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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Emotion Tone
Anger
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Openness
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Conscientiousness
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Extraversion
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Agreeableness
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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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\\ \\ Sermon Title:
/How’s Your New Year Going?/
Sermon Text:
/1 Corinthians 12:27-13:13/
\\ /Intro:/
—One day at a particularly quiet moment in the normally noisy newsroom where he worked, young H. L. Mencken suddenly shouted at the top of his lungs, /“It’s coming in the doors!”/
\\ —Needless to say, everyone stopped and looked in his direction.
\\ —/“It’s up to the bottom of the desks!”/ said Mencken as he rose to his feet.
\\ —/“What are you talking about?”/ asked one of his colleagues.
\\ —/“It’s up to the tops of our desks!”/
shouted Mencken as he jumped up onto his desk.
\\ —Then the whole newsroom practically in one voice shouted, /“What do you mean?”/
\\ —/“Mediocrity!”/ came the reply.
\\ —/“We’re drowning in mediocrity!”/ he shouted over and over as he jumped from the desk and ran out the door never to return.
\\ —Well, H.L. Mencken was a prophet far ahead of his time.
\\ —If ever there was a shout that would ring true for our world today, it this one, /“We’re drowning in a sea of mediocrity”/
\\ —Who can name, for instance, a worthy role model for our young people?
\\ —Who can name a politician they admire without reservation?
\\ —Who can even find a decent, as far as entertainment is concerned, show to watch on television?
\\ —We flip through 70 or 200 channels with our remote controls and what do we end up saying?
/“There’s nothing on TV!”/
\\ —This has given rise to a whole generation of /“channel surfers.”/
\\ —We ride the waves of channels for hours gleaning little bits here and there.
\\ — We begin each new year in a similar way.
We have a thousand things that we want to accomplish or correct in our lives, but is seems that we can do very little.
\\ —Thus Paul’s words at the end of the twelfth chapter of 1 Corinthians should be sweet to our ears.
\\ —Did you hear it?
\\ —/“But I will show you a more excellent way.”/
\\ —Thank God!
In this shallow world of mediocrity, false promises and failed resolutions, how our hearts yearn for a more excellent way.
\\ —Listen a minute again for Paul’s formula for excellence:
\\ —/Though I speak in the tongues of men and of angels but have not love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal.
And if I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing.
If I give away all that I have to the poor, but have not love, I gain nothing.”/
\\ —Now, let’s make sure we understand this.
\\ —Paul seems to be saying for example that as a minister I could preach the gospel eloquently and our worship services could be broadcast by satellite around the world, but if I have a heart full of hatred and indulge in gossip, lying and character assassination, I am nothing but a bunch of noise.
\\ —I can have my Ph.D. in nuclear physics, be a Nobel prize winner with many books to my credit, but if I’m not able to relate to my family, I’ve accomplished nothing.
\\ —I can be a world class athlete, totally committed to being the best I can be, but if I don’t love others, my gold medals are nothing but a sham, a waste and meaningless.
\\ —Isn’t that basically what Paul is saying in more modern terms?
\\ —This is not the message that the world today has to offer us.
It is the message of me first, it doesn’t matter about anyone else but me.
\\ — I am all that counts.
\\ —But here is the first thing Paul says to us:
\\ /I.     //The only excellence that really counts in life is excellence in love./
\\ /Illustration:/
\\ —Over the years, I have kept clippings of a newspaper column that was a staple of about every newspaper in the country.
Of course I am talking about the /“Dear Abby”/ column.
In one letter, a girl by the name of Amy Mulrooney wrote to /Dear Abby/ hoping the stranger who helped her at a busy airport in Washington State would see her letter and know how much she appreciated his generosity.
\\ —It seems that Amy flew to Pullman Washington for an interview for admission to Washington State University’s veterinary school.
\\ —Before she left she made reservations for a rental car and a motel room.
\\ —She had everything planned out, hoping to have a couple of hours of peace and quiet in her hotel room before her important interview.
\\ —That wasn’t how things turned out, though.
\\ —At the airport Amy went to the rental car agency, intending to pay for it with her credit card.
\\ —To her horror, her credit card was not accepted.
\\ —It seems she had made a payment five days before and was certain that the payment would clear by the time she arrived in Washington, but it didn’t.
\\ —Amy had no other way to pay for either the rental car or the motel room.
\\ —/“So there I was, /Amy wrote, /“stranded at the airport.”/
\\ —She went immediately to a pay phone to call her roommate back in California.
\\ —By the time she got through to her, she was upset and crying.
\\ —It was while she was on the telephone that she felt a tap on the shoulder.
\\ —She naturally thought that it was someone who thought she was taking too long on the phone.
\\ —But it was a man who had been listening and very matter-of-factly handed her a one hundred dollar bill and walked away without saying a word.
\\ —Amy never even got the chance to find out who he was and to thank him.
\\ —He simply disappeared into the crowd without a saying a thing.
\\ —Amy wrote to Dear Abby, /“I want him to know that I was accepted in Washington State’s veterinary school.”/
\\ —/“So, not only did this anonymous benefactor make it possible for me to arrive on time for my interview, he made it possible for me to get into veterinary school.”/
\\ /—/Amy will remember the experience for the rest of her life.
His quiet act of love made a lasting impact.
\\ —Albert Schweitzer was once asked to name the greatest person in the world.
\\ —The doctor replied, /“The greatest person in the world is some unknown individual in some obscure corner of the earth who at this very moment has gone in love to be with another person in need.”/
Could that be something that some of you are called to do?
\\ —So the first thing Paul says to us is:
\\ —The only excellence is excellence in love.
\\ /II.
//The second thing Paul says is that love is more than an emotion./
\\          A.
/“Love is patient and kind; love is not jealous or boastful; it is not arrogant or rude.”/
\\                   1.
Is that the kind of love you have for others?
Can you say no to feelings of jealousy?
Can you avoid bragging?
Can you get behind the wheel of the car with patience and kindness?
Does incompetent service cause you to become arrogant or rude?
\\ \\                   2.      Do you have the kind of love that gives to others with the expectation of something in return?
\\          B.
Again Paul says: /“Love does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice at wrong, but rejoices in the right.
Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.”/
\\ \\ /Illustration:/
\\ —There was a man who several years ago had a blood clot on his brain.
It required surgery.
\\ —The doctors then had to remove the part of his brain which deals primarily with communication skills (reading, writing, speech).
\\ —He had what is referred to as Aphasia.
It is very difficult for him to communicate.
\\ —He had to learn to read and write all over again.
Speaking was also very difficult for him.
\\ —Now, when he wrote letters, it could take days to finish just one letter.
\\ —He wrote one of his daughters a letter.
\\ —And in that letter, he recorded a memory that has been stored in his brain since he was three years old.
\\ —We hear so much these days about repressed memories of childhood trauma, but this memory was very much different.
\\ —Here is what he wrote (remember he is writing under that cloud of Aphasia):
\\ —/“I can remember the many times when ‘Colly’ (his father) proved his love to his children./
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