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
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Agreeableness
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Emotional Range
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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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Scripture Reading
Opening Prayer
Intro/Review
In Mark, the story about the fig tree is rightly divided, placing the cursing of the tree before the temple cleansing and then when Jesus and the disciples return, the disciples notice the tree is completely withered
Matthew does not take a strict chronological approach to telling the story of Jesus’ life.
Exposition One
As Jesus was entering the city (Jerusalem), he wanted to eat
very human
What is going on here with the fig tree?
It is not fig season
Yet this tree has leaves when it shouldn’t
So Jesus goes up to it, sees it has no fruit, and decides to use the opportunity to teach His disciples something
He “curses” the tree and it died.
We know from Mark that it didn’t wither before their eyes but rather that when they returned it had withered.
Matthew here emphasizes how unusual that was.
Even if you cut a tree down it doesn’t wither in a day
Is Jesus just simply using this opportunity to display His power and to say that prayer has access to that same power?
I don’t believe so, it doesn’t fit the context.
He is teaching that but Matthew places this here to fit into his theme.
We just read about the triumphal entry, then the cleansing of the temple, next we are going to read about the basis of Jesus authority.
All three of these things have to do with people who profess righteousness yet are not truly from among the faithful.
So what is going on here?
Jesus in enacting a parable.
Here is a tree that appears to be producing fruit out of season
Yet it is not what it appears to be.
Similarly, the money changers and sellers of animals in the temple appeared to be doing God’s work but were actually deceitful and greedy.
Even those who welcomed Jesus into Jerusalem would turn their back on Him.
I.
Those who appear to produce much fruit but are actually barren are condemned to wither
Application:
Look at your life.
Do you produce fruit?
Or do you only appear to do so?
I am not saying that you have to see people converted, that is God’s work.
What I am saying is do you real growth in Godliness?
Is God changing and transforming you?
If not, perhaps you are like the fig tree.
Don’t be like the fig tree.
The question is of Jesus’ power
Hyperbole?
Yes and No
The answer?
II.
God answers the prayer of the one who has faith in Him.
Jesus is NOT teaching, if you pray and have faith in your prayer then it will happen.
Instead, its faith in God.
If you pray, and if you are one who has faith, God will answer.
You have access, as a child of God, to ask of the almighty!
Major Transition
Jesus entered the temple again
The religious authorities question Him again
Asking about the source of His authority
Spoiler alert: Jesus is God the Son!
Answers a question with a question, yet the question, Jesus proclaims is not an answer, yet at the same time it is.
Here is the question…
“the baptism of John” refers to his whole ministry
Basically, if they say from man, then the crowds will get mad because John’s popularity still exceeded Jesus’ at this time
If they said God, then that would validate Jesus because it was well know that John had bapotised
So they don’t answer, yet all those listening know the answer...
III.
Just as John the Baptizer’s ministry came from God, Jesus’ ministry is from God.
How does this tie into what came before.
Just as you recognize true followers by the fruit they exhibit, so too, Jesus’ life and ministry are validated by the fruit it produces, just as John’s was.
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