”
So how do you choose the right path?
1.
The Prudent Make Course Corrections.
Have you ever driven down the road and come to a sign in the middle of the road that says Detour.
What that sign is telling you is that there is possibly danger up ahead in the middle of the road and you need to make a detour to avoid it.
What happens if you continue to travel down that road?
You are going to end up in a heap of trouble.
Now I know that life is a little more complicated than that, but part of choosing the right path is getting off the wrong path.
It is time for you to see the danger ahead and say, “this behavior, this habit, this relationship, this whatever you want to name it, is leading me somewhere that’s going to hurt, so I’m going to get off of this path and get on a better one.”
And Unlike the prudent...
2. The Simple Keep Right on Going.
When a prudent person senses that a relationship is moving in an unhealthy direction, they do something.
The simple keep going.
When a prudent person sees trouble on their financial horizon, they do something.
The simple keep spending.
When a prudent person realizes that God is the most important person in the universe, and their relationship with him isn’t growing, they do something about it.
The simple keep doing whatever they were doing that took their time away from God.
Just to be clear.
Look at the second half of that proverb.
It says, “the simple keep going and pay the penalty.”
The penalty for what?
For refusing to act on what they see.
They pay the penalty because they see no connection between the choices of today and the experiences of tomorrow.
They overlook the fact that every path has a destination.
Sometimes you have to make a detour.
The really sad part about not making course corrections: not only does the simple person himself pay a penalty, but often a lot of people around him pay a penalty too.
His wife, his children, his co-workers.
The list of people effected could go on.
After hearing this, none of us want to be called a simple.
But no matter how old you are and you see a problem in the future because of your path, you need to get off that path.
If you don’t, you are “simple”.
So, how do you choose the right path?
3. Prudent People Know that it’s Not What They SEE that Makes a Difference, it’s What They DO.
So, they do things.
They make course corrections.
Here are 4 ways that you can make course corrections in your life.
1.
You DO Something!
Here is something that you may have heard me say before.
If you always do what you always did, then you always get what you always got.
If the road you are on is leading to destruction get off the road.
You take action.
You step off a path and get on another one.
This isn’t always easy because we are creatures of habit.
We naturally do what we’re used to doing.
If we’re used to overeating, overeating feels natural to us.
If we’re used to losing our temper, losing our temper is natural to us.
If we’re used to looking at pornography on the internet, then that’s what is natural to us.
Momentum carries us in the same direction, so to change direction means you almost always give up something.
2.
You Give Up Something
Think about it this way.
When you see danger, it almost always requires sacrifice, which is why we don’t do it.
And here is the ironic part.
When prudent people act, they often look foolish.
They do things that others aren’t doing; they swim against the stream.
They act as if then is now and change course before the wall ever hits them or they ever hit the wall.
And when you behave prudently, you usually will suffer embarrassment.
3.
You Must be Willing to suffer Embarrassment
Why?
Because nobody else is doing it.
Several years ago, before 2008, the economy seemed to be doing pretty good and everyone was buying and enjoying life.
The housing market was booming.
Builders were building faster than they could sell because people were buying.
Some people could see danger ahead and starting saving instead of buying.
Then in 2008 the bottom fell out and people were loosing their shirts.
The market dropped and business’s were filing for bankruptcy.
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