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
0.53LIKELY
Disgust
0.11UNLIKELY
Fear
0.13UNLIKELY
Joy
0.19UNLIKELY
Sadness
0.53LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.65LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.58LIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.93LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.48UNLIKELY
Extraversion
0.14UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.35UNLIKELY
Emotional Range
0.36UNLIKELY

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
Are Tongues For Today?
Are Tongues For Today?
 
 
       */I know you are wondering why I have this on, it represents the nine tools that you get when you are baptized in the Holy Ghost.
God impressed upon me to use this to keep us focused on what He has given to us.
Please ignore it for now, but I’ll talk about it later./*
You have heard about the boy who falsely cried wolf so much, until when the real wolf appeared, it devoured him—because nobody paid any attention to his cry.
Well, pastors and church people can do the same thing with the will of God or the impression of God.
If God tells us everything, then the importance of the voice of God is soon lost, and nobody believes us.
*/Therefore, I do not run around saying that God told me everything or has impressed everything upon my heart or mind./*
I just say true things like, “This came to me while I was reading the Bible and I believe it is the Lord” or “I feel strongly that this is the Lord.”
These statements have more truth to them and should leave room for stronger or weaker statements.
Well, I believe that God has impressed upon me to do some teaching on the subject of “Tongues,” on Sunday morning.
Back in 1997, when we begin to restudy the passages of the Bible that deal with “Tongues” and other Pentecostal things, I preached fifty-five (55) messages in that series, but all of that was done on Wednesday nights.
So, some of those who left the church because of my change in doctrine, never heard me preach one message of that series, because 75% of the church doesn’t attend Wednesday evening service.
Yet, Wednesday evening service is where I usually will cover the deeper teachings of the Bible and do so in more depth.
Please keep in mind that many of the people who left were leaders and they too missed most of that teaching, because leaders were allowed to miss Wednesday nights with no accountability.
Well, that’s going to stop.
All leaders of this church are going to attend on Wednesday or keep up by tape, if they */have/* to work, or they are *not* going to be leaders of this church.
*/You can’t be a leader of this church and miss 50% of the teaching that goes on in this body./*
The point is:  “Most people in this church, because of their attendance patterns, have never heard me do a series of messages on Tongues!”  So, I believe that God said to me, “It is time to bring this teaching to the Sunday morning crowd.
If you are listening carefully, you will notice that I called the gathering on Sunday morning a “crowd.”
I do this, because there are at least three levels of people in any church:  1) the crowd or people that gather on Sunday morning; 2) the congregation, i.e. those who are committed to the church at some level; and 3) the core, i.e. those leaders who have made a solid commitment to the ministry of the church.
*/So, after today, the church will have at least some teaching on things that they have believed they understood all along./*
Please keep in mind that during that series and during this ongoing paradigmatic transition or model shift:
 
1.
Our attendance never went down, but continued to grow.
2.     Our offerings never went down, but continued to grow.
3.     Our praise and worship went to another level.
4.     There was an increase in miracles of healing and deliverance.
5.     We began to lead a growing network of churches who feel that God wants them to be in an accountable relationship with us.
/(So, I would like to begin a three-part series today that will answer three questions, “1) Are tongues for today?
2) Why do I speak in tongues? and 3) What are the Biblical guidelines for speaking in tongues?”
We begin this series by answering the first question, “Are tongues for today?”)/
In any discussion of “tongues,” there is always the question of “Are tongues for today?”
This question is raised because of the teaching of the Fundamentalists, which were the forerunners and theologians of Evangelicalism, i.e. those of us who preach the Gospel and believe that the Gospel, i.e. the /euaggelizomai/, i.e. the Good News of the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, should be preached to the whole world for a witness, and the end shall come.
The Fundamentalists led a “Back To The Bible” campaign in the early 1900’s, in reaction to some of the excesses of Pentecostalism, particularly the Azusa Street Revival and claims of miraculous healings all over the world.
This movement grew out of the work of B. B. Warfield, a Princeton theologian, who wrote a book entitled:  /Counterfeit Miracles/, which, incidentally, I have read.
*/Warfield’s response was used as a basis for a position statement by many who did not believe in tongues and Fundamentalism was born./*
The tenets or beliefs of Fundamentalism are too many to cover here, so let it suffice to say that one of it’s major tenets is */cessationism/*, i.e. the teaching that tongues ceased with the passing of the last apostle and are therefore *not* for today.
Please keep in mind that I believe God wants us to learn something from every religious movement that He allows.
He allowed the Pentecostal movement, because there was a lack of fire and enthusiasm in the Church world at that time.
He allowed the Fundamental movement to teach the Church to stay rooted and grounded in the Word of God.
When any of these movements become polarized and pushed to an extreme, their teachings become extreme and dogmatic.
\\        Remember, we are more than Fundamental or Evangelical and less than Pentecostal.
*/We are Biblecostal./*
I’ll give you a definition for that, probably in the last message.
*/Just keep in mind that it is more both~/and than either~/or!/*
 
