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
0.14UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.09UNLIKELY
Fear
0.11UNLIKELY
Joy
0.6LIKELY
Sadness
0.51LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.77LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.33UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.9LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.48UNLIKELY
Extraversion
0.11UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.33UNLIKELY
Emotional Range
0.56LIKELY

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
Today’s text is tailored to teach us that “Jesus is point blank with the spiritually blind and patient with the spiritual slow.”
JESUS IS POINT BLANK WITH THE SPIRITUALLY BLIND.
The spiritually blind are argumentative.
The word “came” {carries the idea of military rank}.
They came to argue {to attempt to gain control of and the verb tense indicates a continual argument}.
If someone is constantly wanting to argue, then there is a definite possibility they are not interested in learning!
The spiritually blind are arrogant.
“seeking a sign” {Both Jesus and the Pharisees knew that false prophets trafficked in the sensational.
More miraculous signs would only begin to undermine His credibility}.
If Jesus would have yielded to their passion for a sensational display he would have made faith impossible it would have precluded a free personal acceptance of who he was.
Their demand was a demonstration of their spiritual blindness.
They were attempting to gain by empirical {observational} means what can only be gained by faith and trust.
Faith that depends on proof is not faith but veiled doubt.
They continually sought a sign and yet one of their leaders Nicodemus said this to Jesus in
They had been given a sign and still they could not see the Savior.
Unbelievers will demand a sign but reject one when they see it.
The word test does not mean an objective test to discover the merit of something, but an obstacle or stumbling block to discredit.
They are not attempting to discover if Jesus is the Messiah but discredit His claim.
This word test is used only 4 times in Mark’s Gospel.
Three times concerning the Pharisees and one time concerning Satan.
When spiritually blind seek to test God in this sense they are acting like their father Satan.
Jesus does not give them the sign they requested because He knows they are not seeking salvation.
People don’t become believers through signs but by the Spirit.
The spiritually blind will be abandoned.
The word for “sighed” is a rare word, occurring only here in the NT, and fewer than thirty times in all of Greek literature.
It is not an expression of anger or indignation so much as of dismay or despair.
It describes a person who finds themselves pushed to the limit of faithfulness.
The antagonism of the Pharisees parallels the antagonism of the Israelites to Moses in the wilderness—and Jesus’ groaning in dismay seems to reflect God’s disgust with the bent and recalcitrant Israelites
Leaving is a definite moving away or departing.
It was used in some context to describe a divorce, not a bad picture of what Jesus was doing!
In the parallel Matthew the word left is meant He left them behind using a verb which also carried the idea of forsaking or abandoning.
JESUS IS PATIENT WITH HIS DISCIPLES.
Some people need some extra help, like the man who went into a bank and said he wanted some money.
The teller asked him to make out a check.
But the man would not do it.
So the teller said, “If you won’t sign the check, I can’t give you any money.”
The man went across the street to another bank, where the same conversation took place.
But after this exchange the teller reached across the counter, took him by the ears, and banged his head three times on the counter.
After which the man took out a pen and calmly signed a check.
The man then returned to the first bank and said, “They gave me money across the street.”
“How did that happen?” asked the teller.
“They explained it to me!” answered the man
THE SPIRITUALLY SLOW NEED REPETITION.
Mark 6:30-7:37 is repeated in Mark 8:1-30.
One obvious reason for this repetition is the slowness of the disciples.
Someone once said that “Repetition is the mother of learning”.
Repetition of truth is needed because we are prone to repeat wrong behaviors.
Repetition of truth is needed because we are prone not remember the Lord’s most recent activities.
Repetition is a wonderful and effective teacher.
If you are a slow learner take heart you are in good company.
Slow doesn’t mean you have learned nothing - it means your learning is negligible (small - almost unnoticeable).
Slow to learn is not an excuse for such behavior only an explanation.
We are like the disciples - they very rarely got it the first, second, or third time.
If you are a slow learner take heart Jesus is patient with slow learners.
However, do not mistake His patience as a pat on the back that you are good.
Jesus does not condemn us for our slowness - he patiently confronts us.
Don't miss the context.
The disciples had just witnessed a striking confrontation between Jesus and the religious leaders and this is what they should have been discussing.
Instead they are worried about only having one loaf of bread.
I guess they thought “what could Jesus do with one loaf of bread?”.
Jesus interrupts their conversation with a caution - this word means to command with authority and the verb tense means he repeated this command.
Notice his caution - Watch out {calls for mental alertness} Beware  {demands that one look attentively at the object called to one’s attention in order to avoid the danger that it presents} the leaven of the Pharisees and the leaven of Herod.
Notice their response to Jesus teaching
Discussing indicates that they were repeating this over and over.
So, Jesus is continually warning them about impending danger and they are continually discussing impending hunger.
They were concerned over their lack of bread while Jesus was concerned about their lack of faith.
Notice that Jesus does not treat them like He did the Pharisees.
He does not abandon them.
He is aware of their discussion - he is omniscience - he doesn’t know some things he knows everything!
Jesus is not attacking them.
He is helping them to apprehend.
The Greek word for understand means {to put the pieces of the puzzle together and make sense out of the parts}.
The disciples still saw only "puzzle pieces" but had so far failed to see the full picture.
They had become hardened to the spectacular.
Scar tissue had begun to encase their heart.
Not to the state that is was irreversible but enough that they missed the deeper points of Jesus teaching.
Are we as His disciples not just like the 12? Too often Jesus and His Spirit are at work in our life and yet we fail to see what He is doing.
May we frequently pray Paul's great prayer in
Do you not remember?
A common refrain throughout Scripture.
Forgetting what the Lord has done is not a long term memory issue but often a short term one.
Memory is a horrible thing to lose, especially when it comes to the remembrances of the great and marvelous works which God has already wrought in each of our lives!
It would be good for all of us to set up many "Ebenezers" ("stones of help")!
(What does Ebenezer mean?) to aid our feeble memories of His good hand on us in our lives!
We all do well to rehearse the times when the good hand of the Lord was clearly on us and bestowing grace upon grace in our times of need!
God’s people must retain and act on God’s truths.
The memory of the disciples was clear and accurate concerning the historical facts, but they had failed to deduce the appropriate spiritual truth from those facts.
They yet failed to grasp the true significance of His Person.
Though they are slow their is great hope
Do you not yet understand? - Those two words “not yet” holds out real possibility that they to whom he trusted the message of salvation will know and understand.
Matthew's passage adds details, for there Jesus clearly tells the disciples what He was not speaking of literal bread, but of the leaven-like influence of the religious leaders.
Mark does not tell us they understood, but Matthew's account says that finally they
Though they were slow to understand Jesus remained patient.
Jesus demonstrates patience because he knows that though our understanding is slow it is sure.
THE SPIRITUALLY SLOW NEED A REPEATED TOUCH.
Saying {He said this over and over again}
In Matthew’s account Jesus said they were of little faith.
Jesus does not teach us to increase our faith by simply trying harder to believe.
He increases faith by increasing their understanding.
Faith is not separate from understanding, but possible only through understanding.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9