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
0.06UNLIKELY
Fear
0.11UNLIKELY
Joy
0.68LIKELY
Sadness
0.53LIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.52LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.01UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.66LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.95LIKELY
Extraversion
0.27UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.96LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.7LIKELY

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
It is easy to be thankful when life is good.
We get a new job, fall in love, or fall into some unexpected good luck.
It is more challenging giving thanks when things are difficult.
Incorporating prayer every day and making it a habit invites thankfulness into your life.
Thanksgiving is a holiday that is surrounded by family, friends, food, and suffering.
There is joy, celebration, reunion, and grief.
The suffering and grief may be silent, but it is undoubtedly present.
Thanksgiving is a time of refocusing on what we are most grateful for, but how do we celebrate it in the middle of a lament?
How do we remain genuine in showing our gratefulness to God when this year Thanksgiving falls on a season of suffering for many believers around the world?
The answer: we can be thankful like Job.
Job’s blameless life
What was Job’s life like before he was tested?
Why did God choose him to test?
Job lived a rich man’s life in the land of Uz.
He feared God and people respected him.
He followed all God’s laws and was careful to remain blameless.
While God could find no blame in Job, we must remember that we cannot live a good enough life or follow enough rules, we must trust in God.
God trusted Job’s faith so much that God allowed the enemy to essentially torture Job and make him lose everything to see how he would react toward God.
God’s tests on Job and how he reacted
Job 1-3 gives us a picture of what Job’s life was like and all the calamity that happened so very quickly.
Job had seven sons and three daughters.
He had seven thousand sheep, three thousand camels, five hundred yokes of oxen, and five hundred donkeys.
Job also had servants and people highly respected him.
His life was clearly blessed, but in one day, Job hears that his livestock, servants, and all of his children died.
When Job heard this, he tore his clothes and shaved his head in mourning, but even then, Job remained faithful to God.
God allows Satan to test Job again.
Next, Job is struck ill with sores.
Even his wife tells Job to curse (or bless – there is some disagreement here) God.
Job refuses and remains true to God.
When three friends come to visit, they offer advice on why this must have happened.
Job must not be so blameless.
His children must have done wrong to deserve their deaths.
Job is angry and calls them “worthless physicians.”
After a period of days, we see Job’s lament in Job 3. Job begins to question God.
He curses his life and wishes he was never born.
Then he shows anger that God lets wicked people prosper while the good suffer.
Also, he wishes he could speak with God and ask why he has been cursed.
I can only imagine that what it would have been like to be Job in that moment.
I expect that we would react in a way that is at best the way Job responded and at worst by cursing God for allowing this all to happen.
How on earth can we be thankful and remain strong in our faith with this much loss and calamity?
Well, if we keep following Job’s story, he gives us a great example.
Let’s take a look this morning at how God responds to Job in chapter 38:
How Job’s faith and thankfulness regained God’s favor
God thunders from above and demands that Job be brave and respond to his questions.
Imagine the types of questions that God is demanding an answer from Job:
vs 4
vs 5
if we go on in chapter 38 we see questions like:
vs 8-11
vs12-15
And there are many more in the verses that follow.
I can’t imagine being in that moment with God, but I often wonder how often God wants to ask us these questions?
When we are so frustrated and angry with God - even though we haven’t experienced half of what Job went through.
After doubting it is him, Job acknowledges God’s power and knowledge.
God is pleased but is angry at Job’s friends for philosophizing and speaking out of turn.
Their advice is unsound and not based on good theology.
Job asks God for their forgiveness, and God agrees.
Job is made healthy again and given twice as much property as before.
He is also blessed with new children and long life.
At this point, we would assume Job would praise God and be thankful, but Job’s praise and thankfulness come long before God rewards him for his faith.
After losing everything Job shaved his head and fell to the ground in worship.
Over and over, during the worst of times, Job continued to praise God and honor him for his life.
Job’s story encourages our faithfulness and thankfulness during times of strife and pain.
We must praise God for the gifts he gives and the trials he puts us through, even though it is hard.
His knowledge is vast and sometimes he is testing us to help us learn and grow.
I’m not saying that everything we go through is a test of God, we do live in a fallen and broken world that has consequences all its own.
However, what if we looked at all of these times of trial and did not focus on if it is a test from God but instead focus on how we can continue to give thanks to God and allow God to grow our faith through times of trial?
How can we do that?
Here are some practical tips I think we can take on in our lives to get to a point of thankfulness to God
1.1 Start by saying thanks
Today’s prayers often start with what we want or need from God.
We rarely thank him for the gifts he has given.
Instead of leaving our thanks until last or not at all, start all your prayers with gratitude for the Lord’s gifts.
I have found that it is quite amazing how my own prayer times have been enriched by starting with giving thanks to God.
Give thanks in all circumstances.
We see here in these verses that thanksgiving should be a normal and regular part of our lives.
1.2 Have a conversation
One of David’s prayers comes to mind when we think about having a conversation with God.
Do not let not knowing what to say keep you from incorporating prayer into your life.
Speak with God like you would a friend.
Invite him to your home and share your daily worries and questions.
1.3 Include prayer in your daily tasks
You do not have to wait until dinner or bedtime to say your daily prayers.
Talk to God while you are waiting in line to pick up your child from school.
Pray to God instead of spewing anger at unsafe drivers on the road.
Live a prayerful life by including it whenever you can.
1.4 Do not hide what you feel
Talking to God like a friend means being honest about your feelings.
He already knows what is in our hearts and the burdens we are carrying, but telling him honestly how we feel will help you focus your emotions and address issues we are having trouble dealing with ourselves.
It is also a way to strengthen our relationship with God.
1.5 Let God Take Away Your Worries
The next time you worry, ask God to take that worry.
We are not alone anymore.
Once we invite God into our lives, we no longer must struggle with worries ourselves.
COMMUNION
RITUAL
The Communion Supper, instituted by our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ is a sacrament, which proclaims His life, His sufferings, His sacrificial death, and resurrection, and the hope of His coming again.
It shows forth the Lord’s death until His return.
The Supper is a means of grace in which Christ is present by the Spirit.
It is to be received in reverent appreciation and gratefulness for the work of Christ.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9