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
0.11UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.06UNLIKELY
Fear
0.11UNLIKELY
Joy
0.6LIKELY
Sadness
0.57LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.7LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.32UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.61LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.97LIKELY
Extraversion
0.12UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.91LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.79LIKELY

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
Introduction: Have you ever played the game, “Bigger and Better?”
You take $1 and you try to use it to trade for something more valuable.
Then you take that and try to trade for something even more valuable.
You keep doing that over and over and over again and each team meets back at a certain time to see what they could come up with.
I’ve heard of one team coming back with a recliner, when they started off with just $1.
You know God gives us things that sometime seem small and insignificant.
Yet in reality if we would use those things for His glory we could experience a great harvest.
From one small kernel of corn, hundreds of kernels grow as a result.
When I was younger there was a song we use to sing a lot and it was entitled “We’ll Work ‘Till Jesus Comes.”
The song was written by Elizabeth Mills in 1837.
The chorus simply says three times, “We’ll work ‘till Jesus comes” and then it ends with the reminder, “And we’ll be gathered home.”
While this is an old reminder of an old truth, it is an important reminder, because we do have a job and responsibility while we await our Lord’s return.
Jesus is coming again!
More is said in Scripture about Jesus’ second coming than was said about His first coming.
We can be sure He will come again, and just like He did the first time, He will fulfill every prophecy regarding His second coming in minute detail.
The question is “what are we to do?” Are we to do like some have done throughout history and sell all of our stuff, quit our jobs and sit on a mountain somewhere and wait for Jesus to come?
Are we to do the opposite and live our lives as if this world is all that matters and when we die it just ends it all?
Absolutely not…neither of these extreme responses are what God has called us to do.
However, He has called us to watch, wait and work.
Scripture Introduction: In Jesus tells us a parable about how we should respond to the news of His return.
Some of Jesus’ followers assumed that He was going to set up His kingdom immediately (see ).
As a matter of fact that belief is what prompted Jesus to tell this parable to begin with.
Remember, a parable is an earthly story with a heavenly meeting.
It was a story that people of this day and time could relate to and from it, learn deep spiritual truths.
Let’s take a moment and read the entire thing and notice with me a few important truths.
Read
First, notice in . . .
We Have Been Entrusted With the King’s Goods While He is Away
Explanation: In this passage of Scripture we are introduced to a “nobleman.”
A nobleman was a “servant of the king.”
He leaves to go on a far journey, to receive a kingdom, and his plans are to return.
Before he goes away he gathers ten of his servants and gives them each a mina.
A “mina” was equivalent to about 3 months wages, so it was a pretty good sum of money.
He then explains to them to “engage in business until I come.”
In other words they were expected to take what he had given to them and wisely invest it until he returned.
In essence they were to be good stewards of what he had entrusted them with.
We see another group of people in this section that are simply referred to as citizens.
These citizens did not like this nobleman, nor did they want to submit to his rule and reign.
That’s all that is said about them for now, but they are mentioned again later.
Illustration: One thing we need to establish very clearly is everything we own and everything we have comes from God and ultimately belongs to God.
Listen to David’s prayer and his confession of this truth in
You know God gives us things that sometime seem small and insignificant.
Yet in reality if we would use those things for His glory we could experience a great harvest.
From one small kernel of corn, hundreds of kernels grow as a result.
Once this fact has been established, let’s once again look at this parable and apply it to each of our lives.
Application: The nobleman is obviously a reference to Jesus.
The servants are those who have made the decision to follow Jesus and who have been born again.
The citizens are those who do not know Jesus and who refuse to submit to His reign over their lives and His Lordship, thus they represent the lost of this world.
We are waiting for Jesus’ return, and God has entrusted us with His blessings (money, talents, treasures, children, etc) until He returns.
Just as the nobleman was expected to “engage in business” with the money the nobleman had left them with, we also have been blessed and we are to use those blessings to invest not in an earthly kingdom, but in a heavenly one.
We are reminded in :
The question is “WHY” has He given us these good and perfect gifts.
Do we have them just to make our lives easier.
Does He want these gifts to become our idols?
Did He give us these things so we can hoard them and use them as competitive resources to enable us to “keep up with the Jones’s?” Are these things to be used to build our kingdoms?
No, no and no!
Listen to what God’s Word has to say to us about STEWARDSHIP…how we are to use the blessings and gifts of God...
1.
We are to Use the Gifts God has Given us to SERVE One Another
2. We are to be a CHANNEL of His Blessings, not a Reservoir
3. We are to be CAREFUL that Gifts are our Servant, Not our Master
4. We are to Use What We Have to Honor the One Who Gave It to Us
1 Corinthians 6:
The point is this you and I have been entrusted with the King’s goods while He is away!
Everyday you LIVE, is a day God gave you—give it back to Him
Every dollar you HAVE, is a dollar God gave you—use it for His glory
Every talent you possess, is a talent He allowed you to have—use it for the benefit of His kingdom
Every spiritual gift you have been given, has been given to use to build up other believers and/or to reach the lost
Remember, according to verses 15ff, Christ will return and . . .
We Will Give An Account to the King When He Returns
Explanation: When the king returned, he had the servants come before him and give a report concerning what they had gained by doing business with his goods.
The first individual had gained ten times his initial investment.
He hears the words, “Well done, good servant,” and as a result of his faithfulness he is given the honor and responsibility of ruling ten cities.
The second servant had gained five times his initial investment.
As a result of his faithfulness he is given the privilege of ruling five cities.
However, the third individual he speaks with has been unfaithful.
He had taken his masters investment, and rather than invest it he had buried it.
He begins to make excuses as to why he had been disobedient, but his excuse only serves to condemn him.
This man has demonstrated that not only had he been unfaithful, but he had also been untrustworthy.
He could not be entrusted to use his master’s goods in a faithful manner, therefore, his mina is taken away from him and given to the servant who had ten minas.
Some began to complain (v.
25) that the individual who had ten would be given another, but the king responds, “I tell you that to everyone who has, more will be given, but from the one who has not, even what he has will be taken away.”
The king in this parable is saying that he is not going to entrust an unfaithful servant with more, because he has proven to be unfaithful and untrustworthy.
However, the one who has been faithful will be entrusted with more because he has proven himself to be faithful.
Illustration & Application: Does the thought of giving an account to King Jesus concern you or excite you?
No doubt we all have regrets in life and we all realize that we could have done more with what we have been blessed with at times.
However, we shouldn’t live our lives dreading giving an account to our Master.
We should live our lives for His glory and take the blessings He’s given us and use them to bring praise, honor and glory to His holy name.
So how are you doing with the blessings God had entrusted you with?
Some of you in this room have been entrusted with God’s blessings called CHILDREN.
Regardless of how those children were conceived, God is His sovereignty chose to entrust you with another human being.
One day you will stand before God and YOU will give an account to God as a parent.
Dad—it is YOUR responsibility to do what says:
Dad how are you doing?
You cannot afford to be an absentee father.
No one can do your job for you.
You cannot hire someone else to be your children’s dad.
You are the one God wants to use to teach your boys what it means to be a godly man and how to treat his wife one day.
You are the one he needs to learn what it means to live a life of sexual purity from.
You need to teach your daughters by example what they should look for in a husband one day.
It’s not the pastor’s job or the children’s ministry director’s job, or the schools job, or anyone else’s job to “bring your children up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord.”
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9