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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Anger
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Joy
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Analytical
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Openness
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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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We believe in the bodily resurrection of the dead.
We don’t think that the body is evil and the spirit is good.
We don’t believe you leave this body behind to go to you eternal reward.
Any separation from the body is temporary after death.
Our bodies are part of our lives every day.
Our bodies are part of our redemption in glory.
One day the Bible tells us we will have a new body like the one Christ had after the resurrection.
This is important to remember.
It’s gnosticism to teach that we are trapped in these bodies and will finally be free of them.
It’s Christian to say immediately after someone dies they are absent from the body and present with the Lord.
But it’s a temporary absence.
One day all who hope in Christ will experience the resurrection and receive a new more glorious body.
I think this affects how we experience every day.
If we think of our bodies as a trap, how will we experience pain and suffering?
If we think our bodies as part of God’s creation, something that will be redeemed and made new as part of God’s plan, that changes the equation.
Our bodies are incredibly useful and do so much for us.
They are not a burden, they bear many burdens.
The suffering we experience in the body is part of life but pain is helpful in alerting us to issues and guiding us toward better choices as well.
I could say so much more, but I’m simply laying the foundation that for Christians the body is a good thing, that’s why it’s mentioned so much in the Bible.
This was true for Jewish thought as well.
So, Paul writes this letter assuming that people do appreciate the good things about their bodies, despite the limitations.
So Paul says, think about how your body works.
So many very different parts all amazingly and sometimes strangely working together for good.
Your feet may hurt and maybe don’t smell their best at the end of long day.
But think of all they did for you to end up in that condition!
Your eyes may get tired after a long stretch of reading or using a computer.
But think of all you learned and accomplished before they got tired.
Your hair may be a mess in the morning, but it helped keep your head warm all night.
Your nose can help you find trouble or guide you to the kitchen for a fresh cup of coffee.
Our bodies are an integral part of who we are.
They ground our existence in the natural world.
They help us communicate and survive.
To be human is to exist with a body.
So Paul makes the case that this is what it means to belong to Christ.
To be part of a larger body that makes up God’s people.
So we are part of something larger than ourselves....
Being saved.
Being baptized.
We become part of one larger body.
Bodies have a massive number of moving parts, especially as you go down to the microscopic and subatomic levels.
It’s just incredible but all the parts are important in some way.
So everyone who belongs to Christ is part of something important.
Nobody sitting things out.
Nobody cast aside.
Now there’s a whole series of these but you get the point.
We can’t start saying only certain parts matter.
We can’t say, I don’t get to be like that other part so therefore I’m not playing my role.
If your colon goes on strike, you’re in trouble.
If your left arm says not today, you’ve got a problem.
So, it’s a problem for the body.
However, if ear says hey, listen up, even though he’s hidden under hair and gets cold in the wind, you hear that car coming and avoid getting hit.
If tooth says, I’ll help you turn your meal into energy, good things happen.
And if all of us are connected in this way, you can begin to see the possibilities...
So how are we staying connected to one another?
How are we supporting each other in times of trial and in moments of celebration?
Are we developing those relationships by reaching out and remaining connected?
COVID has made things choppy at times.
This current surge hasn’t helped.
But thankfully we have ways to remain connected.
We can do it.
Usually that’s what I like to emphasize: the opportunity we have to live the life God blesses.
But there is another side to this: the body suffers when a part refuses to cooperate.
So check yourself and listen to the Spirit.
Usually the Spirit isn’t just going to tell you to go with what you prefer.
The Spirit will lead you to where you can do the most good.
Whether you think of it as becoming part of the body of Christ or joining God’s family, we all usually arrive because of our own needs.
But we really can’t resolve our own needs without beginning to do our part to help others.
That’s just how it works.
The selfish person doing selfish things simply becomes more and more selfish over time.
No matter how much good happens to them they remain independent and they never feel they have enough.
It’s really hard to be happy that way.
On the other hand the person who is generous and willing to help others soon discovers just how blessed they are.
In my experience, people who realize they have been blessed are the ones happy to extend grace to others.
The ones who judge the most are forgetting how much they’ve been forgiven.
Hopefully it’s just temporary amnesia.
Some of us are more coordinated than others.
Some people are blessed with a body that obeys their every command.
These people can become professional athletes or graceful dancers.
Like poetry in motion.
But if it seems like you’ve got two left feet, well dancing is a sight to behold.
Christ is the head of the body.
All of us have a key role to play: hands, feet, noses and ears.
When we are all connected and all in sync with the head it’s beautiful whenever we are in motion together.
Several have pulled together to help a family in need recently.
Sometimes our part is being willing to accept that help.
Let it flow, don’t stand in the way of what God is doing.
If you don’t let someone else help you could literally be keeping them from obeying God’s leading in their life.
So it’s great to serve.
It’s great to be served when it’s a true need.
If we all give, we can pay the bills and more.
If we all show up, it’s more enjoyable to be together.
If we connect online it’s more than just watching a video of a service.
If we all make that phone call or send that card or note, everyone is remembered.
Nobody is forgotten.
Nobody will say “the church should do this”… because particular people will have already done it.
Well I take that back because I have seen cases where no matter what people do some still find fault.
You can’t help that.
But we can do what we can...
Someone dear to me has been extremely ill across this last few years.
You wouldn’t know it, however.
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