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
0.45UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.44UNLIKELY
Fear
0.02UNLIKELY
Joy
0.6LIKELY
Sadness
0.59LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.65LIKELY
Confident
0.33UNLIKELY
Tentative
0UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.85LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.94LIKELY
Extraversion
0.19UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.89LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.76LIKELY

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
In our first hymn we sang: /Buried with Christ and dead to sin.
Your Spirit now shall live within /(294:4).
We will sing at the end of this service: /Baptized in water, Sealed by the Spirit, Dead in the tomb with Christ our King: One with his rising, Freed and forgiven, Thankfully now God’s praise we /sing (297:2).
Seems a little strange doesn’t it?
After all, it was two thousand years ago and half a world away that Christ physically walked this earth.
And yet we are claiming that we were crucified with him on that cross, that we were buried with him in that tomb, and that we rose with him that Easter morning?
These are truths that fly in the face of human understanding.
But these are also truths that are boldly affirmed in Scripture.
These are exactly the truths that that Apostle Paul writes for us this morning.
In his letter to the Romans, Paul writes that *Our Baptism Unites Us with Christ!  *We are united with Christ *Into his death*.
We are united with Christ *In his resurrection.*
Paul’s letter to the Romans has often been called the doctrinal book of the New Testament.
In this book, Paul lays out in a very clear way the doctrines of Christianity.
In the chapter right before our lesson this morning, Paul reminds us that sin entered the world through one man.
He doesn’t stop there; Paul says that through sin death also entered our lives.
In fact, Paul writes that because of sin there is “condemnation for all men” (Rom 5:18).
This is nothing new to us – we see the effects of sin all around us and even in ourselves!
We know that sin is not something that we grow into, but that our sinful nature is with us from the very beginning.
For example, take the kids in Loving Arms.
They may look innocent, but it doesn’t take long to see their sinful nature.
We know that what God said after the flood is true: that “every inclination of our heart is evil from childhood.”
We say along with the Psalmist, “Surely I was sinful from birth, sinful from the time my mother conceived me.”
Paul calls this sinful nature our old self.
In the verses right before our lesson this morning, Paul says that our old self is God’s enemy!
Its every desire is to rebel against the Almighty God in heaven; its will is the complete opposite of God’s will.
It’s a further opposite than hot and cold or sunshine and rain.
Because he breaks the law of God, our old self is a criminal.
He is guilty of breaking God’s law, and therefore you and I deserve the punishment that God has declared – eternal death in hell.
It is for that reason that Christ Jesus came.
The death we deserve because of sin was not Paul’s only topic in the verses leading up to our text.
No, that was only his lead in to the beautiful message he was proclaiming!
Paul wrote that just as sin entered the world through Adam, so also salvation and eternal life was won for all because of Christ!
While our old self disobeyed every aspect of God’s law, Christ Jesus obeyed that same law.
He pinch hit for us and hit a home run with his perfection.
Jesus came to be our substitute; he died the death that we deserve.
His death paid for the sins of the whole world – past, present, and future.
My fellow Christians who have been baptized into the name of the triune God, the Apostle Paul has a wonderful message for us this morning.
Listen to how our lesson this morning begins: *Don’t you know that all of us who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death?*
(v.3)
What a wonderful truth!
Paul is saying that baptism is so much more than a symbol – he says that our baptism is a means of grace, that it /does/ something!
He says that at our baptism, at that font, we were intimately joined to Christ.
When that water was poured on our heads, when those words were spoken, we were made a partner in the works and life of Jesus Christ.
When I say partner, I do not mean that we are partners in the sense that we did something to help Jesus in his saving work.
Rather, we are partners in the sense that we are brought along.
In other words, we receive the benefits of Jesus life and death without having done a single thing!
Think of a child getting a piggy back ride from their father.
The child does not do anything while getting that ride – they don’t direct their dad, they don’t move his legs – they are simply along for the ride on their father’s shoulders.
