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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Joy
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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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It was near the twilight of his life, and quite possibly he sat on one of the curvaceous slopes of the hills of Judea, looked out into one of the valleys, and saw a common site of the times.
David had walked with the Lord for many years, and maybe in a time of reflection and contemplation he saw a flock of sheep being led through the valley by a faithful and loving shepherd.
Flashbacks in his mind took David to his days as a young lad serving in his dad's household.
He began to reflect upon his walk with God, and as his eyes were captured by the sight in front of him, maybe it dawned on him, /As that shepherd is to those sheep, so has the Lord been to me./
David said, "The Lord is my shepherd."
*The Lord sometimes has to make us rest*
David said, "The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.
He maketh me to lie down in green pastures" (kjv).
He is the Lord Jehovah Ra'ah.
He is the God of gods, and he is my shepherd.
David said, "He maketh me to lie down in green pastures."
Ah, that's my dilemma.
As shepherd I lead God's people, and yet I'm following God as a sheep.
He makes me lie down.
There's something challenging about that phrase.
David says God is such a shepherd that he maketh me to lie down.
God knows there is a sheep in me, and there's something about my sheepness that would cause me to trot right on through the green pastures.
God is so committed to blessing me with the blessing in the pasture that when he has to, he'll make me lie down.
He knows my sheepness comes out unexpectedly, and if I'm not careful, I'll trot right on past my blessing.
There's something about my sheepness that is uncontrollable.
There's something about the sheep in me that even though I try to lead God's people as shepherd, my sheepness causes God sometimes to make me lie down.
He'll force me to lie down if he has to.
He will not risk me trotting through the blessing he has planted in the green pastures.
There's something in my sheepness that comes out sometimes unexpectedly.
/Baaaa./
There's something in my sheepness that will cause me /baaaa /to miss the blessing God has for me.
/Baaaa./
There's something about me that if God is not careful /baaaa/ I'll run right past the blessing /baaaa/ he has for me.
And /baaaa/ there's something about the sheepness in me that God will have to sometimes /baaaa/ make me lie down.
I'm so driven sometimes.
I'm so obsessed with being a shepherd that I forget I'm a sheep.
It's a part of my dilemma.
As a sheep God often makes me to lie down.
"He maketh me to lie down in green pastures…he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name's sake.
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death."
It's not death.
It's the shadow of death.
He maketh me to lie down in green pastures, and he allows me sometimes to walk through the valley of the shadow of death.
It's those times when I experience things in my life that seem to overwhelm me.
It's when the burden and the weight and the challenge and the chore of leading God's people have me feeling I'm about to be consumed.
It's when the weight of leadership and the responsibilities of guiding God's people weigh me down to the point that I feel I'm in the very shadow of death.
*When you are in a valley, remember a mountaintop is ahead*
But notice what God says.
It's "through the /valley /of the shadow."
God has to remind me of the definition of a valley.
He must let me understand the topological concept of a valley, for you can never be in a valley unless you are positioned between two mountains.
Whenever I realize I'm in a valley, it by definition means I just left some mountaintop and I'm on my way to the next mountain.
In between there is a valley that often seems to consume me.
It often seems to weigh me down.
It's that valley of discouragement.
It's that valley of weight and load.
It's the valley that has me struggling and wondering why am I here.
It's the valley where I tend to reexamine and reanalyze and reinvestigate the call of shepherd on my life, the challenge that has me wondering, /How did I get here?/
The catch is, you can't stop in the valley.
"Yea, though I walk /through./"
Yea, though I walk /in/—not what he said.
"Yea, though I walk/ through,/" which means you came in one side; if you keep on walking, you're coming out the other side.
God has brought you here to tell you this journey is not complete.
*God blesses us even in the valley*
Watch this.
Though you feel you're walking through the valley, God has a blessing in the valley.
Watch this.
"Yea, though I walk through the valley…I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me."
Watch this, verse 5, "Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies."
The flow of the text would imply God does something unique in the valley, that even with the shadows lurking around me, God brings something into my life.
God makes an assignment on my life even as I am in the valley, for the Bible says he prepares a table before me in the presence of mine enemies.
Now watch this.
I want to suggest this is the meat of this text.
If you miss this, you'll miss what God is trying is trying to tell you.
"Thou preparest a table before me."
I'm in the valley, in between two mountains, and God moves.
I'm in the valley, in between decisions, and God moves.
I'm in the valley, in the midst of depression, in the midst of confrontation, in the midst of challenges, in the midst of failure, in the midst of disgust, in the midst of discouragement, and God moves.
Here's what he does.
He prepares "a table /before /me."
Watch what God does.
In this valley, in this shadow, in this struggle, in this challenge, in this call, God prepares a table—symbolic of blessing and provision—before me.
If you were invited to dinner in that culture, you would recline at a long, low table, if you sat at a table at all.
Eating was an experience.
It was a time of fellowship and sharing.
It was a long, drawn-out time of interaction with someone else.
It was at this time of fellowship that the table would be prepared.
Have you been to Shoguns?
Shoguns is a unique restaurant with an Oriental theme.
You sit at a table, and a guy comes out with knives and is throwing them between his legs and behind him, flipping them up and catching them.
He's a craftsman and an artist, and he begins to prepare the meal before you.
While you are watching him, he brings out the hors d'oeuvres and the shrimp and meat, and he begins to slice it and dice it and prepare it before your eyes.
Here's the catch.
You know a main entrée is coming.
You are watching him go through the various preliminaries and appetizers, but in your mind you know a main course is coming.
Sometimes he'll slice the main course and put it to the side, and you are seeing this simmering meat or fish, knowing the main course is coming.
That's the way God moves sometimes.
Sometimes God puts you in a position, and you can smell a blessing coming.
Sometimes God puts you in a position, and you see God moving things from here to there, place to place, and you see God setting you up to receive it.
You can't always put your name on it, can't always explain it, can't always figure out what it is.
You just know God is up to something.
You can't always dictate it, can't always put it in your computer.
You just have a sense in your spirit that God is doing something.
Maybe you don't know what God is up to, but there is a move of God in your church, in your life, in your spirit.
You know God is preparing something right in your face.
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