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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Disgust
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Fear
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Joy
0.59LIKELY
Sadness
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Language Tone
Analytical
0.69LIKELY
Confident
0.57LIKELY
Tentative
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Social Tone
Openness
0.67LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.75LIKELY
Extraversion
0.01UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
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Emotional Range
0.64LIKELY

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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Background
is a psalm written in response to sin.
It is the beginning of the means to dealing with sin.
It is not written to process the sin itself.
If we read this psalm as a way to process sin we lose its purpose in dealing with sin.
We read the stages of grief onto the psalm.
5 Stages of Grief:
, , and 51 present a healthy theology of sin and self that takes sin seriously while at the same time acknowledging that God is greater than our sin.
Denial,
Anger,
Depression,
Bargaining,
Acceptance.
The Psalmist has already accepted the truth of his sin, and the situation that he is in.
The psalm is attributed to David after Bathsheba and as Nathan has revealed the Law to David and David is convicted in his heart.
So the question is: What should I do about my sin?
Request
Where does the process start?
In AA’s 12 step program, working the steps starts with admission to need.
My life is unmanageable and I need help.
The decisions I make, the relationships I have, everything in my life needs renewal.
Do we start with the people, the outlook, do we work on ourselves?
The first 7 steps are all focused on the key component - I need renewal, healing forgiveness with God first, because He will be the crucial player in the rest of my life.
In the same way our own inventory of our sin raises our focus from the depths of despair to the one truth, before all else and before all others - I have sinned against God.
& first and foremost I need him back.
The writer’s request overwhelms the psalm.
Nineteen of the forty-four lines appeal for God’s grace in one form or another (vv.
1a, 1d, 2, 6b–12, 14a, and 15a), and, in his appeal, the psalmist provides a near complete Hebrew thesaurus for the idea of forgiveness, including common and unusual images for forgiveness: have mercy (v.
1a), blot out (vv. 1d, 9b), wash me (vv.
2a, 7b), cleanse me (v.
2b), teach me (v.
6b), purge me (v.
7a), let me hear joy (v.
8), hide your face (v.
9a), create in me a clean heart (v.
10a), put in me a new and right spirit (v.
10b), don’t cast me away (v.
11a), don’t take away your holy spirit (v.
11b), restore the joy of your salvation (v.
12a) sustain in me a willing spirit (v.
12b), deliver me (v.
14a), and open my lips to declare praise (v.
15a).
The psalmist asks for nothing more than God’s mercy—and he asks for mercy in every imaginable way to express his deep longing for God’s grace.
Request, Motivation,
Despite the poet’s desperation for forgiveness, the psalm possesses a tone of quiet confidence.
The poet knows that God is willing to forgive because such is God’s nature toward those with “a broken and contrite heart” (v.
17b).
So although no dramatic shift from appeal to praise takes place in (as in ), the psalmist is no less sure of God’s response or his own intention to praise the Lord.
Confidence
The restoration of God’s mercy will make the psalmist pure, righteous, whole
Psalm 51:7
The restoration of God’s mercy and forgiveness will reconnect the Psalmist to others
The restoration of God’s mercy and forgiveness will establish life in the will of God.
That connects the heart and acton.
Psalm
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