Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Tone of specific sentences

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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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“Rescue the perishing, care for the dying, snatch them in pity from sin and the grave; weep o’er the erring one, lift up the fallen, tell them of Jesus the mighty to save.
Rescue the perishing, care for the dying; Jesus is merciful, Jesus will save” We have been touching on this hymn now for six weeks, weaving in and out of its’ verses and chorus.
We have heard parts of it and used it to highlight the need to witness, the need to testify to a lost and dying world about our Savior Jesus Christ.
We have used it as a word of encouragement and as a reminder of the Great Commission given to us by Jesus himself.
We have through this hymn, been reminded of the condition that our hearts must be in; so that we may effectively carry out that Great Commission.
This is evangelism.
Bringing the truth to the lost.
It is where we go spell it out.
To all people, in all places.
It is when we let go and let God, get God and get going.
Let’s start today by looking at Jeremiah 8:20 where it is written: “The harvest is past, the summer is ended, and we are not saved”.
Someday, someone, somewhere will utter these words and for the Christian it has to be a heart stopping statement.
It is a statement so profound with such vast implications that it should send shivers down your spine to think that you may one day hear it.-the
harvest is past, the summer is ended, and we are not saved.
To think that someone who has crossed your path may utter these words someday.
Someday, when they stand in judgement, they will say these words.
They will say them because no one witnessed to them and the day of salvation passed them by.
They were not saved!
It is an odd perspective really.
We are going into the future and looking back.
We see all the opportunities we may have missed.
We see those who did perish because we rescued them not.
We see the dying whom we neglected.
We see those we condemned whom we left in sin, and sent them to their graves eternally damned.
We see how we were indifferent to the erring one, and how we dropped the fallen.
We see how we never told them of Jesus the mighty to save.
Looking back we see how the harvest is past.
In Matthew 9:37-38 Jesus said: “…to His disciples, “The harvest truly is plentiful, but the laborers are few.
Therefore pray the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into His harvest.”
The harvest speaks about winning souls.
We reap where others have sown.
We gather in the crop that was sown by others.
Other people witnessed, other people testified.
God gave the increase and our witness our testimony led them to Christ.
We went out into the fields of humanity and there we labored.
We labored long and hard to separate someone from the world and bring them to Christ.
There are four stages in life where the harvest may reaped.
The first, is the harvest of youth.
In Ecclesiastes 12:1 it is written “Remember now your Creator in the days of your youth, Before the difficult days come, And the years draw near when you say, “I have no pleasure in them”: and also in Matthew 19:14 where Jesus says “But Jesus said, “Let the little children come to Me, and do not forbid them; for of such is the kingdom of heaven.”
Youth.
It is a time we try to remember and retain.
It is a time when innocence keeps life choices so simple.
It is a time when we have no doubts about the puissance of the Father.
It is a time when we can see everything so clearly and we wholly trust in the word and provisions of the Father.
It is a time when we have no difficult times.
Where we don’t worry about our finances, our relationships, our job or our church.
It is that child-like faith that is so endearing.
Being able to completely lean on the Father and completely trust him.
As youths our perspective on God is unique.
And that child-like faith is what makes up the kingdom of heaven.
This is the first period of life that a person can be witnessed to.
A child finds it so easy to trust in Christ because they don’t have the doubts of the world weighing them down and confusing them.
In this time they know how to completely trust.
And that’s what Jesus was trying to get the disciples to see-just how precious a child was, and how as adults we could relearn from them.
The second stage of harvest comes at special times in our lives.
They are special opportunities that God places in our lives.
They can be good times, or they could be bad times.
They could be happy days or they could be sad days.
They are times when we concentrate on an event in our lives.
It can be during times of crisis.
We are familiar with these.
Sickness, accidents, death.
These are times in a persons life where all the cares of the world seem to melt away, and they begin living in the moment.
They have the ability to perceive their condition.
They have the ability to start looking within themselves.
These events, ultimately bring people to the point where they begin asking questions such as: Is this all there is?
What happens if I die suddenly?
Is there a God?
These events remind us of our fragile mortality.
It is a time when we can have a child-like fear and are so ready to lean on the Father.
If only someone would tell them about Jesus.
And it’s not just the person that’s going through the tragedy.
It’s the people around them too.
Nurses, doctors, friends, family.
All these people have been touched by these events and many are ready to receive what you can bring them.
Other times in our lives can be times of tenderness.
Times when we come together at the monuments of our lives.
Love, memories, marriage, birth.
Special times when our focus is off the world, and experiencing events in our lives which produce joy.
The last type of special opportunity is during times of turmoil.
When disaster strikes, when war breaks out.
That’s when God’s prayer lines begin to light up.
People have an inherent belief in God that lies buried.
When disaster strikes.
When people call out to him it is the church’s responsibility to be there.
This is perhaps one of the greatest areas where our works as Christians can shine.
These people are battered by events that are beyond their control.
They feel like they are left in a dark world of despair.
As Christians, we need to shine the light of Jesus into that darkness.
We need to walk not behind them or in front of them.
We need not to be above them or below them.
We have need to walk beside them.
They have just witnessed their worldly world being destroyed.
Show them how to build a new world through Jesus Christ.
Who better to build a new world with than with a carpenter.
“Crushed by the tempter, feelings lie buried that grace can restore; touched by a loving hand, wakened by kindness, chords that were broken will vibrate once more.”
I never really saw how this verse works in the grand scheme of things but listen to it.
People have been crushed by the tempter.
A worldly view of life has been set upon them and that is what they live.
But when tragedy occurs a person remembers their child-like faith.
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