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.
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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
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Anger
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Come and See - John 4:5-42
 
*I bring you greetings * from the Springfield Heigths MC. *It is a joy *for our family to worship with you this morning.
And as a sister congregation we wish you God’s strength, wisdom and compassion as you serve in Christ’s name.
*Prayer:* Creator God, in whom we live and move and have our being, Thank you for Jesus Christ the Savior of the world.
Open our hearts in this time of worship.
Speak to us words of truth that spring forth from the fountains of your love.
Give us a real thirst for the living waters that you offer and enable us to share that water with others - as Jesus Christ our Lord did.
Amen.
“I stock shelves at the local grocery store,” said Jack. “I’m responsible for the soft-drink aisle.
So I’m familiar with the wide variety of soda available to consumers these days.”
With that Jack took a deep breath and began to rattle off a list of options that was mind-boggling:
We stock –
·        Coca-Cola
·        Diet Coke
·        Pepsi
·        Diet Pepsi
·        RC Cola
·        Diet Rite Cola
·        Dr.
Pepper
·        Diet Dr. Pepper
·        Tab
·        Pepsi Free
·        Mountain Dew
·        Diet Mountain Dew
·        7-Up
·        Diet 7-Up
·        Sprite
·        Diet Sprite
·        A&W Root Beer
·        Diet A&W
·        Mountain Dew
·        Hires Root Beer
·        Mug Root Beer
·        Barqs Root Beer
·        Slice
·        Diet Slice
·        Crush
·        Diet Crush
·        Squirt
·        Diet Squirt
·        Cherry Coke
·        Cherry Pepsi
·        Canada Dry Ginger Ale
Jack rattled off many more brands of soft drinks.
And then he began a second long list of sizes:
“You can get these soft drinks in –
·        12 ounce cans
·        12 ounce six packs
·        12 ounce twelve packs
·        12 ounce twenty four packs
·        1 liter Bottles
·        2 liter bottles
·        refundable bottles
·        non-refundable bottles
·        1 liter six packs
·        2 liter six packs
 
Just when everyone was starting to wonder where he was going with this account of his tedious daily restocking duties he delivered the timeless truth:
 
“I deal with so many types of soft drinks in so many different types of bottles and cans that it can be overwhelming.
Sometimes it’s just too much.
I don’t want to see any more soft drinks, for they don’t really satisfy anyway.
What do I want?
I want it to stop.
I want someone to say to me, /Ho, everyone who thirsts, come to the waters; and you that have no money, come… /(Isa.
55:1a).
I don’t know about you, but *I can identify* with the thirst for pure and simple fresh water expressed by Jack.
Sometimes we feel *empty inside* and we have very little to share with others who are in need of a drink of living water.
How we feel and how we behave towards others depends upon how much or how little of Christ’s living water we have inside ourselves.
If we are overflowing, we will feel joy, have energy, and look forward to each day with enthusiasm.
We will radiate warmth, be tolerant, forgiving, understanding, and want to give to others.
On the other hand, if we are empty, which happens occasionally for almost everyone, we will feel and act very differently.
We will feel depressed, have little energy, and dread the coming of the next day.
We will be unhappy, bitter, complaining, and non-supporting of others.
We will have little to share.
When we are empty, we may not feel good when we see another person who is full, and we may try to take some of their water.
We may criticize, gossip, or put that person down, thinking this will fill us up.
But it doesn't.
Or, we may go after material possessions, pleasure, money, and success, thinking that will fill our emptiness.
And it may seem to do that for a while, but it's not lasting.
As a young man, Augustine, one of the historical fathers of the church, tried to fill the void in his life by chasing after wine, women, and song.
Later he confessed, "Lord, thou hast made us for thyself and our hearts are restless until they rest in thee."
Many of our lives are so busy and hectic.
We're busy going places and doing things.
It's so easy to be constantly on the go-
going to church
going to meetings
going to help someone
going shopping
going to children's activities
going to work -
going, going, going.
We are not much different than Jack restocking the shelves in our spiritual life with the same old sodas day after day.
And, like the woman at the well we thirst for the living water that God alone can give.
In the first part of John 4, we find a Samaritan woman trudging out to the well - at high noon - in the heat of the day.
Why was she going at the hottest time of day?
Was her life hectic and disorganized?
We learn that she had five* *husbands and the man she was presently living with was not her husband.
Was she ashamed of the way she was living?
Perhaps she didn't want to be at the well with other women - she may have feared they would look down their noses at her and make her feel badly about herself and the way she was living.
Whatever the reason - it's high noon-and we find the woman moving toward the well.
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