Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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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
Emotional Range
Anger
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Taking the High Road
Text: 2Peter 1:1-11
 
*Introduction:  *Those who are born again have a hatred for sin: I once read a story close to the following: A woman, who loved roses, decided one day to cut some of them.
Back near the center of one of her rosebushes, she spotted a particularly beautiful rose, which she wanted to cut.
Carefully, she maneuvered her hand into the rosebush to do so.
Suddenly, she felt something cold begin to coil around her arm.
She quickly drew her arm back out of the rosebush, and to her horror, there was a black snake wound around her arm!
With utter revulsion and fear, she violently shook her arm until the serpent was flung loose from her limb!--and from that day onward, she would not go near that rosebush.
Her hatred, fear, and abhorrence of snakes was stronger than her attraction toward the roses on that bush.
--Duane V. Maxey
 
--So many people live with the idea that sin is inevitable.
This is the low road.
Others have come to realize the power of God to keep the Christian from sin.
These are those who take the High Road.
*I.
**Attend To The Promise (3-4)*
*A.      **A Promise of Power*
***What if someone questioned me about if electricity can light a 60 watt bulb.
I try to convince him ...  Let's consider the source!
This bulb is in the lamp socket plugged into the outlet - the outlet goes to the fuse box - to the transformer - to the Power station - to the Power plant which lights this part of the county.
At the Power Plant the energy is generated from the dam or nuclear power station.
The source provides billions of units of energy.
The bulb is at the smallest end of the big source of power!
LIKEWISE Someone may say, "How can I keep victorious and not lose my salvation?
Consider the source!
The Pastor says 'divine power.'
He got the message from God's Word, the Bible.
It is inspired of the Holy Spirit who is God.
God is the author; He is all powerful.
He made the Universe and all in it.
He is the source of all power!
Do you think God is big enough to take care of you?
 
*B.
**A Promise of Participation*
- Participation in the divine nature is not a stuff encounter, but a savior encounter.
Participation in the divine nature is a remedy for the fallen nature, because when it is no longer I that live, but Christ that lives in me, then the one who is at the controls is Christ.
You still have your individuality with choice enabled and intact, but when your choice is subsumed and submitted to the will of Christ, it is He who you engage first and foremost in all your choices and actions.
*C.
**A Promise of Purity*
*** One day a young minister was being escorted through a coal mine.
At the entrance of one of the dim passageways, he spied a beautiful white flower growing out of the black earth.
"How can it blossom in such purity and radiance in this dirty mine?" the preacher asked.
"Throw some coal dust on it and see for yourself," his guide replied.
When he did, he was surprised that the fine, sooty particles slid right off the snowy petals, leaving the plant just as lovely and unstained as before.
Its surface was so smooth that the grit and grime could not adhere to it.
Our hearts should have the same characteristic.
Just as that flower could not control its habitat, so we cannot help it that we have to live in a world filled with evil.
But God's grace can keep us so clean and unspotted that though we touch every side, it will not cling to us.
If we want the Lord's full blessing and approval, we must heed the admonition, "...keep thyself pure" (1 Tim 5:22).
By the cleansing power of His Word and the sanctifying influence of His Holy Spirit, it is possible for the Christian to remain "clean in a dirty place."
See:  2 Cor 7:1; 1 Thess 5:23; 2 Pet 1:4; Jam 1:27
 
 
*II.
**Acquire Possession (5-7)*
*A.      **Requiring the exercise of  beginning Faith*
***When General Booth was in this country he told the story of a man
who was starving to death, and the man received a check from a friend,
promising to pay a certain amount of money to him.
He held it up and
danced around the room in his glee.
His wife looks at him and says:
"Poor man, I was afraid it would be too much for him.
He has suffered
until he is unsettled mentally."
"Wife," he said, "I am going to have
it framed and hang it up.
I will have it set to music and we will sing
it every day."
And General Booth said he could have it framed, and
could have it set to music and sing it every day of his life, sing it
hour after hour until he died, and it would not do him any good if he
did not take the check and demand payment.
It is thus we treat God's
promises.
They are valueless without we present them to Him and
believe them.
-- J.W.C.
By J. Wilbur Chapan, "Present Day Parables."
* *
*B.      **Reaping the excellence of  beautiful Character*
***Character is not made in a crisis.
It is only exhibited in
a crisis!"
 
***   A dear old lady was asked what she used to make her complexion so beautiful and her whole being so bright and attractive.
She answered in short:
 
        I use for my lips, truth;
        I use for my voice, kindness;
        I use for my eyes, compassion;
        I use for my hands, charity;
        I use for my figure, uprightness;
        I use for my heart, love;
        I use for any who do not like me, prayer.
Try this make-up and see what it will do for you.
--- Robert G. Lee, Lee Lines, (Nashville: Broadman Press, 1937) 18-19
 
*C.
**Revealing the Expression of  brotherly love.*
***An anecdote published many years ago of the Indian chief, Teedyuscung, king of the Delawares, is too valuable to be lost.
One evening he was sitting at the fireside of a friend.
Both of
them were silently looking at the fire, indulging their own reflections.
At length, the silence was broken by the friend, who said, "I will tell thee what I have been thinking of.
I have been thinking of a rule delivered by the Author of the Christian religion which, from its excellence, we call the 'Golden Rule.'" "Stop," said Teedyuscung, "don't praise it to me, but rather tell me what it is, and let me think for myself.
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