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
0.1UNLIKELY
Fear
0.09UNLIKELY
Joy
0.67LIKELY
Sadness
0.55LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.32UNLIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.82LIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.76LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.69LIKELY
Extraversion
0.06UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.39UNLIKELY
Emotional Range
0.57LIKELY

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
INTRO: As humans in the western world, far removed from this night in the Middle East, we get to experience the Christmas season just as everyone else does.
· We get to see the sights, hear the music, sense the difference this time of year can make when the season is in its best form.
· At its best, the Advent season can provide a sense of warmth, even during cold December days.
· It can provide a sense of joy, even as the world around us seems to be so full of sadness.
At its best, the Christmas season can make one feel as though there is love in this world, even as people seem to hate the rest of the year.
· And for the “world,” that term we use for those outside of the Church, those not born again as Jesus described it to Nicodemus in the gospel of John, the difference, the warmth, the joy, and the love are fleeting.
This season is powerful IF we learn to harness and implement its message!
The opportunity we have, as the Church, to take advantage of the extra good will, and the general feeling of happiness that is in the air at this time of year should not be lost.
· The power of this season on the souls of humankind is undeniable.
· Even in war we have had truces on Christmas Day.
· Even in those times in history where our hate for one another has caused us to take up arms and start killing, the season of Christmas has caused some to say, “We should not try to kill each other on this day!
Let’s call a truce!
Then we can begin killing each other again tomorrow!”
One such legendary truce happened this way...
· On a crisp, clear morning 100 years ago, in the then young WW1, thousands of British, Belgian and French soldiers put down their rifles, stepped out of their trenches and spent Christmas mingling with their German enemies along the Western front.
· Most accounts suggest the truce began with carol singing from the trenches on Christmas Eve, “a beautiful moonlit night, frost on the ground, white almost everywhere”, as Pvt.
Albert Moren of the Second Queens Regiment recalled, in a document found by the New York Times.
· Graham Williams of the Fifth London Rifle Brigade described it in even greater detail:
“First the Germans would sing one of their carols and then we would sing one of ours, until when we started up ‘O Come, All Ye Faithful’ the Germans immediately joined in singing the same hymn to the Latin words Adeste Fideles.
And I thought, well, this is really a most extraordinary thing ­– two nations both singing the same carol in the middle of a war.”
· The next morning, in some places, German soldiers emerged from their trenches, calling out “Merry Christmas” in English.
· Allied soldiers came out warily to greet them.
· In other places, Germans held up signs reading “You no shoot, we no shoot.”
· Over the course of the day, troops exchanged gifts of cigarettes, food, buttons and hats.
· The Christmas truce also allowed both sides to finally bury their dead comrades, whose bodies had lain for weeks on “no man’s land,” the ground between opposing trenches.
While not a total truce, over 100,000 troops, some two thirds of active, warring soldiers, are believed to have spontaneously participated in the now legendary truce.
· In a war that would eventually claim over 18 million lives worldwide, the occasion of Christmas brought a momentary respite from the carnage of battle.
· Such is the power of this “greatest story ever told!”
· There is something about a God/Creator coming in such a humble and quiet way as a babe in the manger, the feeding trough of farm animals, that is powerful enough to halt the bloody motions of brutal war.
But if it is powerful enough to stop men when in the throes of atrocious battle, shouldn’t it be powerful enough to change the world so that war, itself, is a distant memory of the days before Jesus got ahold of mankind completely?
· Well, believe it or not, I think that is the task of Christians; to facilitate the complete overtaking of men’s hearts so that the horrible actions of the past that have decimated so many lives through war, and other ways, becomes a terrible memory.
· And if that reality ever comes to pass, it will have all begun with the babe in the manger.
So here is the Good News!
· While the “world” get a respite from the normal, everyday routine of deceit, and hate, and darkness that this world has to offer, we, as Christians, get to provide the message of HOPE that is the cure for the common world!
· Not just a cure for a season, but a cure for all time!
We can provide the cure for the cancers of hate, violence, and all other forms of evil in this world FOR GOOD!
Not just for a season!
· And even if you don’t believe that will ever happen on a world-wide scale, this side of eternity, it should be our goal in our individual lives.
· As we live our own lives of peace, joy, love, mercy and grace, it shows hope to a hopeless world.
· We can have an effect on the hopelessness that prevails among the marginalized of this world!
The gift of HOPE makes peace possible in this world!
As we share this Christmas, the birth of Christ is the gift I want to encourage every one of us to give to somebody else this year.
· I’m not even asking you to NOT partake of all the other holiday stuff; the decorating, the gift giving/receiving, nor the endless, one after the other run of Christmas movies on the Hallmark channel.
· Enjoy all that, but ALSO...
This year, give someone the gift of HOPE!
With the birth of Christ was brought hope, love, peace, joy, and victory to ALL of human kind.
· The life of the average person in 1st century Palestine was full of many things, but hope, for many people , was not among them.
What is it like to live without hope?
The world into which Jesus was born was a world that felt like a world without hope.
· It had been over 400 years since God spoke through the prophet Malachi.
· The Roman empire was the most powerful force on the planet, and they ruled the area of Jesus’ birth without mercy, and without much hope of freedom for the Jewish people.
· They lost all hope.
· The writings of the time reveal a nation that did not know what to do with themselves because they were oppressed, and their God had not spoken in so long.
· One historical writing says,”…they tore down the altar and stored the stones in a convenient place on the temple hill until there should come a prophet to tell what to do with them.”
Isn’t it God’s way sometimes that just when we think our problems are perpetual and will never be resolved,
· …just when we began to yield to the groping pessimism that seeks to overtake any promise of a brighter day,
· …just when the presence of despair begins to block out the gleam of the sunshine,
· …just when the quality and integrity of our souls and lives are in jeopardy,
· …hope is born in a barn on the backside of Bethlehem.
God’s way is HOPE!
The Christians way is HOPE!
Hope is about living in anticipation of tomorrow while you’re still dealing and struggling with the stuff of today.
· And the good news of this season is “We have a hope.”
· We have a hope that is not just based in our feelings and our subjective observations.
· It is not based on some attitude that we may possess.
· Rather, our hope is built and founded in Jesus Christ.
God clothed himself in Galilean cloth and was born in the ghetto.
· God stepped onto and into the pages of human history.
· That is the basis of our hope and the foundation for our expectations.
Our faith is not merely a faith that reminisces about the past but our faith is also a faith that anticipates the future.
· Ours is a faith that looks down the road to the future, to the time when the promises God made will be the promises God will manifest.
· Ours is a faith that is able to look past the pains and problems and pressures of the presence and to anticipate the victory, joy, blessings, and grace that God may bestow upon us in some future moment.
· This belief is all about hope!
CLOSE:
THIS CHRISTMAS, GIVE SOMEONE THE GIFT OF HOPE!
· If there is anyone in this world that should know about hope, it is the Christian who has discovered God’s Son.
· There are people all around you that have no hope!
· They have lost a loved one.
· They have experienced a busted relationship.
· They have felt the pain of betrayal.
· Or they have come from a place of hopelessness, by way of a messed up home and family, or a they’ve been abused by a world that is more than will to use them and toss them aside.
Whatever their situation, there are people in this world, placed here by a loving God, who have an answer whose name is Hope; hope is Jesus, and we celebrate His birth.
· But don’t just celebrate in the usual way.
· Offer your Savior as a gift to others who are lost in hopelessness.
· It’s an awesome power, and an awesome responsibility to give Jesus as the gift of hope.
Will you give the gift of hope?
Let us pray…
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9