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
0.13UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.15UNLIKELY
Fear
0.15UNLIKELY
Joy
0.52LIKELY
Sadness
0.23UNLIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0UNLIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.61LIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.9LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.38UNLIKELY
Extraversion
0.05UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.56LIKELY
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
For the football fans among us, one of the big stories of the NFL Draft this year was that the League allowed players drafted to pick their own theme music, a song that defines them.
Keenen Ivory Wayans once made a satirical film in which a band followed the main character around singing his theme song.
Ever thought about your theme song?
God has.
We hear it in Isaiah 6.
The verse of the day assigned for Holy Trinity gives us God’s theme song.
Hear it again: “Holy, holy, holy, is the LORD Almighty; the whole earth is full of his glory.”
“Holy, holy, holy!” “Kadosh, kadosh, kadosh,” is the way Isaiah first heard it that day.
The angels bounced those words back and forth to each other, savoring them: Kadosh!
Holy! Kadosh!
Holy! Kadosh!
Holy!
Is the LORD!
We know this is God’s theme, not just an incidental word or poem of the angels, because that word “holy” appears throughout Isaiah’s prophecies attached to God.
More than in any other book, in Isaiah the Lord our God is called “the Holy One of Israel.”
To be holy means something to God.
It concerns Him.
This isn’t news to us.
Or, maybe it is.
Maybe we’ve lost touch with God’s concern with holiness in the New Testament era.
Someone like Isaiah wouldn’t have.
He knew quite well God’s obsession with holiness.
Isaiah, a priest in Israel, knew God’s holiness codes; we call them Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy.
There God commands again and again: “Be holy as I as I am holy.”
We find holiness in God’s demand that an Israelite keep away from dead bodies.
We find it in dietary laws that called some foods clean and other not.
We find it in the rules about mold in your home and what happens when a woman has her period.
Everything in Old Testament Israel had to be clean or unclean, pure and holy and set apart, or common, profane and untouchable.
Isaiah got it.
When he saw this vision – remember, that’s the context of these words, a vision of the Lord sitting on a throne, surrounded by smoke, with a robe that filled the Temple – he collapsed to the ground.
And it wasn’t just the doorposts and thresholds shaking.
“Woe to me!” Isaiah cried.
“I am ruined!
I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips…my eyes have seen the…LORD Almighty.”
Even the seraphim, God’s theme song singers echoed Isaiah.
They covered their feet and their faces as they sang.
Oh, they knew well that no one and nothing deserves to be in the presence of the Holy One of Israel, thrice-holy, triple holy, the Kadosh!
What’s the big deal?
God’s the big deal.
Holy’s a big deal.
Did you sense it as we confessed the Athanasian Creed?
Those words, so easy individually, yet when added together nearly incomprehensible: one God, three Persons, three Persons, One God; Father, God; Son, God; Holy Spirit, God; yet not three Gods, but one God.
One God, not mixed, but not divided.
God the unique, God without equal, not least because he is three in one and one in three!
Yet more: He IS Holy, which puts Him outside of us and beyond us, as the Lord said through the prophet Hosea, “I am God, and not man.”
Pure, righteous, set apart, superior in thought, word and deed, superior ethically and morally.
And not just superior, as if He yet has heights to reach, but apart from human frailty and infirmity.
Truly sacred, not profane, common, or normal.
This is God.
Once mankind was like this, created in God’s image and likeness, we knew and experienced the righteousness and holiness of God.
Yet we fell.
God has not, did not, and cannot fall.
He is not created holy.
He IS holy.
And He says, “Be holy, because I am.”
Not because He achieved it or earned it.
He IS it.
God is.
The LORD Almighty is.
The Church Father, Athanasius, after whom history named our creed today, saw in this verse a hint of the Holy Trinity.
He heard three “holys” and heard Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, each perfect in their deity.
And Athanasius didn’t miss the mark here, because in verse 8 of Isaiah 6, the LORD asks, “Whom shall I send?
Who will go for us?” Ah, “us”!
Just like Genesis 1, “Let us make man in our own image!”
Yet just one Lord.
Jesus in Matthew named three Persons, but just one name, “in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.”
Not names, but name.
The Father is God.
The Son is God.
The Holy Spirit is God.
Significantly, even the demons know this, though man often refuses.
Once, as he prepared to cast out one of Satan’s foot-soldiers, that damned demon said, “I know who you are – the Holy One of God!”
A slip of the tongue?
No, an admission that standing there in Capernaum was the kadosh, kadosh, kadosh one: the Holy One, the Lord Almighty!
We sing about that: “You ask, ‘Who is this?’ Jesus Christ it is, the almighty Lord.
And there’s no other God; He holds the field forever.”
Some of you might recall how that line went in the old hymnal.
It called Jesus “of Sabaoth Lord.”
That word wasn’t “Sabbath”, but “Sabaoth”, a transliteration of the Hebrew text before us today.
“LORD Almighty” is a translation of the Hebrew title Yahweh Tsabeoth.
It means “LORD of hosts” or “armies.”
Interesting title for a holy, holy, holy God.
Joseph Stalin, the tyrant of World War II Russia, once quipped, “How many divisions does the pope have?”
Stalin feared the pope’s holy words not at all because he had no soldiers to back them up.
Many make that mistake with God.
Israel did.
The first five chapters of Isaiah, in fact the whole book, show us a people who turned their back on the Lord.
They spurned the Lord.
They forsook the Lord.
They turned to greed and drunkenness.
They demanded that God reveal His plans to them instead of vice versa.
God called them His vineyard and said: “He looked for a crop of good grapes, but it yielded only bad fruit….
What more could have been done for my vineyard than I have done for it?”
So God sent Isaiah to speak to ears, eyes and hearts that refused to hear, see, or feel.
He gave them the rope and they hung themselves.
His armies were Assyria and Babylon trampling his beloved vineyard and carrying her off into captivity, exile, and death.
Because she would rather be sin-dirty then Lord-cleansed.
Here’s God’s theme music, better, here we see a portrait of the true God.
Next to it our portraits pale in comparison.
He seeks to draw us to Him, but we demand that He come to us.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9