Sermon Tone Analysis

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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
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Anger
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Introduction
This is the day that the Lord has made.
We have a choice to make.
We can rejoice and be glad in it or not.
The choice we make about that and about everything that comes our way determines much of our effectiveness, our joy, our spiritual maturity and what tomorrow will be like.
This morning I am going to speak about the importance of good communication.
We have a choice to make.
Either we listen, learn and apply or we listen, learn, and walk out of here doing the same things and thinking the same things we did when we walked in.
The choice is ours to make.
I am speaking about good communication for two reasons.
First, We are preparing to share 40 Days of Love starting February 18th.
One of the major tasks we have as a church is to get the world out.
Debbie Scates is working with Sandy Keller and others.
They are tasked with getting the word out to the church and community about what is happening.
They plan the advertising, bulletins, and coordinate the flow of information about this focus on love and relationships.
Second, good communication is essential for our church.
We need to communicate clearly with one another.
Not only is good communication essential for our church, good communication is essential for stronger marriages, stronger families, stronger workplaces and a stronger community.
We are going to look at this issue of communication by highlighting the lessons learned from several passages in the Bible.
The first text is Romans 10:13-15.
The apostle Paul makes a point by asking a question that has an obvious answer.
Listen to his question.
Let me ask you the same question.
How can people believe in someone they never heard about?
We must agree with the apostle Paul when he asks this question.
There is no way in the world anyone can believe in someone that they never heard about.
He goes on the a second question that is the same as the first.
If they can’t believe unless they hear, how can they hear unless someone speaks up?
How can someone hear unless another person speaks up?
They can’t.
We agree with the apostle Paul when he says that people cannot believe in someone they never heard about and cannot hear about someone that no one speaks about.
This is the essence of communication.
The essence of communication is to communicate.
In other words, if you want people to know something, you need to tell them.
If you don’t tell them, don’t expect them to know.
Let’s say I showed up at your door with my suitcase in hand and, after you let me in, I marched down to one of your bedrooms, opened my suitcase and started putting clothes away.
I know your first question.
Your first question would be a request for information, for knowledge.
You would ask, “What in the world are you doing?”
At one level this is a bad question.
It’s obvious what I would be doing.
I would be unpacking my suitcase and hanging up my clothes…in your house.
You said come over anytime and I did.
At another level its a good question because even though the immediate answer is obvious, there would be a secondary question that would be known by both you and me.
That question would be, “Why are you here, what happened, why don’t you ask before you do something, what gives you the right to just move in and, finally, when are you leaving…like.....right now?
The problem with the scenario that I put before you is that there was no communication.
I did not ask in advance.
I did not share.
I didn’t do anything but what I did.
You, on the other hand, could not understand what I was doing because you didn’t know why I was there, what I was there for and how long I would be there.
The awareness of this principle, good communication starts with communicating, has motivated me to tell others about Jesus, the church, the Bible, and anything else of a spiritual nature.
We don’t want to dump the whole load on them for sure.
But if we don’t speak they won’t hear and if they don’t hear they cannot believe in Jesus Christ.
This is why my mother said, “Always call me if you are going to be late.”
No call meant that she had no idea where I might be or what might have happened.
This freed her up to worry excessively as the mind usually goes negative when it doesn’t have much information.
If I did call, she now could worry less or more, but whichever she did, she would do it with more knowledge and understanding.
There is a second aspect of this need to communication.
Good communication starts with communication.
Bad communication brings embarrassment, hurt, anger or a combination of the three.
Poor communication tears people down.
It does so in at least two ways.
First, poor communication tears people down by embarrassing them.
Here is our second verse.
What is the result of speaking up without hearing all the information?
The person is embarrassed.
Maybe!
The person speaking might not realize how others see them.
They see the person as morally deficient, a fool and may be embarrassed by their actions.
Or, it might be that the person speaks up and then, when someone gives more information, realized how foolish they were are are embarrassed because their comments were way out of line.
How can the person hear unless someone speaks?
How can the person know unless he or she hears?
In other words, a person might not know all the story because others did not tell them.
Based on what they knew, they spoke up.
When they found out they were totally out of the loop, they were embarrassed by what they said.
Or the scenario that Solomon puts forth here is that the person could care less about getting more information, they just want to speak up to let others know that they have an opinion.
If they just asked a few questions, they would be spared the embarrassment.
Embarrassed people feel pain because of this verbal encounter.
It does not build up, no matter whether the person didn’t have the information because no one told him or he or she didn’t have the information because they spoke before they asked important questions.
Poor communications not only causes embarrassment,
Poor communication is often the basis of fights and quarrels.
This is our third verse.
These verses highlight the self-centeredness that we all have.
Our passions, our desires, are at war within us.
We want certain things.
We might want a house, a car, or some other material thing.
We might want someone to love us or show us respect.
We might want the family to get together and have a certain outcome in mind for that gathering.
We might want the church to be a certain way or a ministry we are a part of to function according to our plan.
But we do not have what we want, according to this passage, because we do not speak up.
We do not have because we do not ask.
Asking is no guarantee that we will get what we want either.
But if we do not ask, if others don’t know, how can we expect them to consider or respond the way we want?
What happens within us?
Even though we don’t ask, our passions, our desires still speak to us.
When we interact with others, we fight and quarrel.
Have you ever been in a fight or quarrel and wondered what the big deal was with the other person?
In many cases, the big deal was some information that you did not share with them or they did not share with you.
Or maybe they did share and someone didn’t listen.
The result is that people were blindsided, torn down as a result of someone not speaking up.
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