Sermon Transcript Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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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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Good morning.
Good to see everyone while this place is kind of full this morning.
This looks like nothing that I like it.
Thank you.
John, for that singing.
Thank you.
Vicki, for that song.
You picked out.
So it's just one.
Can't you?
Wait to the day when we see the one face-to-face who has the name of the above all names, they found something.
I think I can preached that sermon again but we'll move on, cause we have something different for each today.
Good to see you though, some nice weather.
You like my red NC State.
See, I'm neutral today.
I did not wear my blue.
Now, why would I be wearing my blue anyway, but call Carolina one and they beat someone else that wears blue to, didn't they?
Yes.
And they beat Duke last night and I want to start any trouble.
I don't want to lose any of you this morning before I pray that should have said this after I preach it.
Okay, well, good.
I was sitting there last night late.
I was flipping between Carolina and Duke and the Yankees and Cleveland.
I'm a big New York, Yankee fan, and I was thinking myself, Can I go to church tomorrow?
Both my teams going to lose.
It looks like both of them going to lose.
Well, one of them, lost one of them one, but that was all.
It was a good football game though.
I thought you didn't have anyone to Route 4 is probably a good game to watch but you know.
So but anyway, well today we won't continue in our series and this is our series a life.
Well spent.
So you know now we're last week, we talked about tithing, we're talkin about money, we're talking about sewing, we're talkin about something that the Bible calls stewardship and we're talkin about sacrifice.
And so last week we we talked about tithing and why it's so important to us.
And today I want to talk about a subject that we need to get.
We need to get this in our hearts and mind if we don't get this.
We're not going to be the giver, we're not going to be, we're not going to exhibit the generosity.
And we're going to clean to our money like his hours unless we understand something today that this sermon is about.
And here's the title of today's sermon.
It all belongs to God.
Now you say well you're talking about my money.
No, I'm talking about everything, including money, I'm talkin about everything and then this is what we need to understand, understanding the difference between ownership and possessing.
That's what we need to understand because the Bible clearly teaches that God owns it all and for a brief time he's given us a small portion of what he owns so that we will manage it the way he would if he was on this earth.
Now, think about you say, what does that include my money?
Yes.
Does that include my children?
Yes.
Does that include my job?
Yes.
It includes your house, your car, your vacation.
It includes everything.
Everything that we get from God, remember every good gift and every perfect gift comes from the one above everything we get is from him.
And he expects us To be good.
Stewards again.
What is a steward?
Is someone who manages something for someone else?
Like I mentioned last week, you've ever babysit you manage children for this mother and father as they went out on a date or whatever.
They expected you to take care of those children.
You were looking after those children with everything that we have, in our life, our relationships, our bank account, everything we have, God has given us, and he expects us to manage it.
Well, and that includes our finances.
And that's what I wanted to talk about today.
So here's what I want you to do.
I want you to turn in your Bibles to First Chronicles chapter 29, you say first Chronicles.
Well, that's in the Old Testament.
That's part of the history books and you'll see first Samuel, 2nd Samuel 1st team 2nd kings first Chronicles, second chronicles.
All those books are right there together.
So first Chronicles chapter, 29, and what I want to do right now is I want to give you a A definition of stewardship that I found.
That I want you to look at and I want you to sync this down into your heart, very short.
And I look at this stewardship is the act of organizing your life so that God can spend you I think about that.
Is organizing your life in such a way?
That God has so much faith in confidence in you.
That he will spend you, he will give you things because he knows that you're going to manage his resources.
Well, we all want God to spend us to look it up.
I said, yes, that's a child right there that I can trust.
That's what we want.
We want that when we get to heaven, we want the Lord say, Well done.
Good and faithful, or Steward means the same thing.
Well done, good.
And faithful Steward.
You took care of what I gave you on Earth.
I'm going to take care of you now in heaven.
That's what we want.
So we it's an act of organizing your life so that God can spend you first Chronicles.
First Chronicles chapter 29 at, let me give you a little background here.
This is near the end of King, David reign in Israel and he wanted so bad to build God's Temple in Jerusalem a temple.
Now that was going to replace remember the Tabernacle that the children use and Bill in the wilderness.
But remember what God told David said, David, you can't build it.
I'm sorry, but you're not going to be able to build my temple, but I'll give you the next best thing.
I'm going to allow your son to build it.
I'm going to allow your son Solomon to build the temple.
So rather than building the Temple rather than saying all good gracious, I wish I could build it and having a pity party David went about and he started raising the funds needed for the project when Solomon became king.
So he made sure everything was ready.
When Solomon was ready to build the Temple of Solomon, wouldn't have to go out and raise money.
He wouldn't have to get the materials David.
Had it all set in there, ready for his son?
That's what a good leader.
You set up your family.
Well, that's exactly what you do.
Now we're not going to read these verses here, but David raised what we would consider today billions of dollars.
To build this Temple.
And he took him from his own personal funds, but also he gathered the people of Israel, all the leaders, all the heads of the tribes and he said, we need to give to the Lord's work and they gave billions of dollars.
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