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
0.11UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.07UNLIKELY
Fear
0.12UNLIKELY
Joy
0.64LIKELY
Sadness
0.47UNLIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.75LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.56LIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.85LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.95LIKELY
Extraversion
0.13UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.92LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.57LIKELY

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
Psalm 16
 
!
Introduction
            What do you get excited about?
In August I took sailing lessons for the first time and I got really excited about sailing.
Since then I have been thinking about how I can rig my canoe in order to make it into a sailboat.
There are a lot of other things that I get excited about and I am sure each of us has something that we get excited about.
Some people get excited about reading or tennis or shopping or music or the latest technological gadget.
When we read Psalm 16, we have to conclude that there is nothing more exciting, nothing more meaningful than a relationship with God.
Yet I have to confess that all the things I enjoy sometimes distract me from my excitement about God.
I have to confess that sometimes I can be much more enthusiastic about some of these other things than I am about my relationship with God.
I suspect that I am not unusual in this.
That is why I want to look at Psalm 16 with you this morning.
I hope that as we think about this Psalm, we will open our hearts to allow God to draw us more deeply into relationship with Himself.
I pray that as we hear God's Word in Psalm 16 something will change in our hearts so that our greatest joy will be God.
!
I.       Fully Committed to God
            Perhaps the problem is that we have not fully grasped what a relationship with God is all about.
Perhaps what has happened to us is what happened to the church in Ephesus when Jesus warned them in Revelation 2:4, "But I have this against you, that you have abandoned the love you had at first."
Perhaps at one time we declared faith in God, but since then our life has become more about us than about God? Perhaps we are so overwhelmed by doubts about God's goodness because we believe He has not answered our prayers that we have a hard time entrusting ourselves to Him?
If our commitment to God is nominal because of these or some other reason, it is no wonder that we are not excited about our relationship with God.
Psalm 16 is the testimony of one who is excited about God and in the first 5 verses the writer gives us some great phrases which describe a commitment to God.
!! A.   Rest in His Care
            The Psalm opens with a prayer for help but it is not certain what the crisis was for which he was asking for help and, in fact, he does not mention it again.
What is clear is that the request for help reveals his heart regarding his relationship with God.
He prays to God because, as he says, "O God…in you I take refuge."
He declares that God is the one to whom He goes for help.
God is his hiding place of protection.
When I interviewed my grandmother in order to record some of her life experiences, she told me that her life verse was, Isaiah 40:11, "He will feed his flock like a shepherd; he will gather the lambs in his arms, and carry them in his bosom, and gently lead the mother sheep."
As a woman widowed and leading 4 children out of Russia during the second world war, she had personally experienced that God was her shepherd.
Such examples inspire us to look to God as our refuge.
If we do, we will rest in His care.
!! B.   Declare His Lordship
            I received an email from someone the other day and the email began, "Hi Mr. Toews, I don't know if you remember me…" When Carla calls, the tone of her conversation is quite different.
The difference is that the person who emailed was an acquaintance whereas Carla has a claim on my life that is closer than anyone else on earth.
What is the nature of our relationship with God?
Is He an acquaintance or is our relationship to Him much more intimate than that?
The Psalmist states "I say to the Lord, 'You are my Lord."
The two words for Lord in these verses in Hebrew are two different words.
The first is the word which speaks about God as the one who has made a covenant with His people to show His everlasting love for them.
The second is a word which means master.
If we say that the one who has first loved us is the master of our life, we are saying something very important.
We first of all acknowledge God's prior love for us and declare gratitude for it.
Then we respond with a statement of deep commitment to God as the one who has the first claim on our life.
Because God has loved us, we are called to obey Him in everything.
Because of all He has done, He has invited us to live our lives for Him as the one who rules in all we do and think.
If we treat God as a distant relative or a mere acquaintance, it is no wonder that we are not excited about our relationship with Him.
If we declare that because of His love we will serve Him, it is much more likely that we will also be excited about our relationship to Him.
