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
0.19UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.14UNLIKELY
Fear
0.14UNLIKELY
Joy
0.15UNLIKELY
Sadness
0.56LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.75LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.45UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.74LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.97LIKELY
Extraversion
0.21UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.91LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.81LIKELY

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
*A House of Prayer*
 
I believe that a church can survive with prayer alone; I also believe that God does not want any church to shut down.
God wants this church to do more than survive, He wants to bless and prosper it.
I want to begin my message by reading you an actual account of another church, a church who’s circumstances were far worse than yours.
This actual account is written up in this book called  “My House Shall be Called A House of Prayer”.
I believe that every believer can gain something from reading this book.
If you’re interested, you can get a copy for yourself directly from the Free Church head office in Langley.
*(Read the account directly from the book)*
 
I hope that this real-life example will be an encouragement for you.
Yes your numbers are small and yes, you are also in debt, but your situation is not desperate.
and you have available to you the same solution that worked at Aldersgate Church – prayer.
Now virtually all  believers know they should pray, but many are not clear as to why.
Why should we pray in the first place?
To some people this question may not seem important, but it should be.
Firstly, Jesus told us to pray!
That alone should be enough reason.
In Mark 11:17 Jesus said, /“My house shall be called a house of prayer for all nations.”
/
/ /
How important was prayer in Jesus’ life?
Scripture records that His ministry was saturated in prayer from beginning to end and it  records that on the very night He was arrested Jesus went away to a place called Gethsemane and said to His disciples, “Sit here while I go and pray over there.”
He knew what was coming; He knew that this would be His last time with the disciples; what did He do?
He didn’t deliver a fiery message or give them last minute instructions, He went aside and prayed!
Doesn’t that tell us something of prayer’s importance in His life?
John Wesley, the renowned theologian~/evangelist from the eighteenth century said, “ God does nothing but in answer to prayer.”
John Vandergrind says the same thing in his 40 day devotional called “Love to Pray.
In his two fictional classics on spiritual warfare, Frank Peretti makes it clear that the forces of heaven are powerless to act unless believers are praying.
That puts a lot of responsibility on our shoulders.
In “The Man God Uses”, Henry Blackaby says that “prayer is interactive (in other ways it’s a two-way dialogue between us and God) when you are in relationship with God.
Not everyone can pray; there are prerequisites – First is belief; second is cherished sin, and third is obedience.
All are essential ingredients in effective prayer.
Time does not allow for a thorough discussion of all three so in this message I will deal only with obedience.
 
1 John 3:21-22 says:
/    “Dear friends, if our hearts do not condemn us, we have confidence before God and *receive* from him anything we ask, because we *obey* his commands and do what pleases him.
“    (Read twice)/
/ /
Only those who */obey/* God have the right to come before Him with requests.
God delights in the prayers of His */obedient/* children.
When we want what He wants and live the ways He wants us to live, then the tendency will be for us to offer up prayers that God will answer in the way we expect.
And, in answering our prayers, God is supporting the */obedient/* behaviour he wants from us.
If God were to answer the prayers of those who are living lives of disobedience, He would be giving tacit approval to the type of behaviour He does not approve.
That would be out of character for God, and even the new believer knows that God never acts out of character.
If we obey Him, He will listen to our requests and grant some, if not all of them because we know that God’s answer will not always be yes – “yes” may not be His will for us.
In other words, then, if we expect God to do what we ask, we should be prepared to do for Him what He asks.
This principle also explains much of the weakness of prayer – the lack of power, lack of perseverance (Luke 18:1-5 tells us about the value of persevering in the story of the woman and the unjust judge), lack of godliness, and lack of confidence in our prayers all stem from some lack of obedience  in our Christian lives.
When our prayers are not answered, we assume that the problem lies with God while in reality the problem is really in us.
God does not expect more of us than we are able to deliver, so the level of obedience he desires from our lives is possible.
God gives enabling grace, and His grace is sufficient (2 Corinthians 12:9) so that we can live obediently because He is committed to hearing our prayers.
By His grace and the infilling of His Holy Spirit, we have both the desire and the strength to do His will.
But if we want to become  powerful in prayer, we must be obedient and spend time with God and time in the Word.
That’s where we will find His will clearly stated.
/“Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly”/ Col. 3:16.
Yes, and that TAKES TIME!  Jesus reminds us in John 15:7 /that “if we remain in Him and His words remain in us, we may ask whatever we wish, and it will be given us.”
/How will His words remain in us if we’ve never read them?/ /Or, to put it more simply, Do you want to have confidence when you pray and receive from God what you ask for?
Then begin by living a life of obedience.
That’s the bottom line.
Yes, prayer does make a difference.
As James 5:16 tells us,  /“The prayer of a righteous man is powerful and effective.
“/
 
