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
0.08UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.06UNLIKELY
Fear
0.06UNLIKELY
Joy
0.68LIKELY
Sadness
0.15UNLIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.56LIKELY
Confident
0.39UNLIKELY
Tentative
0UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.94LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.72LIKELY
Extraversion
0.29UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.21UNLIKELY
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
Did you grow up in a home in which an adult was skilled at a craft that included following a pattern?
What was the skill?
Did you learn this craft from him or her?
What templates do you currently follow in any area of your life for work or for leisure?
How important is it for the pattern to be followed carefully?
In this session, the concept of following a pattern comes into focus as we consider the tabernacle that the Israelites constructed at Mount Sinai.
We will see the divine design of God’s plan for the tabernacle and how He used His people to build it.
Then we will see how the tabernacle itself was a pattern that pointed to something in the future.
According to the New Testament writers, God sent His Son to earth, God in the flesh, to “tabernacle” with us.
Further, as the people in whom God’s presence dwells, believers today serve as mini-tabernacles, manifesting His presence in the world in which we live.
After centuries of seeming silence from God, the Israelites were on their way to becoming the holy nation the Lord had promised to make from Abraham’s descendants.
They had population because they had multiplied in Egypt
God redeemed them from slavery through Moses
They had crossed the Red Sea and arrived at Mount Sinai
God the Lawgiver gave the Ten Commandments to a people who had already received His salvation.
These laws taught the Israelites how God expected them to live
God is going to provide the people with a land in another generation under Joshua’s leadership
While Moses was alone with God on Mount Sinai, God showed him what was next on the divine agenda.
God asked for a tabernacle—a sacred tent—to be constructed as the place where His presence would be manifested.
This would make it possible for a holy God to dwell among His people.
In this place their sinfulness would be addressed (through animal sacrifices) and their status as God’s holy, set-apart people would be established.
Up to this point, the Lord had not mentioned a place for worship.
Thus, His words must have puzzled Moses at first.
Here is the opening of in verses 1-7...
“The Lord spoke to Moses: “Tell the Israelites to take an offering for me.
You are to take my offering from everyone who is willing to give.
This is the offering you are to receive from them: gold, silver, and bronze; blue, purple, and scarlet yarn; fine linen and goat hair; ram skins dyed red and fine leather; acacia wood; oil for the light; spices for the anointing oil and for the fragrant incense; and onyx along with other gemstones for mounting on the ephod and breastpiece.”
(, CSB)
These instructions were about gathering the raw materials that would be used for the construction project.
The Lord began by emphasizing that these gifts were to be voluntary.
They were an “offering” by those who were “willing.”
Thus, at the beginning of the tabernacle section of Exodus, we find a reminder that although God deserves our worship, He wants people to come to Him willingly, not grudgingly.
Why do you think God wanted the offerings to be voluntary?
The precious metals mentioned would be designated for specific parts of the tabernacle and its furnishings.
Gold would be used for furniture inside the tent.
Silver would be used in the bases for the frames that held up the tent and in certain other places.
The bronze would be used for the outside furniture (the altar and the basin) as well as in certain other places.
The dyed yarn, linen, and goat hair would be used for various curtains; the skins were for the roof of the tabernacle; the acacia wood, native to the Sinai Peninsula, would be used for the floor and for the frames supporting the tent curtains.
2 Oil would be necessary for the lamps, and spices would be compounded into the incense burned at the gold altar.
The gems would make their way into the priest’s garb.
How did ex-slaves come to have such wonderful materials?
No doubt these were part of the plunder that the Israelites took with them during their flight from Egypt.
describes how the people rose to the challenge of offering these materials, culminating with verse 29: “So the Israelites brought a freewill offering to the Lord, all the men and women whose hearts prompted them to bring something for all the work that the Lord, through Moses, had commanded to be done.”
On the mountain, God began explaining to Moses what all these fabulous materials would be used for.
Here’s how continues in verse 8...
““They are to make a sanctuary for me so that I may dwell among them.
You must make it according to all that I show you—the pattern of the tabernacle as well as the pattern of all its furnishings.”
(, CSB)
The term translated “sanctuary” (Hebrew, miqdash) means “holy place” and is based on the Hebrew term meaning “set apart” or “holy” (qadash).
