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
0.1UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.11UNLIKELY
Fear
0.11UNLIKELY
Joy
0.65LIKELY
Sadness
0.22UNLIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.42UNLIKELY
Confident
0.36UNLIKELY
Tentative
0UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.92LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.91LIKELY
Extraversion
0.1UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.73LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.71LIKELY

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
Some of my favorite kinds of entertainment are improvisational.
You guys have heard me talk before about my days of following the Grateful Dead and other jam bands around the country.
What made all those shows special was that they were never the same.
Even the same songs played from one show to the next were always different.
One night, the band would play a basic five-minute rendition of one of its popular songs, and then a week later, they’d play that song again, this time stretching it into a 15-minute version that took them and the audience to places they never would have imagined that song could go.
That’s one of the reasons I like jazz music.
Some guys get on the stage, grab a few instruments and then create something that has never existed before, something that will never be heard again unless the show is being recorded.
Once in a while, we’ll turn on the television to reruns of a show we used to watch all the time, Whose Line Is It Anyway?
Perhaps you’ve seen it, as well.
There are four comedians on stage, and a moderator (for a long time, it was Drew Carey) will give them prompts and, sometimes, props, and the comedians have to create a funny skit or song based on the prompt.
Sometimes the result is laugh-out-loud funny, and sometimes it’s a bit risqué, but it’s always amazing to me that they can create comedy on the fly.
Whenever I try to do that, I get into trouble.
But I think that creativity like this is in our very nature.
After all, we were CREATED by the God who made us in His image.
We were made to represent His character in and to the world around us.
And so, perhaps such creative acts as a jazz saxophonist noodling over a bass line or a comedian creating a funny skit from a simple prompt should not surprise us.
After all, we have within us the very breath of the God who spoke all things into existence.
We see this in Genesis, chapter 2. Now, it may seem odd to us that this chapter restates so much of what we see in Moses’ first account of creation in Genesis, chapter 1.
What you need to understand is that this is a characteristic of Hebrew storytelling, and it’s a characteristic we see quite often in the Old Testament.
A Hebrew writer will give one account of an incident, and then he will follow that account with another of the same incident that has a slightly different perspective, one that includes certain other details missing from the first account.
And what’s normally going on when we see such dual accounts is that the first is a general recounting of something that happened — in this case, creation of the universe.
And the second account, along with its different details, focuses our attention on something specific within the greater story — in this case, the Garden of Eden and the relationships between God and mankind and between Adam and Eve.
And so, it wasn’t necessary for Moses to repeat the details of chapter 1 in chapter 2 or to present everything in the same linear fashion.
In chapter 1, he is describing the greatness of the God who creates only good things.
In chapter 2, he is describing the graciousness of this God, who breathed into man the breath of life and set him into a garden where he had everything he needed to flourish in peace and then gave him a mate who would complete him, and together, they would help one another be the people God had made them to be.
And the central verse here — at least for our study today — is verse 7.
The Hebrew word that’s translated as “formed” here means to shape or mold something.
Whereas God had spoken light and plants and animals and fish and birds into being back in chapter 1, he FORMED man.
He made man with His own hands, as it were.
The implication is that God took great care in making Adam.
He created Adam much as an artist might create a beautiful sculpture.
By speaking everything else into existence, God demonstrated His creativity.
By shaping and molding Adam out of the dust, He demonstrated His artistry.
When God breathed into that first man the breath of life, Adam became a living being, a living soul.
And we know from what Moses wrote about this sixth and last day of creation back at the end of chapter 1, that this culminating act of creation made it all very good.
At the end of each of the previous five days, God had looked over what He had created, and He had pronounced it good.
Now, with this final work of creation, God looked over everything, including Adam and Eve, and he announced that it was VERY good.
We must not miss the point that everything God created was good.
That’s the kind of God He is.
He makes good things.
He ONLY makes good things.
He made everything out of nothing.
He brought light out of darkness.
He brought peace and prosperity and order out of chaos.
And as the people who had been made in His image, He charged Adam and Eve with doing as He had done.
Be fruitful and multiply.
Create life, just as I have created life.
Fill the earth.
Extend my creation beyond this garden.
Subdue the earth.
Bring it under subjection; take what is disordered outside this garden and bring it into order.
Rule over every living thing.
Be my representatives on earth and rule in my Name.
He took us from the dust and made us to reign over the dust and everything else on earth.
And so, how did we respond?
You all know the story.
Adam and Eve were disobedient.
They failed to trust that God was good and that He had their best interests at heart.
He had forbidden them to eat from one tree, the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
He had given them one boundary that they must not cross, because He loved them and because He knew that on the other side of that boundary were suffering and death.
But Adam and Eve wanted to set their own boundaries.
They didn’t believe God had set this boundary for their own good.
They wanted to decide for themselves what was good and what was evil.
And so they disobeyed.
Their first recorded activity together as a couple was to disobey God, to turn on Him.
And the result was disaster.
Whereas God had brought light out of darkness, they brought the darkness of spiritual separation from God out of the light of His presence in the Garden.
Whereas God had brought life out of nothingness, they brought the curse of physical and spiritual death onto everything and everyone.
Whereas God had brought order out of chaos, they brought the chaos of sin into the peaceful place He had created.
We were made in the image of a God who creates only good things, but our first creative act in history brought evil and corruption and death.
And this has been the problem of all mankind ever since the Garden of Eden.
We are made in the image of God — made to reflect His character — but we also bear the image of our first parents, Adam and Eve, the image of sin and death.
And we confirm that we are their children — that we bear their image — in ways great and small every day.
In every lie, in every selfish act, in every lustful thought, in every greedy behavior, we commit for ourselves the same sin of disobedience that caused their separation from the God who made us all to be in fellowship with Him.
Each one of us creates chaos and darkness and death in our sins.
This is not what God made you for.
This is not how things were ever supposed to be.
But you and I are all helpless to make things right.
We cannot fix what we have broken, no matter how we might try.
The hurt that we cause within this world by our sins is never completely healed here.
And our rebellion against the Creator-King cannot go unpunished, because He is perfectly righteous and just.
The Bible tells us that the punishment that awaits us as sinners — as people who have rebelled against God by failing to reflect His perfectly righteous character, by failing to trust Him — is eternal suffering in Hell.
And that would be the fate of us all if God did not love us so much.
But He does love us.
And because of His great love for us, He sent His unique and eternal Son, Jesus, to live a sinless life among us as a man.
He came to show us how a life lived in complete obedience to and perfect fellowship with God should look.
He came to live the life that you and I can’t live because of the nature we inherited from our first parents.
Jesus, the image of the invisible God, came to show we who were made in the image of God what it looks like to reflect the character of God.
And He came to give His very life at the cross, where He took upon Himself the sins of mankind and their just punishment, so that we who follow Him in faith can have eternal life, life the way it was always meant to be, in the presence of and in fellowship with Him and with the Father.
The Bible says that, as Jesus hung on that cross at Calvary, He BECAME sin on our behalf so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.
In those hours on the cross, this perfect and sinless Jesus took upon Himself the image of sin that we bear as descendants of Adam.
And he did this so that we who follow Him in faith would now bear the image of God’s righteousness in Christ.
This is God’s new act of creation.
The Apostle Paul describes it this way.
Just as God’s brought order out of chaos, light out of darkness, and life out of nothingness at the beginning of time, He brings life out of death for those who place their faith in His Son.
He makes us new creatures.
You don’t have to be what you are.
You can be what God always intended you to be.
For the follower of Jesus, old things have passed away, and new things are come.
Indeed, the Bible says that Jesus will eventually make ALL things new.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9