In a sense, he is a partner in the ride, but their dad does all the work and they are simply brought along.
So also, through our baptism we are brought along in the life and death of Christ without having done a single thing!
The righteousness that has been credited to us is based solely on Christ’s death and resurrection.
We have been made partners in Christ’s death in our baptism.
In our baptism a complete identity has been formed between Christ and us.
In the sacrament of baptism each and every one of our sins became Christ’s; in turn Christ’s righteousness became ours.
Because of our baptism, we are constantly surrounded by the forgiveness won by Jesus.
As partners in Christ’s death, *we know that our old self was crucified with Christ at our baptism* (v.6a).
That criminal we call our old self deserved to die a criminal’s death.
That is exactly what Paul said happened at our baptism – he died a criminal’s death and was nailed to the cross with Christ!  Paul writes that this was done *so that the body of sin might be rendered powerless* (v.6b).
Since our old self was crucified in baptism, it is now powerless.
Our old self no longer has any power over how we live; it has been defeated in baptism.
We are now *no longer slaves to sin* (v.6c).
As partners with Christ in his death, we have power over sin.
We have been given a new man – the will of this new man is completely in line with God’s will.
Yet while, on this side of heaven, sin will always remain, we know that it has no power over us.
Through our baptism we have been given the power, the desire, and the weapons to defeat our old self – the very word of God.
We are no longer slaves to sin because *anyone who has died has been freed from sin* (v.7).
If any of us were to die today, we would no longer have any obligation to this life.
No debt collector would knock on our gravestone in attempts to collect a debt.
Such an idea is ridiculous to even think about.
Nor do judges waste their time sentencing a dead person for some crime they committed while they were living.
So also, through our baptism, we have been cleared of our sins.
Because baptism connects an individual to Christ’s death, Satan and sin no longer have a claim to a baptized individual.
We have been baptized into Christ’s death.
We have been made partners in his death and that means that all the debts of our sin have been satisfied!
When someone dies, their body isn’t just left alone.
It is prepared for burial and ultimately lowered into a grave.
It is no different with our old self.
Paul writes that *we were therefore buried with him through baptism *(v.4b).
Since our old self has been crucified and executed as a criminal, it is now buried.
For us Christians, funerals and burial services are mainly an opportunity to celebrate God’s grace in the deceased’s life.
It is an opportunity for us to praise God for taking that person into eternal glory.
And yet, there is a secondary purpose for funerals.
Funerals serve as a way to acknowledge that a death has indeed happened.
Baptism is that funeral ceremony for our old self.
Through baptism it is proclaimed and verified that our old self has indeed died.
Paul has already told us that we have been baptized in Christ’s death and buried with him through baptism.
Now he uses a conditional statement to advance his though.
He says, *if we have been united with him like this in his death* (v.5a)…
This conditional thought is not some iffy condition such as “If I had collected Boardwalk and Park Place, I would have won one million dollars.”
Instead, we see from the context that Paul is saying that this is a sure thing.
That means we could translate this verse, */since/ we have been united with him…  *Paul advances his thought by saying because Jesus triumphantly rose that Easter morning we are also *united with [Christ] in his resurrection *(v.5b).
Because *Christ was raised from the dead* (v.4b) we have been assured his sacrifice paid the punishment our sins deserved.
God would not have raised up a failure.
Christ’s resurrection is proof that he was a success.
Paul says that we have been united with Christ, not only in his death and burial, but also in his resurrection in order that *we too may live a new life* (v.4c).
In other words, just as Christ rose after being crucified and buried, so also God resurrected our new man after our old self was crucified and buried in baptism.
This new man who has been resurrected is in the image of God and desires to do God’s will.
Our baptism is not just a one time event that no longer has any significance for our present-day life.
Instead, our baptism means that from the instant of our baptismal washing until the day we die we live a new life.
When Paul wrote the words *live a new life*, he had the image of a person walking around in that new life.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9