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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Agreeableness
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Tone of specific sentences

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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
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Anger
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Sunday, October 7th, 2007
*“It’s Our Duty!”*
Luke 17: 1 – 10  (focus on v.10)
When I’m going about the task of selecting the Scripture reading that will be the text for a sermon, I read each section.
I read the OT reading, the Epistle, and the Gospel.
I read and pray about each passage a few times and let the Spirit lead me to which periscope I will write the sermon on.
For this Sunday my wife, Barbie, had volunteered to do the children’s message.
She wanted to know what I would be preaching on right when she found out she was doing it.
I had read the texts and preliminarily decided on the Gospel lesson.
Now, mind you, my wife likes to plan and prepare ahead of time but this was weeks before this sermon.
I had another sermon, a devotion, and 2 confirmation classes to prepare for…all before this sermon.
Her pestering (I mean her persistence) won out.
I read the passages for this Sunday to Barbie.
I told her the first lesson was from Habakkuk.
We both thought…not this time.
Barbie listened as I read the Epistle.
“Oh, oh, oh (like on Welcome Back Carter)!  Use the Epistle lesson.
It’s got a verse on /the Spirit/ /flaming the fire/.
I could get candles….”
I said, “Well, I didn’t think I would use that one this week.
I was thinking I’ll preach on the Gospel.”
She wasn’t exactly thrilled.
She had already thought of where to get the candles and everything!
Finally, she said, “Okay, the Gospel reading is broken down into three main categories.
/Sin,/ /Faith/ and /Duty/.
Which one are you going to use?”  Again, she got a little excited and said, “If you do/ Sin/ we could do the children’s message with counting hash marks for sins.
If you do /faith,/ I could get a mustard seed…”
Well I said, “I think I’m going to preach on /duty/.”
“Duty?
Honey, you’re going to preach on duty?
Why do you always pick the hard ones?
We humans don’t like to be told to do our duty.”
You know, I think she’s right.
We don’t like to be told /it’s our duty/.
I know I don’t.
However I feel led to talk about /doing our duty /today (and not just because my wife didn’t want to).
*Most of the time we do things because we have to.*
We like to believe that we do things out of the goodness of our hearts.
We imagine ourselves to be giving and altruistic.
If we’re honest with ourselves, *most of the time we do things because we have to*.
Do you really like doing the laundry?
Do you have a passion for your job…every day?
How about mowing the lawn, servicing your car, doing your taxes?
Most of those things are “have tos”.
We do them because, if we don’t, we will have nothing clean to wear, we won’t have money to pay our bills and take care of our family.
If we don’t do our taxes we could get audited or fined or even go to jail.
Our motives are less then philanthropic.
I never thought I would arrange to get up at 6AM every weekday morning.
Yep, almost every weekday morning I get up at 6AM.
I don’t go to work at that time.
I get up to take my lovely daughter to school.
Because she has the great opportunity to go to St Charles High school I have to get her to school a little after 7Am for her first early class.
I know some of you are chauffeurs for your kids too.
You can relate.
I’m sure that some mornings you’re like me and you wish you didn’t have to drive your sweet little offspring to school.
But we do.
We love them so we have to.
It’s our duty as moms and dads.
You know though, because it takes a good 30 minutes to get to the high school, I get a lot of time with my daughter to talk.
We do devotions together, or talk about what is going on in her life.
It has given us time to build up our relationship.
Even though it’s my duty we’ve grown closer.
My daughter is blessed and I’m blessed.
*Our duties get into our head, our body, then our heart.*
We talk to our girls about working hard to do something well.
It’s the blessing of duty.
First you do something because you believe you have to.
Like making your bed.
In your *head*, you say I have to make my bed or I will get in trouble with Dad.
As they physically do the chore, it becomes a habit of *body*.
The experts say it takes about 14 days to make a habit.
You do something enough times and it just starts coming naturally, like driving a car, riding a bike, or making a bed.
Then something happens where you can appreciate the value of the chore or duty.
You see, *Our** duties get into our head, our body, then our heart.*
Why do we do our duty?...  Sometimes we can see our work has value.
My girls have discovered it’s “kinda nice” that their room looks neat and organized because they make their bed everyday.
I don’t need to tell them to do it any more.
It just comes naturally now.
And if it isn’t made is bothers /them!/
I think God blesses us with duty.
God said, “Honor the Sabbath day and keep it Holy.”
And in Hebrews 10 He warns us, “Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing.”
We don’t always want to get up on a Sunday and go to worship.
Maybe you came to church this morning because you had to.
I did.
(ha ha) 
*God blesses us when we do our duty.*
I’m sure a lot of you have experienced that after you make it a priority and just plan on coming every Sunday you just naturally do it.
You don’t even think twice about it.
You decide to do it (in your head) and you come enough (move your body) and make it a habit…and then it gets into your heart.
You come to find that you are blessed by being here.
You find that *God blesses us when we do our duty*.
You receive God’s gift in His Word and sacraments.
You receive forgiveness and absolution.
You commune and fellowship with your brothers and sisters.
You worship Him and grow closer to the Creator who made you and loves you.
We can leave this place feeling forgiven, refreshed and renewed.
We do it because we “have to”, it’s our duty, but we end up richly blessed.
*This blessing is a free gift.*
We know that God doesn’t give us salvation because of what we /do/.
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