“Prayer”, said C. Samuel Storms (in Reaching God’s Ear) “ in and of itself possesses no power.”
I was astounded by that statement, and didn’t understand it until I read what Storms said next: “Prayer is powerful because God is powerful, and prayer is the means through which that divine power is released and channelled into our lives.”
In other words, all the power in prayer is really God’s power activated by prayer.
So when you pray for another person, there is nothing that flows from you to them – no vibes, no force, no energy.
Instead, your prayers go heavenward, and the power of God moves from Him to the ones you pray for.
When the Scriptures say that “prayer is ….powerful and effective”, it means that God acts powerfully and effectively through the prayers of His people.
Prayer is the instrument by which God has chosen to have His power directed in the universe.
Ole Hallesby (in Prayer) provides something of a mental picture of how this works: “This power is so rich and so mobile that all we have to do when we pray is to point to the persons or things to which we desire to have this power applied, and He, the Lord of this power, will direct the necessary power to the desired place.”
Isn’t that amazing!
– God partnering with human beings to accomplish His purposes!
In “The Power of Prayer”, R.A. Torrey, enthralled by the enormity of this prayer, states, “Prayer is the key that unlocks all the storehouses of God’s infinite grace and power.
All God is, and ….has, is at the disposal of prayer.
Prayer can do anything that God can do, and as God can do anything, prayer is omnipotent.”
Prayer can do what political action cannot, what education cannot, what military might cannot, and what planning committees cannot.
All these are impotent by comparison.
Prayer can move mountains.
It can change human hearts, families, neighbourhoods, cities, nations, and *churches*.
I feel that the biggest weakness in this country is the church, but let’s not get started on that> *Prayer is the ultimate source of power, because it is the power of Almighty God*.
This power is available to the humblest Christian.
It was a man “just like us” who prayed “that it would not rain”, and God stopped the rain in Israel for three and a half years.
Where will the power of your prayers be felt today?
By now some of you may asking, ”when is this guy going to give me something useful, something practical that I can apply to my life?
(There‘s no need to say amen at this point).
The answer is simple, I have.
At this stage in the life of your church, many of you are probably discouraged and wonder where you can go from here.
You may ask “what can we do to turn things around?”
You may wonder what you can do to fill this building with born again believers committed to turning this community upside down.
There are things you can do, lots of things – some will work, others will fall flat.
But what you can do that *will work* is  pray!
Did you hear that?
What we can do that will work is pray!
In our society we tend to be action oriented.
We want to do something decisive that will turn things around immediately!
In terms of our society, that’s fine.
But in God’s economy, things don’t work that way.
Firstly, if our actions could bring about the necessary changes, we would be justified in taking the credit.
Secondly, God’s interest is much more in what we *are* than in what we *do*.
Turn with me to Isaiah 43:10
    "You are my witnesses," declares the Lord,
        "and my servant whom I have chosen,
    so that you may know and believe me
        and understand that I am he.
Before me no god was formed,
        nor will there be one after me.
He is far more concerned about the quality of our relationship with Himself than He is with the number who come here every Sunday morning.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9