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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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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My friends, I greet you today in the name of our Savior, Jesus Christ.
Our lesson comes to us from the 15th Chapter of Matthew’s Gospel, beginning with the 21st verse.
This morning, I would like to try something a little different.
Boy, doesn’t that strike fear into your hearts?
There is nothing quite as scary as when a pastor says, that we are going to try something different.
This text is an awesome text and I want us to have a discussion about it.
I am going to ask a series of questions, and you can answer them out loud, or you may think the answers in your heart or write them down on your bulletin.
It is my prayer that in doing this the text will come alive in a whole new way.
How would you define the word “faith”?
What do you think of?
… Is it a religion, as in my faith is Christian.
Is it a series of beliefs?
Is it a way of getting God to do whatever we want him to do, as in, if you have enough faith, then God will…?
As we mentioned earlier, faith is the hand that holds onto the promises of God.
It grips them tightly, knowing that those promises will be kept, because the one who made those promises is faithful.
So then, faith lives within and according to those promises.
It influences everything that we do, not because we are now bound by a whole bunch of rules.
You can do this, but you can’t do that.
Rather, faith lives in the reality of the promises that it holds onto, no matter what the situation may be.
Faith is persistent.
Think about this for a moment.
Because it impacts how we live our lives, and the things that we do, and the witness that we give…
I can’t help it.
No matter how hard I try to resist, I am powerless against it.
I would like to think that I’m not, but the reality of the situation is, that it is actually my kryptonite.
When it hits me, it hits me hard, like a ton of bricks and then, well then I’m a goner.
It’s just two words, but there is nothing I can do to stop them.
“Pleeeeaaaaaaaassssseeeeeeeee, Daddy!”
They are always said with a killer smile and the biggest blue eyes.
And the worse part, is that they are persistent.
I mean, this isn’t fair.
I’ve tried to say “no.”
I really have, but the kryptonite gets stronger and stronger.
“Pleeeaaassseee, Daddy!”
The more I resist, the harder it comes.
I think I’m sweating just talking about it.
She is a persistent one I’ll tell you what.
But it works, and she knows that it works.
That is why she keeps it up, she is too smart for me.
Her faith that I will cave is greater than my initial responses.
She knows that all she has to do is flash those big blues at me and…bingo.
The woman in our text is an example of faith.
She is a wonderful example of faith, because she models the persistence and what it is to live in the expectations of the promises made.
She knows that Jesus heals.
She knows that Jesus will heal her daughter, whether he does that at the moment she asks, or whether he does that with his second coming, she knows that her daughter will be healed, and so she acts on that.
What does she do?
She is amazingly bold.
Do you know why?
Well, she has three strikes against her.
This woman is a gentile, that’s strike one.
She is not a Jew, and in those days gentiles were not looked upon very highly.
She was in the area of Tyre and Sidon, that’s strike two.
Tyre and Sidon weren’t exactly popular vacation destinations.
In fact, in the Old Testament these two towns came to be symbols of evil and enemies of God.
And she is a woman.
Now, this point of view is not something that we condone in our world, but back in that culture, being a woman would be strike three.
In other words, there was no conceivable reason why this person should be talking to Jesus.
Except for one.
Faith.
Life with faith looks different.
Because life with faith is not reactionary, you just hunker down and hope for the best, you deal with the problems as they come and pray that those problems are few and far between.
Is that something you can relate to?
Does it feel like that is really the way it is sometimes?
But the life with faith, lives in the promises of God.
For example, we know that when Jesus returns, he will make all things new.
Heaven and earth will be restored.
That must mean that heaven and earth are important, right?
Therefore we should care for our planet and be good stewards with what God has given to us.
Or how about the life with faith living in the promises of communion?
What does that look like?
… The body and blood of Jesus are in, with and under the bread and the wine.
And so we receive forgiveness of sins, life that never ends and salvation.
When you receive those you can live in the forgiveness of our God, not in guilt.
But is that usually the way we think about it?
Or what about baptism?
We know that in the waters of baptism that we are not only made God’s own dear daughters and sons, but we are also made brothers and sisters with one another.
Therefore the ways that we interact with one another, the ways that we share our lives together is to reflect that reality.
No matter what happens, life with faith says that we know God made these promises and we are going to live according to them.
And the woman in our text is an example of that.
What is going on here?
What is her situation?
What happens?
Not only did she have the three strikes against her, but then in her dialogue with Jesus it seemed as if he was not going to grant her request.
First he ignores her.
He gives no reply, not even a word.
Talk about an awkward silence.
The disciples in their brilliance have come up with a solution, “Hey Jesus, get rid of her.”
What does she do?
Common sense would say to give up and go home.
It was a good try, but really the deck was stacked against you.
No, instead she goes and she kneels before Jesus.
But this is not just respectful or nice kind of kneeling.
This is worship.
She is worshiping Jesus.
Why?
It must be motivated by faith.
From the position of faith, worship happens because God is worthy of worship, no matter what.
He is not only worthy of worship, but worthy of the trust that says, “Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”
But know this, the worship of the woman here is not worship that is being done to manipulate God into giving her what she wants.
This is not pushing the right buttons to make God bend his will to ours, as if God is some kind of heavenly ATM that hands out whatever we want if we push the right buttons.
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