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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Tone of specific sentences

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Higher Account
Not perfection, but pursuit of holiness.
We will all make mistakes, but leaders/teachers will be judged more harshly for our mistakes.
Imagine, teachers/leaders, with me for a second.
Your student arrives at the day of judgement.
He or she is asked where they learned something contrary to the Word of God.
Imagine that they turn and point at you.
We are supposed to take this very serious.
One reason I went to seminary, one reason I continue to push myself and study is because I am aware of the higher accountability.
Satan has done no where near as much damage to the internal church as false teachers do.
If you are called and gifted, then teach.
But why does James specifically talk of this.
Wrong Motives were at Play
They sought status or standing.
Opening Up James (A Note of Caution (v.
1))
Our appeal, then, to all who are interested in teaching is simply this: by all means, take up the work, but make sure you are doing it for the right reason.
We are not to teach to satisfy our own ego needs, but to bring glory to God and to deliver his Word accurately to the eternal benefit of those who hear us.
Alistair Begg once said “
We cannot make much of ourselves and much of the Lord Jesus Christ simultaneously.
Begg, Alistair.
Preaching for God's Glory (Repackaged Edition) (Today's Issues) (p.
57).
Crossway.
Kindle Edition.
We need good teachers
A good teacher clears the way, declares the way, and then gets out of the way.
Begg, Alistair.
Preaching for God's Glory (Repackaged Edition) (Today's Issues) (p.
57).
Crossway.
Kindle Edition.
This passage is not trying to scare away good teachers, it is simply trying to express the seriousness of the calling.
The New Testament clearly, repeatedly, and unapologetically lays out the qualifications of a pastor.
What is so remarkable yet so often overlooked is this: Pastors are called and qualified to their ministry not first through their raw talent, their finely-honed skill, or their great accomplishments, but through their godly character.
Of all the many qualifications laid out in the New Testament, there is just one related to skill (he must have the ability to teach others) and one related to experience (he must not be a recent convert).
The rest of the nearly 20 qualifications are based on character.
What fits a man to ministry is not first accomplishment or capability but character.
James simply wants us to take serious the matter of teaching.
Andrew and I have forever given up the right to simply be congregants.
Do not get me wrong, this is not something to feel bad about, it is simply something to recognize.
I have become a teacher and it carries a higher accountability.
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