/(All right, back to Fundamentalism.)/
The doctrine of cessationism rested mainly on the interpretation of
 
1 Corinthians 13:8-10 (NASB-U), “Love never fails; but if there are gifts of prophecy, they will be *done away*; if there are tongues, they will *cease*; if there is knowledge, it will be *done away*.
[9] For we know in part and we prophesy in part; [10] *but when the perfect comes*, the partial will be done away” (/emphasis mine/).
The doctrine is based upon the meaning of the term “perfect” and a rigid, noncontextual interpretation of the Greek terms translated “done away” and “cease.”
/(I do *not* intend to do a major teaching on this today, because it is too long and involved.
Besides, I have already done it, as a part of 55 messages entitled “The Tongues Trilemma//Ò.”
Today, I only intend to generally prove that tongues are for today, by removing some general obstacles./
/      So, let me comment briefly on 1 Corinthians 13:8-10.)/
I want to briefly deal with the phrase “the perfect.”
Cessationists maintain that it means or refers to the completed */canon/* or */list of books/* of the Bible.
The interpretation of these verses are crucial, because they are the only verses in the Bible that seem to directly state that tongues have ceased.
/(Well, let’s touch on three possible views concerning what “the perfect means.”)/
·        */One view is that this phrase refers to the Rapture./*
Well there will at least be knowledge and probably prophecy (/or the gifts of knowledge and prophecy/) after the Rapture, so this—plus a number of points, that I will *not* take time to right now—disproves this view.
·        */Another view is that this phrase refers to the completed canon of the Bible./*
This view sees “... ‘the perfect’ as referring to a full revelation given in the NT itself, which when it would come to completion would do away with the ‘partial’ forms of charismatic revelation.
Given its classical exposition by B. B. Warfield, this view has been taken over in a variety of ways by contemporary Reformed and Dispensationalist theologians.
*This is an impossible view, of course, since Paul himself could not have articulated it.*
*/There is nothing in this passage even remotely referring to the completed canon of the Bible./*
What neither Paul himself nor the Corinthians could have understood cannot possibly be the meaning of this text.”[1]
·        */The third view is that this phrase refers to the eternal state./*
This is the easiest and simplest interpretation.
It requires *no* tenuous exegesis for it merely states that when the eternal state arrives the gifts of prophecy, tongues, and knowledge will *no* longer be needed.
Consequently, with that very, very short explanation, and after much study of the word of God, I see no verse in the Bible which states that tongues have ceased.
As a matter of fact, more and more, those who previously held this position are surrendering it.
The vocabulary seems to be just various ways of saying the same thing.
*Tongues, knowledge, and prophecy will be done away with, when “the perfect” comes.*
*You will be hard pressed to find any major scholar who maintains that the phrase “the perfect” refers to the canon of the Bible.*
And those who insist upon that interpretation do so from arguments from silence—because that is *not* the context of the passage and nothing concerning this is directly stated in the passage.
Most scholars, believe the phrase “the perfect,” in the NASB or “that which is perfect,” in the KJV, refers to the eternal state or the Second Coming of Jesus Christ.
Therefore, we must affirm that “Tongues” are for today.
/(Okay, we have affirmed that tongues are for today, by showing what the Bible does *not* say about them.
Are there any Scriptures that positively state that they are still for today.
The answer is, “Not explicitly,” but there is verse from which can draw a very strong inference.)/
Luke wrote in
 
Acts 2:38-39 (NASB-U), “Peter said to them, ‘Repent, and each of you be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.
[39] For the promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off, as many as the Lord our God will call to Himself.’”
 
\\ These are the words of Peter to the crowd that gathered after the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the Great Day of Pentecost.
He affirms that the promise of the Father or the promise of the Holy Spirit, which they had just received was for the Jews, their children, all who were far off, i.e. the Gentiles, and as many as the Lord our God would call to Himself, i.e. all believers in the New Dispensation of the New Testament.
Now some of you will say, but I don’t see tongues there.
If you go back a few verses, you will see how Peter characterized the promise of the Holy Spirit.
He said in
 
Acts 2:33 (NASB-U), “Therefore having been exalted to the right hand of God, and having received from the Father the promise of the Holy Spirit, He has poured forth this which you both see and hear.”
*/Peter characterized the promise of the Holy Spirit as that which they both saw and heard./*
What did they see and hear?
Just go back a few more verses to
 
Acts 2:1-4 (NASB-U), “When the day of Pentecost had come, they were all together in one place.
[2] And suddenly there came from heaven a noise like a violent rushing wind, and it filled the whole house where they were sitting.
[3] And there appeared to them tongues as of fire distributing themselves, and they rested on each one of them.
[4] And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit was giving them utterance.”
They saw tongues that looked like fire distributing themselves and resting on each one of the 120.
They heard 1)  A noice like a violent rushing wind; and 2)  Each one of the 120, in the upper room, speak with tongues, as the Spirit was giving them utterance.
*/Therefore, Peter affirms that what they saw and heard was for today./*
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9