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
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Disgust
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Fear
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Joy
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Sadness
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Language Tone
Analytical
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Confident
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Tentative
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Social Tone
Openness
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Conscientiousness
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Extraversion
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Agreeableness
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Emotional Range
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Tone of specific sentences

Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Emotional Range
Anger
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I. Transformational Dependency on and Discipline of God's Grace
++A.
Be aware of the trap of pride and guilt.
++B.
Abandon personal performance and embrace God’s grace.
++C.
Continually commit yourself to the foundation of grace (at the start and end of each day)
II.
Transformational Dependency on and Discipline of the Word
++A.
Embrace God’s path of righteousness for yourself.
++B.
Engage the Word of God as the power to stay on the path of righteousness.
++C.
Continually commit to internalizing the Word throughout your day.
III.
Transformational Dependency on and Discipline of Prayer
++A.
Surrender self-sufficiency to God-dependency in every aspect of your life.
++B.
Know that surrender leads to peace.
++C.
Continually commit to crowding out the world with spiritual longing to talk with God.
IV.
Transformational Dependency on and Discipline of Holiness (Obedience)
++A.
Understand your victory in Christ.
++B.
Identify how personal your sin is to you and to God
++C.
Continually commit to actively putting sin to death
V. Transformational Dependency on and Discipline of Personal Evangelism
++A.
God has called you to share your faith.
++B.
God will teach you as you share your faith.
++C.
Continually commit to loving others enough to share your faith.
VI.
Transformational Dependency on and Discipline of Serving (Spiritual Gifts)
++A.
God fully equips you to fulfill His expectation (call) in you.
++B.
You are the Holy Spirit’s spiritual gift to His church.
++C.
Continually commit to loving God’s church as “it” (they) loves you.
I. Transformational Dependency on and Discipline of Redemptive Suffering
++A.
God’s grace and love shine brightest in the darkest trials.
++B.
See God’s strengthening work.
++C.
Continually commit to “Who” and “What” instead of “why.”
I. Transformational Dependency on and Discipline of Keeping Track
++A.
See sin as God sees sin.
++B.
Four Questions (Is it helpful—physically, spiritually, and mentally; does it bring me under its power; does it hurt others; does it glorify God)?
That leads to Four Steps (identify, confess, repent, retrain) [Jerry Bridges, Pursuit of Holiness, p. 69]
++C.
Continually commit to keeping track of challenges and triumphs (journaling)
++D.
Find a partner/get going (chronos [time passing] vs. kairos [opportune moment])
Conquer Your Sin
Define
Sin
++A.
Taking one’s love (Matt.
22:36-40; 1 Cor.
13:4a, 6b-7) for God and redirecting it to a distorted love of self (13:4b-6a).
++or
++B.
Any lack of conformity to God’s law or will; in action, attitude, or nature (1 Jn. 3:4; 5:17).
If we are to rise above, overcome, break the chains of, turn from our sin increasingly, now that we have trusted Christ as our Savior, it seems prudent that we gain clarity on what sin is in the first place.
Two questions that must be asked:
1.
Is sin the collective of God’s law or will; through the laborious effort to discover, define, list, and rehearse that which is then broken when not upheld?
or
2. Is sin something much simpler to identify, overcome, and thereby conquer?
What is Sin? (Matt.
22:36-40)
When challenged with the question of how to identify what Law of God is the greatest, the most important, Jesus Christ answered His detractors with a simple view, one that anyone could grasp…adopt…and implement in their lives.
He boiled it down to two simple considerations, both of which hung upon one sole action for all to follow.
What is Sin?
1. Love God more than me vv.
36-38
2. Love others more than me v. 39
3.
This is all God’s Law v. 40
When challenged with the question of how to conquer sin, it seems we can now return to answer the question we asked in the beginning about a better definition of Sin, was it A or B?
Sin
A. Taking one’s love (Matt.
22:36-40; 1 Cor.
13:4a, 6b-7) for God and redirecting it to a distorted love of self (13:4b-6a).
or
B. Any lack of conformity to God’s law or will; in action, attitude, or nature (1 Jn. 3:4; 5:17).
In support of B,
1 John 3:4 “Everyone who practices sin also practices lawlessness; and sin is lawlessness.”
1 John 5:17 “All unrighteousness is sin, and there is a sin not leading to death.”
If sin is defined here as lawlessness and unrighteous acts;
...and all those broken laws and actions are covered under one concept of heart, soul, and mind;
...then it is reasonable to accept all sin as a breach of that one single concept, which according to Jesus Christ Himself is love.
It seems that letter A is a better idea of what sin is…it makes it personal as an affront to God, rather than simply a personal failure of one’s own, to uphold an imposed standard.
To put it another way, if I believe God to be who He is; if I believe God to love as he says; then is what I am doing at any given moment, done out of love for me which is offensive...or love for Him?
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