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.
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Tone of specific sentences

Tones
Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
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Anger
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Introduction
ILLUST - Ever leave a child with a task only to come back and find they became distracted?
Recognize the claim of Jesus on the world and on you.
(16-18)
“All authority” is given to Jesus:
The word “all” is used four times in this passage (All authority, all nations, observe all teaching, with us always )
all nations
observe all teaching
with us always
The word here used for “all” in the original means ALL
In heaven.
There is no greater spiritual authority than Jesus.
His resurrected body proves Satan cannot own you.
He speaks from God as God.
On earth.
Jesus is Lord of all nations.
There is no nation that can or will stop the spread of the gospel.
There are no laws or dictators that can stop the spread of the gospel to the ends of the earth.
The implication, then, is that Jesus also has all authority over YOU.
Over you.
This is what it means to be a follower of Christ.
You don’t live for yourself anymore.
He is your life.
You have been bought with a price.
Hear me - Jesus is the authority in your job.
Jesus is the authority in your family.
Jesus is the authority in your marriage.
Not you.
To claim Jesus as “Lord of your life” means he has a claim on every part of your life.
We surrender to his will for our lives; he does not surrender to ours.
This means you go where he says to go and you do what he says to do, no matter the cost.
For some we need to stop right there.
If you don’t acknowledge who Jesus is in your life, you will not do what he says to do with your life.
We are called to be disciples as we make disciples.
You can’t lead people to a place you are not willing to go yourself.
If people follow us, where are we leading towards?
Safety and comfort or radical and sacrificial devotion to Jesus.
**The first step in making disciples is to be a disciple.
Where are you in following Jesus?
Exploring, Growing, Serving, or Reproducing?
Exploring?
We want you to know Jesus!
Infant, Child, Young Adult, Parent (Jim Putman)
Dawson Trotman, founder of the Navigators.
The curse of today is that we are too busy.
I am not talking about being busy earning money to buy food.
I am talking about being busy doing Christian things.
We have spiritual activity with little productivity.
I wonder
. . .
today we have a lot of pew-sitters — people think that if they are faithful in church attendance, put good-sized gifts into the offering plate and get people to come, they have done their part.
Obey the command of Jesus to make disciples.
(19-20a)
The church does not exist to manage disciples; the church is called and commanded to MAKE disciples.
One imperative verb - “Make disciples.”
Going, Baptizing, Teaching are all participles that further explain how to carry out how we are to make disciples.
One of Satan’s biggest ploys (at least in America) is to keep Christians casual and complacent.
illust – Screwtape Letters?
If he can persuade Christians that one hour a week is sufficient to be a fully functioning member of the Body of Christ then he has crippled the Body.
If he can keep Christians focused on satisfying their own comforts and “spiritual needs” he can distract them from the 2.8 billion people around the world who have not even heard the name “Jesus” and slow the mission of God.
If he can fool Christians into thinking that following Christ is something that we “fit” into our lives instead of something that consumes our lives, then he has succeeded in compartmentalizing the Christian walk.
Dawson Trotman, founder of the Navigators.
The curse of today is that we are too busy.
I am not talking about being busy earning money to buy food.
I am talking about being busy doing Christian things.
We have spiritual activity with little productivity.
. . .
today we have a lot of pew-sitters — people think that if they are faithful in church attendance, put good-sized gifts into the offering plate and get people to come, they have done their part.
I wonder how money, time, and energy in the church is focused on maintaining programs and people who already know and follow Jesus (These are good things); instead of resources intentionally focused on equipping and making disciples and disciple-makers.
ILLUSTR - on average, it takes 85 church attenders to make one disciple.
One imperative verb - “Make disciples.”
Going, Baptizing, Teaching are all participles that further explain how to carry out how we are to make disciples.
“Make disciples” as you are:
What is a disciple?
To follow Christ, to be a disciple is to be:
- Intensely devoted to the person of Jesus (“come after me”)
Context is the confession of who Christ is.
- Intensely devoted to the place of Jesus in your life.
(“deny himself”)
To deny oneself is to give something else the place.
It denotes submission to Christ.
- Intensely devoted to the purpose of Jesus (“take up his cross”)
Taking up a cross implies suffering but not random suffering, suffering for the cause of Jesus, the mission
- Intensely devoted to the transformation in Jesus (“follow me”)
You can’t lead someone to someplace that you are not willing to go yourself.
If you are not leading others to follow Jesus then you are not fully following Jesus yourself.
One of Satan’s biggest ploys (at least in America) is to keep Christians casual and complacent.
illust – Screwtape Letters?
If he can persuade Christians that one hour a week is sufficient to be a fully functioning member of the Body of Christ then he has crippled the Body.
If he can keep Christians focused on satisfying their own comforts and “spiritual needs” he can distract them from the 2.8 billion people around the world who have not even heard the name “Jesus” and slow the mission of God.
If he can fool Christians into thinking that following Christ is something that we “fit” into our lives instead of something that consumes our lives, then he has succeeded in compartmentalizing the Christian walk to a weekly part of one’s life.
Dawson Trotman, founder of the Navigators.
The curse of today is that we are too busy.
I am not talking about being busy earning money to buy food.
I am talking about being busy doing Christian things.
We have spiritual activity with little productivity.
. . .
today we have a lot of pew-sitters — people think that if they are faithful in church attendance, put good-sized gifts into the offering plate and get people to come, they have done their part.
I wonder how money, time, and energy in the church is focused on maintaining programs and people who already know and follow Jesus (These are good things); instead of resources intentionally focused on equipping and making disciples and disciple-makers.
ILLUSTR - on average, it takes 85 church attenders to make one disciple.
Being a disciple was always intended to lead to making disciples.
ESV
And he said to them, “Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.”
Jesus never said to follow him so they might be nice rule-followers.
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