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
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Sadness
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Analytical
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Social Tone
Openness
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Conscientiousness
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Extraversion
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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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The scribes and Pharisees got a bad rap.
When you read the New Testament and encounter them, you know that they are the bad guys.
They are the evil empire, the corrupt mob, the plotting villains.
You were probably taught to think this way about the Pharisees in Sunday School, but it’s not actually true.
If you met one of the Pharisees today, you’d quickly realize that he was not just a good guy, but he was one of the very best.
When a pastor daydreams about the ideal church member, he usually has a Pharisee in mind.
A Pharisee is the perfect Lutheran.
His church attendance is flawless.
He serves on the board of elders and church council.
He tithes ten percent of his income faithfully.
He gives generously to missions and outreach.
He actually reads his Bible, and he’s probably also read all 55 volumes of Luther’s Works – in German, of course.
His children sing in the choir and are active in the youth group.
His wife is the first one to sign up for church dinners and potlucks.
The Pharisee makes the world’s best neighbor.
He mows his lawn.
He rakes his leaves.
His dog never barks all night.
He drives a hybrid car and has solar panels on his roof.
He takes your recycle bin down to the curb when you forget.
In winter, he shovels his snow and yours.
He’s happy to check your mail when you go on vacation.
Everybody wants to live next door to him.
And the Pharisee is also a model citizen.
He generally votes conservative, but he still keeps an open mind on important issues.
He volunteers at the fire department and coaches little league.
He drinks socially, but never too much.
He is known and respected in the community.
If our country had more Pharisees, there’d be more order and less crime.
If our churches had more Pharisees, we’d have no problem balancing the budget or paying our pastors.
This Pharisee is the guy that you secretly wish you could be and know that you are not.
Are you impressed yet?
Well, you should be.
But Jesus isn’t.
Jesus says to you, “Unless your righteousness is greater than that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will absolutely never enter the kingdom of heaven” (Mt 5:20).
How’s that for a cold dose of reality?
If this guy, whose life looks basically perfect, can’t get into heaven, then what hope is there for you?
If this Pharisee with all his amazing works doesn’t have a shot, then what chance do you have with your mediocre list of accomplishments?
None! Zero! Nada!
When it comes to heaven, God demands absolute perfection and you don’t have it.
Imagine that you and 1,000 other people are trying to get into Harvard.
You take the entrance exam and score in the top 90%.
Surely, you’re in, right?
But the admissions counselor says, “Sorry.
You don’t qualify.
You needed a perfect score – on the exam, AND on your senior finals, AND on every test, quiz, or assignment you’ve ever had from preschool until today.
Remember that time you missed a spelling word in 2nd grade?
Sorry, you’re out.”
This is what the Law of God requires of you.
It’s easy to look around at your neighbor and think, “Well, at least I’m better than he is.
I don’t curse.
I don’t lose my temper.
I don’t sleep with my girlfriend.”
We tend to think of sins only as outward actions – things we do or don’t do.
But Jesus says, “You have heard that it was said to those of old, ‘You shall not murder; and whoever murders will be liable to judgment.’
But I say to you that everyone who is angry with his brother will be liable to judgment” (Mt 5:21-22a).
Jesus tells us that sin is not a matter of the hands; it’s a matter of the heart.
Now, in the eyes of your spouse, there is a big difference between lustful thoughts and actual adultery.
In the eyes of your neighbor, being angry with him is not the same as shooting him.
But in the eyes of God, there’s no difference.
When it comes to qualifying for heaven, being angry with your brother is the same as committing murder.
What’s the difference between you and the guy on trial for murder?
Perhaps it’s simply that in the heat of the moment, he had a gun in his hand and you didn’t.
Why not?
Maybe you couldn’t afford one.
Maybe you were too lazy to go to the store and buy one.
Maybe you simply got lucky.
In any case, there’s no room for boasting or judgment.
Instead, thank God that he was merciful to you.
Thank God that your hands didn’t have the chance to carry out the evil that was in your heart.
So, you haven’t choked your neighbor with your hands.
You haven’t beaten him with your fists.
That’s good.
Your neighbor appreciates that kind of behavior.
But if you’re counting on this to get you into the kingdom of God, then you’ve got a big problem.
Because you’re nowhere close to being as righteous as the Pharisees, and Jesus said, “Unless your righteousness exceeds the scribes and the Pharisees, you will absolutely never enter the kingdom of heaven.”
As the disciples watched the rich, young ruler walk away, a man who had kept every commandment from his youth, they asked Jesus in despair, “Who then can be saved?
(Mt 19:25).
If this guy can’t make it, then what hope is there for us?”
The Law answers, “None at all.
With man it is impossible!”
The name Satan is simply the Hebrew word for accuser.
The Bible calls Satan the accuser of the brethren, and he’s very good at his job.
No man on earth is his equal.
He’s the sharp prosecuting attorney that has never lost a case.
He knows the law forwards and backwards, and – you’d better believe it – he’s got an airtight case against you.
Your accuser has been keeping track of your sins since way before second grade.
He knows what you’ve done, he knows what you’ve said and thought, he knows all the things you think you got away with.
So, Jesus warns, “You’d better settle with your accuser quickly before the Day of Judgment, lest he hand you over to the judge, and the judge to the guard, and you be thrown into the prison of hell.
Truly, I say to you, from there you will absolutely never get out until you have paid the last of your debt” (Mt 5:25-26 alt.).
How can you settle with your accuser?
Promise to be a better person, better even than the Pharisees?
That’s impossible for men.
You’ve made that promise many times before and broken it just as often.
Offer to make a deal?
Your accuser is demanding that you be punished to the full extent of the law.
He’s out for blood and nothing you can offer would change his mind.
What then can you do?
There is only one way to settle with your accuser and you aren’t the one to do it.
You’re going to need to let Jesus speak for you.
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