!! C.   Know He Is The Best
            We will also get excited about our relationship with God if we recognize that there is nothing better than God in our life.
There are a lot of things in life that we can enjoy.
At one level, we recognize that whatever we enjoy, whatever we are good at is a gift from God. Eric Liddell, the Scottish runner said, "I believe God made me for a purpose, but he also made me fast.
And when I run I feel His pleasure."
Sometimes, however, we stop at the pleasures we feel and the things which give us joy.
The Psalmist goes further when he declares, "I have no good apart from you."
It is OK to rejoice in all the blessings which God gives us, but it is much more important to recognize not only that our pleasures are a gift from God, but that our greatest good is Him.
Surely if this is something that we choose and commit to, we will naturally be more excited about Him than about anything else.
In a Moody Bible Institute Devotional, we read, "This didn’t mean that David wasn’t thankful for his family, kingship, and other blessings.
It simply meant that God Himself is incomparably greater than any of His gifts--that He was the all-sufficient, all-satisfying joy, truth, and purpose of David’s life."
!! D.   Love Those Who Love Him
            When the Psalmist says in verse 3, "As for the holy ones in the land, they are the noble, in whom is all my delight." he acknowledges that there is a connection between our love for God and our love for others.
It is another way of saying what is stated in 1 John 4:8, "Whoever does not love does not know God, for God is love."
Love for God is demonstrated in practical ways in our love for one another.
If we do not love our brothers and sisters in Christ, it is evident that we do not love God.
If we do love our brothers and sisters, it shows that we love God and if we love God, then we will also be excited about our relationship with God.
!! E.   Reject Godlessness
            On the other hand, loving God means that we will not serve anyone else.
Psalm 16:4 says, "Those who choose another god multiply their sorrows; their drink offerings of blood I will not pour out or take their names upon my lips."
At the time when this was written, the nations around Israel served a host of other gods.
Many in Israel were tempted to follow those other gods.
They made offerings to them and they declared their allegiance to them.
The Psalmist recognizes that such a path leads only to sorrow.
Today the same thing is true.
If we follow the gods of materialism, secularism, consumerism and selfishness it leads only to sorrow.
Excitement about serving God will come into our lives when we have a single hearted allegiance to Him.
!! F.    Choose Him
            In ancient Israel when the people entered into the promised land, the land was distributed among the people by lot.
Everyone received a piece of land and they had to go and settle the land.
The Levites, who were the priests and servants of God, however did not have any land given to them.
Deuteronomy 10:9 says, "Therefore Levi has no allotment or inheritance with his kindred; the LORD is his inheritance, as the LORD your God promised him."
It is likely verse 5 reflects such a blessing.
There we read, "The LORD is my chosen portion and my cup; you hold my lot."
God has chosen us as His people.
If we embrace that choosing and declare that He is the one in whom we trust, the one we rejoice in and serve that is the way in which we will also come to a true and deep excitement about God.
If we know what it means to take refuge in God, to call Him Lord, to be thankful for His blessings, to rejoice in His people, to reject any other way and to accept His call in our life, then we will be excited about God and His way.
Is this your commitment?
Do you want it to be?
!
II.
The Blessings We Have From God
            The other thing which will get us excited about God is when we realize how much God has given to us, how much He has blessed us.
The rest of Psalm 16 records some of the great blessings which God has given to us.
!! A.   Good Life
            We have reason to get excited about our relationship with God because He is the one who has given us every good thing we have in life.
God has blessed us so abundantly.
He has given us a heritage of people who have taught us to follow God.
God has also given us so many other good things.
We have warm homes, good food, friendships, jobs that are meaningful and so much more.
A little attitude of thanksgiving will soon reveal that we are truly blessed by God.
This is the meaning of verse 6, "The boundary lines have fallen for me in pleasant places; I have a goodly heritage."
James 1:17 says, "every perfect gift is from above."
We are the recipients of so many of those gifts.
Since God has blessed us so abundantly, we have every reason to get excited about Him.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9