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
0.13UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.07UNLIKELY
Fear
0.08UNLIKELY
Joy
0.64LIKELY
Sadness
0.53LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.7LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.45UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.66LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.96LIKELY
Extraversion
0.2UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.97LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.7LIKELY

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
We are continuing our walk through the book of Ephesians, and we are seeing how God has brought everything together in Christ.
We first saw that God has given us incredible blessings of being in Christ.
Last week, we saw that we need his guidance to understand exactly what those blessings are and how they impact our lives.
We can’t figure it out on our own.
To set the stage for this morning’s message, I want to go back and read through the last few verses we talked about last week.
Remember, Paul said that God has this incredible power working in us and through us.
Look back at Ephesians 1:20-23 to see what that power is capable of doing...
Hold on to the idea that God’s power raised Christ from the dead and raised him to sit in the heavens, ruling over everything in creation, because we are going to come back to that in a minute.
This morning, we are going to spend the majority of our time looking at Ephesians 2:1-10.
This passage is absolutely incredible, and it challenges so much of what we think and believe about what it means to be saved, or right with God.
You see, we are all naturally selfish people.
From the time we are born, we are constantly looking out for ourselves, trying to make ourselves happy, and trying to protect ourselves from anything bad.
In case you don’t believe me, I would encourage you to take a shift in the nursery in the next month.
We alway need additional volunteers, and it wouldn’t take you more than about 10 minutes of being in there to realize that kids are, by nature, selfish.
We don’t grow out of that, although we usually grow better at hiding it.
We manipulate, we lie, we do good things so others will like us or so we will get something in return…we are naturally selfish.
The bad part is that we carry that same mindset into our relationship with God.
We want to stay in the center of our universe, so we think that being right with God means he is going to make me happy.
He is going to satisfy my needs, and ultimately, he is going to do what I want him to do.
We get angry and confused when God doesn’t answer prayer the way we think he should.
We want to give up when the place he puts us is too hard.
We want him to act like we want him to, and we don’t want him to do anything else.
As we look at this morning’s passage, I want you to understand something: salvation isn’t about you.
You didn’t and couldn’t save yourself, and you weren’t saved for yourself.
In fact, that was the whole message right there.
We are going to draw those three points out of this passage, so let’s read it together.
Right off the bat, Paul hits us with a challenging reality:
1) I couldn’t save myself.
As soon as we open this passage, we are hit in the face with the reality that we can’t save ourselves.
Why would I say that?
Because the Bible says you were dead.
You weren’t physically dead.
When God saved me, I was 9 years old, going to school, studying, running around, and doing my thing.
However, before God, I was spiritually dead.
Think about this first in terms of physical death.
When someone is dead, they are separated from us.
Not only that, they do not respond to any external stimuli.
No matter what you do, they do not respond.
In the same way, someone who does not have Christ is spiritually dead.
He is separated from Christ by his sin:
Not only that, one without Christ is enslaved to sin and cannot obey Christ.
She cannot come to Christ on her own, and cannot do anything but sin.
Wilfred and Priscilla taught this passage to the kids during VBS a couple weeks ago:
Even the best things you do are still done out of a heart that is dead towards God, which is why Paul would compile a few different references when he wrote this to the Romans:
Apart from Christ, you are dead and cannot come to Him!
You can’t do anything to get back to God on your own, because your best deeds are still like a filthy, nasty rag that needs to be thrown away.
That runs counter to the way our world thinks, because we would like to believe that everyone is basically good.
However, that’s not what the Bible teaches us, and if we’re honest, we know that it isn’t true.
All of us lived life this way.
In fact, this is just the natural course of life.
Why is that?
Look at the last part of verse 2.
Does this sound familiar?
We have looked at this idea before in another passage:
Back in Ephesians, we notice that we were not living this way on our own—This is how the prince of this world has twisted things to be.
Satan knows full well that God is the one who deserves all our devotion, love, honor, and glory.
He strives, then, to make us all live for ourselves.
He is trying to destroy everything God is doing in the world, and we play right into that with our selfishness.
Verse 3 takes it further…Not only are we living according to what Satan is trying to accomplish, all of us live based off what we want to do.
We are all prone to live by our own selfish desires:
You and I don’t need Satan’s help, because our dead hearts are twisted enough on their own.
Those desires run completely contrary to who God is! That’s why they are wrong.
When God found me, I was living according to my way of doing things.
I didn’t consult Him; I didn’t ever ask how He wanted my life to go; rather, I did what I wanted to do.
Look at what that made me: a child under wrath!
I was an object that deserved God’s wrath.
Everything about who I was deserved to be condemned to hell forever!
As an aside, notice, if you are saved that this is how you used to walk.
Are you still acting this way, living for your own desires?
If you genuinely know Christ, you can’t live like this anymore.
He has freed you from living under the power and dominion of the prince of the air.
If you’re here this morning and you don’t know Jesus, this is where you are: You are a child of wrath, who is dead to God, and living by your own selfish desires, playing into the hands of what Satan has been trying to do for thousands of years.
Before God brought you to himself, you weren’t just bad, you were dead!
You couldn’t save yourself if you wanted to, because you were living just like Satan wants and letting your own selfish desires direct you.
There is no way you and I could save ourselves, so salvation isn’t about me.
In case that doesn’t drive it home enough, we also see that...
2) I didn’t save myself.
Maybe you still think that somehow you were good enough to earn God’s salvation.
You tried hard, you were raised in church, surely that must have added something to you getting saved, right?
Well, let’s go back to the text to see what it says.
Start with me in verses 4-9...
That right there is one of the most powerful phrases in all of the Bible.
“But God, who is rich in mercy...”
Do you understand that today?
Do you understand that the God of the universe, who has every right to condemn us and leave us separated from him forever, changed all of that?
He is rich in mercy, which means he doesn’t give us the punishment we deserve.
Instead, he took our punishment and put it on Jesus!
You didn’t pay off your debt; Jesus paid it for you!
Look at what that means in verse 5...He made you alive!
Think back to last week…remember what we said about the power working in you?
That was the power that raised Jesus from the dead, right?
If you are here and are in Christ, you have been raised from the dead as well!
Spiritually, you are now alive to God.
You can hear from him, you can respond to him, you can know him, where you couldn’t before.
That would have been mercy and grace enough, but he keeps going!
Read verse 6...
He didn’t just make you alive and leave you to fend for yourself; he made you alive and seated you in the heavens with Christ!
Remember?
Jesus is seated in heaven, ruling over every other power in all creation?
You’re seated in the heavens with him!
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9