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
0.14UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.1UNLIKELY
Fear
0.1UNLIKELY
Joy
0.47UNLIKELY
Sadness
0.66LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.51LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.15UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.86LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.46UNLIKELY
Extraversion
0.06UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.75LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.38UNLIKELY

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
[1]
Dr. Tim LaHaye claims to have asked over one hundred thousand people among his audiences if there were any who have never been depressed.
Among one hundred thousand people so questioned not one has ever responded to his query by stating “I have never been depressed.”
It would actually appear that those who live in pleasant surroundings are most susceptible to being depressed.
Someone has said that a pessimist is someone who has to live with a constant optimist.
Depression is both ancient and universal.
The Psalmist implored:
“Why are you downcast, O my soul?
and why are you in turmoil within me?”[2]
[*Psalm 42:5*]
Hippocrates, the ancient physician, wrote a treatise on melancholy.
Winston Churchill, during the Battle of Britain, was a bastion of strength, but at the same time he underwent severe bouts of depression.
Edgar Allan Poe is said to have been depressed for four days after writing “The Pit and the Pendulum.”
Svetlana Alliluyeva, the daughter of Joseph Stalin, recalls that the bloodthirsty dictator was the victim of deep and dark depression.
Charles Spurgeon, arguably the greatest preacher in Christendom since apostolic days, knew weeks on end of darkness and melancholy.
Depression knows neither moral boundaries nor social distinction; all alike are subject to bouts of melancholy.
Some years back we heard a great deal about the Moral Majority in the media.
When you leaf through the Bible you meet the “Miserable Majority.”
So many of God’s greatest servants were, at critical moments in their lives, depressed.
Moses asked God to take his life.
Job pleaded with the Lord, “Kill me!” Elijah desired death by God’s hand.
Jonah wanted God to do away with him.
And Saul, king of Israel, did destroy himself and many of those around him by reason of his fits of depression.
I suggest that in *Jeremiah Twenty* is found the most miserable description of all of the effects of depression.
Jeremiah had hit rock bottom.
His experience should be helpful to each of us who must deal intermittently and periodically with depression.
I am encouraged by the very degree of Jeremiah’s discouragement.
The very fact that Jeremiah’s experience is unveiled in the Bible and that God could accept him and use him in spite of his depression, is a redemptive encouragement to anyone experiencing depression.
I testify that this account has encouraged me at critical moments.
*Reasons Why God’s People May Experience Depression* — I shall not exhaustively explore reasons for depression as this is not a psychological treatise; but from the text we see that depression results when we */imagine ourselves victims of divine deceit/*.
In *verse seven*, Jeremiah reveals unremitting pain and deep disappointment by crying out:
“O Lord, you have deceived me,
and I was deceived;
you are stronger than I,
and you have prevailed.
I have become a laughingstock all the day;
everyone mocks me.”
What could have happened to bring Jeremiah to this point that he believed himself a victim of divine deceit?
We learn that he had just spent time in the stocks for the crime of preaching the mind of God; he had just been punished as result of righteous teaching.
He had experienced yet another confrontation with the power structure of the nation who refused to do right and who refused to heed the warnings of God.
Psychologists tell us that one element in virtually all types of depression is a sense of disappointment.
Jeremiah had certainly experienced one of the greatest disappointments of all.
He looked up to Heaven and cried out: “God, You Yourself have deceived me!”
He was so disappointed that he used incredibly strong language, some of the most exceptional language to be found in the entire Old Testament.
His literal words could be understood to charge God: “You raped me.”
In another place he pointed his finger to heaven and charged God with deceit in his call and assignment:
“Why is my pain unceasing,
my wound incurable,
refusing to be healed?
Will You be to me like a deceptive brook,
like waters that fail?”
[*Jeremiah 15:18*]
Jeremiah lived in Judah, a semiarid land dotted with watercourses which from a distance promise refreshment and relief to the weary traveller.
Upon closer inspection, however, many of these brooks and streams would prove to be waterless … mere wadis which though gushing with water periodically were usually dry and dusty, arid and parched.
Such conditions are difficult for us to imagine, living as we do in a land blessed with an abundance of water as is true for Canada.
The weary prophet charges God with being like such a wadi, promising much from afar but proving a disappointment nearby.
When God called Jeremiah He had informed him:
“My people have committed two evils:
they have forsaken Me,
the fountain of living water,
and hewed out cisterns for themselves,
broken cisterns that can hold no water.”
[*Jeremiah 2:13*]
Now, Jeremiah charges that he has invested two decades preaching—and to no avail; the people are no nearer God than when he started and God is no nearer than when Jeremiah began.
The Babylonians are still on the march.
The people are still playing church.
The politicians and religionists were still in control of daily life and conspiring to exclude God from that life.
Jeremiah is himself hurting, the butt of ridicule and cruel calumny.
This last matter points to another reason God’s people may experience depression: */they experience repeated rejection/*.
Hear his plaintive cry.
“O Lord, you have deceived me,
and I was deceived;
you are stronger than I,
and you have prevailed.
I have become a laughingstock all the day;
everyone mocks me.
For whenever I speak, I cry out,
I shout, ‘Violence and destruction!’
For the word of the Lord has become for me
a reproach and derision all day long.
“I hear many whispering.
Terror is on every side!
‘Denounce him!
Let us denounce him!’
say all my close friends,
watching for my fall.
‘Perhaps he will be deceived;
then we can overcome him
and take our revenge on him.’”
[*verses seven**, eight* and *ten*].
Jeremiah had experienced the cruellest form of rejection—mockery and ridicule.
He had preached with a heart of love and the people had rejected him with biting mockery and with cruel vindictiveness.
The old saw says, “Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.” */It is a lie/*!
Too often have I comforted the child cruelly taunted by playmates or classmates to ever repeat such foolishness.
We know the cruelty of the taunts and ridicule of children.
The suicides of teens such as Phoebe Prince[3] and Megan Meier[4] who were teased and taunted have become so commonplace as to forever banish such foolish thinking.
Indeed, their deaths highlight the fact that teen suicide has become epidemic, and now there are reports that children as young as five are killing themselves!
It is estimated that 500,000 teens attempt suicide each year, and about 5,000 succeed.[5]
Too often in my role as a pastor I have comforted the spouse left torn and emotionally bruised for life by unkind remarks, whether thoughtless or deliberate.
Too often have I personally been on the receiving end of such injurious statements from angry parishioners to ever dismiss in a cavalier fashion the lasting pain that can result from words.
Sticks and stones may break my bones … and words can wound more deeply still, crippling an individual for a lifetime.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9