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
0.11UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.07UNLIKELY
Fear
0.11UNLIKELY
Joy
0.7LIKELY
Sadness
0.17UNLIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.6LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.53LIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.84LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.85LIKELY
Extraversion
0.43UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.76LIKELY
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
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9
I wrote down the idea for this sermon series back in the spring.
Wanting to talk about God’s design for and our need for Biblical Community.
I didn’t expect that we would be in a divisive season in our church, but God’s timing and wisdom go far beyond ours.
Over the next several weeks we are going to be looking at the last part of the Book of Romans.
The letter is can really be broken into 2 parts: Chapters 1-11 and chapters 12-16.
The first part is a systematic theology of the Christian faith, while the second part is a practical outworking of what it means to live for Christ.
We are going to look at the second part over the next weeks.
The Target: GOSPEL-MOTIVATED, SELF-SACRIFICING Community
Pando
South of I70 within the Fishlake National Forrest in south-central Utah, there is a 107 acre grove of quaking aspen trees that is called Pando (Latin for “I spread”).
Made of 47000 trees, Pando has been deemed the most massive organism in the world.
See, the 47000 trees are genetically identical and share a common root system.
They don’t grow like normal trees, rather new trees are actually clones of older trees.
For more than 80,000 years, older, established trees have brought forth newer trees while keeping this massive organism thriving.
From the outside each looks like an individual tree, but underground there is one, interconnected and interdependent root system.
They share resources, they strengthen one another, they bring life to new trees, and they support one another through tough weather and fires that may come.
I can’t help but think of the church when I think about Pando.
There is a sharing of resources
At least what God’s design for His church is in His Word.
Wanting to talk about God’s design for and our need for Biblical Community.
I didn’t expect that we would be in a divisive season in our church, but God’s timing and wisdom go far beyond ours.
The Target: GOSPEL-MOTIVATED, SELF-SACRIFICING Community
9-
This is our target, what we should be aiming at if we are to grasp at the Heart of God for His church.
Real love, real honor, commitment to working hard and serving alongside one another, rejoicing with one another, weeping with one another, being patient with one another, praying with and for one another, helping and giving to one another, having one another over to our homes, living in harmony with one another, forgiving one another...
Though this is our target, it it does not come naturally to us.
Barriers to Community
Paul says in verse 2—Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind.”
In order for us to be the community God desires for us to be (and what we all, DEEP DOWN, desire for ourselves) we must first be transformed.
I read a book on an airplane a long time ago called “Tangible Kingdom” by Hugh Halter
In the book, Halter presents 3 barriers to Gospel community and church unity.
These are the 3 defining marks of our culture and what influences everyone of us in this room without us even realizing it.
Halter challenges our traditional ideas of church and argues for a re
In the book, Halter presents 3 barriers to Gospel community and church unity.
These 3 things are also confronted in the first view verses of .
1) INDIVIDUALISM
Halter defines individualism as the “deep-seated bias that fights against anything that doesn’t directly serve our individual interests.”
The Cultural Mantras are:
You be you.
Be true to yourself.
Follow your heart.
Find yourself.
In the context of the local church it is:
The desire to not be stretched outside of what we are comfortable with.
Seeing your needs and your preferences as more valuable than the needs and preferences of others.
Seeing your needs and your preferences as more valuable than the needs and preferences of others.
Not wanting to commit to serving, giving, or being a part of something that may require you to give up something else (time doing something you want to do, money for things you want…)
Paul challenges our instinctive individualism with these words.
In a nutshell Paul is saying:
It is NOT ABOUT YOU!
You are not the most important person here.
Your preferences, your desires, and your comfort are not the priority.
Paul is speaking to our ingrained tendency to think about ourselves before we think about others, or the community as a whole.
Deep down in all of us there is a desire to be connected to something bigger than ourselves.
phil 2 1-
There is JOY, REAL JOY, in giving up the fight for self and embracing the way of love and sacrifice for the sake of others.
Let us be transformed by the “renewal of our minds” as we die to self and live for Christ in loving and serving one another.
2) CONSUMERISM
Halter says consumerism “is based on the belief that I can’t help others until I help myself, that my own wants and desires trump those of others.”
At the heart of consumerism is the desire to be entertained, to be served, and to be satisfied by the experiences and programs provided by the church.
What does this church have for me and my kids
- What does this church have for me, my kids
Do I enjoy the worship
- Do we enjoy the worship
Do I get anything from the pastor's message
- Do I get anything from the pastor's message
Is the coffee as good as the church down the street
The coffee is not as good as the church down the street
But there is a better way:
romans 12
The heart of consumerism is “how does this serve me?”
But the heart of the “renewed mind” says “how can I serve US.”
Again Paul is declaring to your native hearts
It is NOT ABOUT YOU!
“Jesus didn’t summon us to consume.
He taught us to love God and neighbor, meet each other’s needs, enact justice and mercy, and proclaim the gospel of the kingdom.
This is made evident in the attitude of the early church.
They didn’t ask, What am I getting out of this? or Am I being fed? but rather, What gifts and resources can I leverage for this family?
and Am I counting my brothers and sisters as more significant than myself?”
In another passage very similar to this one Paul says:
1 cor 12
God has designed you, empowered you, and equipped you for service.
We need you, each and every one of you for the purpose of serving the COMMON GOOD, the GREATER GOOD.
It might be waving to cars as the come into the parking lot.
It might be helping kids get to and from the bathroom on a sunday morning
Or teaching a group of 3 and 4 years olds about God’s great love for them.
It might be cutting donuts, making coffee, running a sound board, or something else we haven’t even thought of.
But we need you.
We need your voice at the table in decisions we make as a church.
We need you commitment to give so that we can continue to do what God has called us to in reaching Ohio county and the world for Him.
It isn’t about being served, it is about serving.
Commit yourself to the greater good in the community of Christ.
3) MATERIALISM
Finally, Halter points to materialism as a barrier to community.
Materialism is connected to consumerism, but it is more concerned with how we tangibly serve the needs of others.
Materialism is a condition of our culture as we define our success based largely on the accumulation of stuff of the accomplishes of our lives.
Whether it be cars, houses, clothing, or something else, we find our significance in the world based on how much stuff we own or the.
Or it is experiences we have or accomplishes we can point to.
We spend considerable amounts of time feeding our need to succeed at the expense of serving and connecting with others.
We don’t have time to serve because there are jobs to be done, bills to be paid, games and practices to be made, and experiences to be had.
Serving the needs of others just isn’t all that appetizing.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9