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

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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
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Analytical
Confident
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Social Tendencies
Openness
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Anger
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Many years ago the coach for the Baltimore Orioles baseball team was a man named Earl Weaver.
He was famous for his reaction to what he considered a bad call.
He would angrily charge over to the umpire and shout, “Are you gonna get any better, or is this it?”
/            Do you ever ask yourself this question?
“Am I ever gonna get any better, or is this it?”
/
/            It’s a question many people struggle with at the beginning of a new year.
It’s the season when some of us resolve to become better people.
We resolve to quit smoking or drinking, lose weight, get on a budget, spend more time with the family, make better grades, attend church more often, read your Bible more, pray and witness, along with lots of other things you ought to have been doing all year.
There are usually those moments when we realize we need some changes that will do us good.
Deep inside we long to change, and yet at the same time, most of us have a built-in resistance to real changes./
/            /A man came home one day and saw a plaque his wife put on the kitchen wall."Prayer
changes things!"
Later, the wife notices the plaque missing.
She confronts her husband, “Don’t you like prayer?"
He answers, "Of course I like prayer, but I don't like change!"
            /Mark Twain once remarked that the only person who likes change is a wet baby.
To a large extent this is true.
But I believe it’s also true that almost everybody would admit there is always room for improvement.
Everybody wants to become a better person, but we aren’t really sure how or even if that’s possible.
How can you and I experience a change that will do us good?
/
            /I think the one place we need to start is with one single word: repentance.
Before any and every lasting change in your life, there must be repentance.
Before a revival becomes real, there must be repentance.
Before you and I will ever become the people God created us to be, there must be repentance.
Repentance is the key that unlocks the door to the changes that will do you and I the most good.
I want to offer you some help in this area from God’s Word found in  *Luke 3:1-22.
*/
*PRAYER- Lord Jesus, our hearts struggle between a deep desire to change and a stubborn fear of change.
Would you please intervene this morning and help us pursure the changes you want in us today?
Will you speak to us by Your Word and Your Spirit  and help us not just learn about repentance this morning—help us practice repentance.
In Jesus Name.
*
*/            /*Why is it so important that we change in the first place?
Doesn’t God love us just like we are?
Why should we spend all that time and effort making changes?
Well, the first reason I see in *vs.
1-6* is /God calls us to make changes that will do you good.
/
/            /Every one of the 4 Gospels in the Bible begins not with the ministry of Jesus, but with the ministry of John the Baptist.
Why?
Why not just plunge right in to Jesus’ life and ministry?
Maybe it’s because John is such an interesting character.
Matthew’s Gospel records John is a loner, living out in the desert, dressing in camel’s hair clothes, munching on Honey Bunches of Locusts.
I’ve always had an image of John as a wild-eyed, weird looking, shouting prophet.
I imagine little kids who see him running to their mommies scared of this fiery preacher.
But Luke tells us this strange man is God’s man---a messenger to whom *vs.
2* says /the word of God came to…/ *Vs.
4-6* say John is the fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy about the forerunner of the Messiah, the prophet who will prepare the world for Messiah’s arrival.
What is John’s message?
*Vs.
3* makes it plain: /And he went into all the region around the Jordan, preaching a baptism of repentance for the remission of sins,…/
*Mt 3:1-2* /1In those days John the Baptist came preaching in the wilderness of Judea, 2and saying, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!”/
/            //Repent! /This was John’s message.
But what does it mean to /repent/?
The Greek word Luke originally used here is *μετάνοια* = /a change of mind or purpose *always for the better.
*/John preaches a baptism of *μετάνοια, *that is, he baptized people as a sign that they had truly turned away from sin to God.
Through John God called for everybody to repent.
But John was not the last preacher to call for repentance.
*Mt 4:17* /From that time Jesus began to preach and to say, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand./
/            /When Jesus begins His ministry, He echoes John’s call for a change.
Jesus says that before you enter the kingdom of heaven, you must repent.
But this wasn’t the last time Jesus calls for repentance.
In the last book of the Bible, the Book of the Revelation, Jesus dictates 7 letters to the apostle John, addressed to the church of Jesus Christ, calling no less than 6 times for His own people to /repent.
/
            I’ve traced these echoes of repentance to make a point: /God calls all of us to repentance.
/
            He calls those who have never been born again through faith in Jesus Christ to repent.
You need to change your mind about your sins: to realize that you stand guilty before a holy God, in need of forgiveness.
You need to change your mind about Christ: to believe in Him as your Savior from sin, and surrender your life to Him as Lord of your life.
Without repentance, you cannot be saved.
But He also calls you and I who have been born again to a /lifestyle/ of repentance.
Our position and direction are changed when experience salvation, but after salvation comes /sanctification---/the process through which we become more and more like Jesus Christ.
You haven’t arrived at perfection here in this life, and neither have I.
The Holy Spirit is still working on us, convicting us, showing us more and more areas where He wants to make us more and more like Christ.
/He is continually calling on us to keep changing for the better to become more and more like Jesus.
/
            This may come as a shock to you.
If you’re not a Christian you may feel like you’re good enough right now without Christ.
You may not really want to repent and believe the Gospel, that you don’t really want the changes that Jesus will bring to your life.
God gives you the free will to make this decision.
But the Bible makes it crystal clear that unless you repent, you will never know God and never go to heaven.
Twice Jesus said in
*Lk 13:3, 5 */3,5 //I tell you, no; but unless you repent you will all likewise perish./
/            /At the end of this sermon, I’m going to give you a chance to repent and believe in Christ, and  urge you to take advantage of this invitation while you can.
On the other hand, some of you may say /I’ve been a Christian for 10-20-30-40 years!
I’ve done all the repenting I ever need to do.
/But have you?
I know we get rid of all the obvious, gross sins when we first get saved.
But sin can be very deceptive, become harder to spot---sins of pride, unforgiveness, lust, jealousy---hidden, acceptable sins we think don’t really matter much to God.
The same Jesus Who called His people to repent in Revelation still calls on His people to repent today.
What is Jesus calling you to repent of right now?
Every now and then in a football or basketball game, some poor player gets totally turned around and begins running toward the wrong goal.
When that happens, his coaches and teammates don’t stand by passively and politely suggest he rethink his plan.
They scream and yell LOUDLY for him to stop and turn around—NOW![i]
            /Do you hear God’s call for you to repent this morning?
I don’t know your heart.
I cannot tell you what sins God is putting His finger on right now.
But you know.
Don’t push His conviction away.
Hear Him calling, and repent today.
It’s a change that will do you good.
/
            Well there were many people who came to hear God’s call for repentance, through John’s preaching, and you’d think John would have been happy to baptize them all.
But that’s not what happened, is it?
But *vs.
7-14* tell us some of the folks who come to John to be baptized instead get berated.
John has some pretty harsh words for what *vs.
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