Like the “holy ground” at the burning bush, the tabernacle and its furnishings were sacred not because of any inherent value but because God’s presence would be there.
God is omnipresent, in the classic language of theology.
Yet God chooses to manifest His presence, open to the senses, among human beings in specific times and places.
The tabernacle in the wilderness would become just such a place.
In a way, the tabernacle was merely a spectacularly odd tent with some very expensive furniture placed inside and out.
What made it a sanctuary was that “the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle” as we see in
The term “pattern” (Hebrew, tabnith) meant “model” or “plan,” much like a sewing pattern or architectural model.
The author of Hebrews implied that heaven itself—God’s throne room—was the great real sanctuary that the Israelites were copying ().
The tabernacle became a little bit of heaven on earth where Israel would perceive His presence.
Sometimes plans go awry.
But for the tabernacle, everything worked out perfectly.
After the raw materials were gathered, two master craftsmen—Bezalel and Oholiab, as well as those working under them—set about constructing the tent and crafting all the furnishings.
The inspired biblical writer noted that their skills were God-given ().
The Scriptures provide exact details about each aspect of the construction:
• The tent (36:8-38)
• The ark (37:1-9)
• The bread table, the lampstand, the incense altar, and the oil for the altar (37:10-29)
• The basin and altar for sacrifice (38:1-8)
• The courtyard curtains (38:9-20)
• The garments for the high priest Aaron and his sons (39:1-31)
The Scriptures also provide an exact “materials inventory” for the tabernacle (38:21-31).
The weight of the precious metals is staggering: more than a ton of gold; more than three tons of silver, and more than two tons of bronze were required (see ,,).
After the materials inventory, we find these words in verse 32...
“So all the work for the tabernacle, the tent of meeting, was finished.
The Israelites did everything just as the Lord had commanded Moses.
They brought the tabernacle to Moses: the tent with all its furnishings, its clasps, its supports, its crossbars, and its pillars and bases;” (, CSB)
The following points are important to notice in these verses:
• God expected His work to be accomplished through His people: “The Israelites did everything…”
• It is indeed possible for a God-ordained task to be completed, and completed well: “The tabernacle…was finished.”
• Human beings, at least on some occasions, are able, with God’s help, to obey Him willingly and completely: “The Israelites did everything just as the Lord had commanded.”
• God used human leaders as divine instruments.
Bezalel and the others completed the work, which had to pass human inspection: “They brought the tabernacle to Moses.”
What are some tasks we are called to fulfill as “divine instruments” of God’s will?
As continues, we read about the completion of the various parts of the project.
The list begins with the tent itself and then the furnishings for the most holy place and for the holy place, that is, the items inside the tent, which ordinary Israelites would never see, Let’s continue in verse 33...
“They brought the tabernacle to Moses: the tent with all its furnishings, its clasps, its supports, its crossbars, and its pillars and bases; the covering of ram skins dyed red and the covering of fine leather; the curtain for the screen; the ark of the testimony with its poles and the mercy seat; the table, all its utensils, and the Bread of the Presence; the pure gold lampstand, with its lamps arranged and all its utensils, as well as the oil for the light; the gold altar; the anointing oil; the fragrant incense; the screen for the entrance to the tent;” (, CSB)
Next we read about the furnishings for the courtyard, that is, the items outside the tent.
Special attention was also given to the vestments for the high priest and his sons.
Again, nothing was accidental.
In verse 39...
“the bronze altar with its bronze grate, its poles, and all its utensils; the basin with its stand; the hangings of the courtyard, its posts and bases, the screen for the gate of the courtyard, its ropes and tent pegs, and all the furnishings for the service of the tabernacle, the tent of meeting; and the specially woven garments for ministering in the sanctuary, the holy garments for the priest Aaron and the garments for his sons to serve as priests.”
(, CSB)
Then, as a way to re-emphasize verses 32-33, we find this conclusion to the entire construction process in verses 42 and 43...
“The Israelites had done all the work according to everything the Lord had commanded Moses.
Moses inspected all the work they had accomplished.
They had done just as the Lord commanded.
Then Moses blessed them.”
(, CSB)
Note the last phrase: “Moses blessed them.”
Certainly in this instance Moses was acting as Yahweh’s agent.
There is always blessing to be found in faithful obedience to His commands.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9