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
0.6LIKELY
Disgust
0.05UNLIKELY
Fear
0.03UNLIKELY
Joy
0.7LIKELY
Sadness
0.09UNLIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.71LIKELY
Confident
0.64LIKELY
Tentative
0UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.56LIKELY
Conscientiousness
1LIKELY
Extraversion
0.37UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.99LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.9LIKELY

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
Thanksgiving
1 Timothy 2:1-4
*Pray and Give Thanks*
 
            Thanksgiving is a natural time for prayer.
Tomorrow most people will be talking, at least, about what they have to be thankful for.
No doubt this is more due to the historical roots of this day than to any real religious fervor in our country.
But the fact remains that people will be asking, what do you have to be thankful for?
So it’s fitting on this evening before Thanksgiving that we take a moment and look at one of the many Bible passages that urges us to give thanks.
Let’s follow St. Paul’s advice today.
*Pray and give thanks.*
*            I.
For God’s Gift of Government*
*            II.
For our Universal Salvation*
*I.*
When Paul wrote this admonition to pray, he wasn’t specifically thinking of the holiday that we’re celebrating.
But his words apply.
He urges us to make requests, prayers, intercessions and thanksgivings.
He specifically mentions kings and rulers.
Today, as we prepare to observe our national holiday of Thanksgiving, it’s good for us to hear and heed God’s call: *pray and give thanks for God’s good gift of government.*
*            *Paul really calls us to pray for everyone.
There are so many things for us to pray for.
There are obvious things, like asking for God’s help when someone we know goes into the hospital, and giving thanks when they come out again.
But there are less obvious situations that merit our prayers just as much.
For instance, do you ever pray for your spouse at the beginning of the day?
He or she is going to face many things and needs God’s help and guidance.
Do you ever pray for your children or for your parents in the morning?
Children, for the most part, are off to school in a system that doesn’t have much respect for what we hold dear and parents will find many challenges to their faith.
And how often do we give thanks at the end of the day when we see that spouse or those children safely off to bed?  How often do you children give thanks at the end of the day that your parents are safely home and putting you to bed?
All the things that could have gone wrong, that could have snatched those people out of our lives have been avoided for one more day.
Now, I don’t want to make a law that you have to specifically follow this advice.
But God does say, “Pray and give thanks for everyone.”
Paul seizes on one special area: the government.
He tells us to pray for kings and rulers.
Now for us Americans, government -- any government -- is not our favorite institution.
Sometimes we’re like the priest in the musical /Fiddler on the Roof/.
When asked if there was a blessing for the tsar, he answered, “May the Lord bless and keep the tsar -- far away from us!”
But God wants us to pray and give thanks for our rulers.
Why?
So that they do their job.
Not necessarily the job our constitution envisions for them, or our courts outline for them, or the political parties want for them.
Paul tells us to make requests for our political leaders so that we can lead peaceful and quiet lives.
That’s the job that God gave them.
“Peaceful and quiet lives” means that God wants us to be undisturbed as we live our faith and reach out to those around us.
Of course, if we are unmolested in those things, chances are we are living peaceful and quiet lives in general.
Go home and read your newspaper -- you’ll discover just how richly we are blessed with good government and peace and tranquility here in America.
In spite of Monicagate and Columbine and everything else that our country has gone through in the last decade, we go to sleep at night expecting that soldiers won’t be bursting through our doors before morning.
We don’t expect to turn on the news and find out that our capitol or our home town has been ripped apart by protests or upheavals.
Most of us don’t even expect that Y2K is going to severely -- or even significantly -- disrupt our lives.
We Americans believe that in the morning our lives will go on pretty much the way they did today.
And for that we should get down on our knees and thank God, because I can tell you from personal experience that many countries in the world do not have that same expectation.
God has given us peaceful and quiet lives.
And he wants us to pray for the men and women that he has sent to provide that peace.
Do we do that?
During the endless months of the Lewinsky scandal, when we all wished that the media would find something else to talk about, did we pray for Bill Clinton personally?
Did we ask God to lead him to repentance?  Did we ask God to guide him and the congress so that however it came out, they would continue to do the work that God gave them to do?  I’ll be honest, I didn’t offer those prayers nearly as much as I should have.
Did you?
When it was over, how many of us gave thanks to God that in spite of the sinfulness and pettiness and downright absurdity of that entire scandal, our government still provided peaceful and quiet lives.
Our personal freedom was not endangered in any way, and neither was our freedom to continue to reach out with the gospel.
Again, I don’t remember offering that prayer.
But I should have.
We all should have.
God wants us to pray for our leaders and to give thanks for them.
As imperfect and unworthy as they are for the positions they hold, they are God’s representatives.
And God has used them very effectively to bless every person sitting here today.
It’s a horrible comment on our Christianity that we don’t do it.
I’m sure I’ve said it to you before, but I’ll repeat myself, as all pastors inevitably do.
My greatest failing as a Christian is that I don’t pray nearly enough.
Is that yours?
If not your greatest, is it a serious failing?
God wants us to be faithful men, women and children of prayer.
When we aren’t, we defy him.
We treat all that he has done for us with contempt and for that he ought to disown us and leave us to flounder without the care that he give us day after day.
But God is greater than our failure to pray.
He sent Jesus because he already knew thousands of years ago how unfaithful we Lutherans would be in prayer.
Regularly, Jesus set time aside to pray -- and he was a busy man.
He taught his disciples how to pray.
He prayed for his disciples.
On the night he was betrayed, he prayed for all people who would ever come to faith through their work -- he prayed for us.
And as he was being nailed to the cross, he prayed for the soldiers who drove the nails through his hands and feet.
God has given to you and me Jesus’ perfect life of prayer.
In his eyes, we have lived and prayed and given thanks just as Jesus did.
In exchange for the richness of Jesus’ prayers that God has given us, he gave Jesus all those times that we were too busy or just too thoughtless to pray.
He laid on Jesus’ head all the prayers that we didn’t say for our spouses and our children and our president and our congress.
He made Jesus pay for our lack of thankful prayers that should be storming the gates of heaven for the paradise that we live in here in the United States.
And we are forgiven.
Completely.
Totally.
Absolutely.
We are perfect people of prayer in God’s eyes.
Tomorrow, on Thanksgiving, as you gather your family together to commemorate all that God has done for you, be sure that you remember how much he has forgiven you, how much he has loved you in Jesus Christ.
Starting tomorrow, let us be faithful in prayer, faithful in thanksgiving.
Let us storm the throne of God in behalf of our president, our congress, our governor, our legislature, our county and city officials.
Let us bring our spouses and our children and our parents again and again before the God who loves them as much as he loves us.
Let us give thanks for all the care and blessing he has given them and us.
Let’s be faithful in prayer, not because we earn something by prayer.
But because God has already given us everything.
*II.*
*            *In truth, through our government God gives us blessing after blessing.
All those blessings of peace and quiet and freedom point us to one central truth: Jesus.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9