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
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Disgust
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Fear
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Joy
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Sadness
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Language Tone
Analytical
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Confident
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Tentative
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Social Tone
Openness
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Conscientiousness
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Extraversion
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Agreeableness
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Emotional Range
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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
Emotional Range
Anger
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Jesus speaks “to the Jews who had believed him,” and we see how quickly their faith ends.
One little word felled them: “slaves.”
Actually, he didn’t even need to use the word “slave.”
He just talked about being set free.
Note how these “Jews who had believed him” respond.
“Abraham’s our father.”
“We’re not illegitimate children.”
“We’ve never been slaves of anyone.”
“Aren’t we right to say you’re demon possessed?”
By the time Jesus finished, they picked up stones to stone him.
They simply didn’t see themselves as enslaved.
We could quibble with their grasp of history.
They conveniently forgot about years of Jewish slavery in Egypt, times of exile in Assyria and Babylon, and their current occupation by the Romans.
Of course, since Jesus wasn’t speaking historically, but spiritually, perhaps they were too.
Jesus talks about, as he clarified, slavery to sin: “Everyone who sins is a slave to sin.”
And these “Jews who had believed him” say, “We follow the faith of Abraham, so you can’t be talking about us.
You must mean some other poor schmucks who are slaves.”
Again, that’s usually how we see it.
We feel like we’ve made all the right choices.
We’re right where we want to be, where we intend to be.
We’re notoriously hard to convince about things like this, in our parlance, addictions, mostly because we can’t see it.
“I’ve got it all under control,” we say.
So Jesus begins what we might call an intervention.
He says, “Doing the sin equals being a slave to the sin.”
Notice how particular he gets.
He doesn’t just talk about sinning, or using the plural, “sins.”
He says “the sin.”
This is his big truth, his hard truth, the truth surrounded by flashing neon signs, “I tell you the truth, everyone who sins is a slave to sin.” Literally, “Everyone who does the sin is a slave of the sin.”
No, no, no, no, no, that can’t be right.
I get it if you mean a general predilection, or a compulsive habit, or a way of life, you know, addiction, but this?
The sin?
That one I just did?
It’s not as crazy as you think, this idea that sin, any sin, makes you a slave to that sin.
Think of how bound to sin, any sin, we become.
We waste money on it.
We think of nothing else.
We lie about it.
We connive to do it.
We hurt others to have it or maintain it.
Luther says stunningly in a sermon on this text, “It is vain for you to sin and still expect to be free.”
All the while, we maintain our status as believers, “I’m a son of Christ.”
We carve out our Montana-sized exemption for ourselves so that we can trumpet: “I’m not like that guy over there.
I believe!”
We live in denial and untruth.
We say it isn’t that bad, it’s all under control, it could be worse.
But Jesus says it’s as bad as it gets.
Slaves have no place in the family.
Slaves are unpeople.
Seen, but not heard.
Property, easily gained, easily discarded.
Worked until death.
Look at some of the things Jesus said to this crowd, including these “Jews who believed him”:
“You do not know me or my Father.”
“You will look for me and you will die in your sin”
“You are from below; I am from above.
You are of this world; I am not of this world.”
“I told you that you would die in your sins; if you do not believe that I am the one I claim to be, you will indeed die in your sins.”
“When you have lifted up the Son of Man, then you will know that I am the one I claim to be.”
“Why is my language not clear to you?
Because you are unable to hear what I say.
You belong to your father, the devil.”
All because they weren’t the sons and children they thought they were.
They didn’t yet know the truth.
They followed Jesus, sure.
They even believed, right up until Jesus said something that bothered them, just as happened in John 6.
There, Jesus said they only followed their stomachs and wanted more miraculous food.
He pointed them to himself and said, “I’m God’s bread, the bread of life.
My flesh is food.
My blood is drink.
Eat and drink this and you will have everlasting life.”
They accused him of promoting cannibalism.
We believe, until Jesus bothers us, until the rubber hits the road, until he tells me I’m not as good as I think I am, or I have to give up that pet behavior, or my methods of appeasing God aren’t quite up to snuff.
Faith in Christ is holding to his words, his teachings.
Only then, Jesus says, do three things happen: you are his disciple, you know the truth, and you are free.
And it’s all and only Jesus.
“Anything that is not God’s Son,” Luther said, “will not make me free.”
In Egypt, Abraham feared losing his beautiful wife Sarah to a lecherous pharaoh; more he feared losing his own life.
Instead of trusting God’s promise, a promise that said, “Through you all nations will be blessed, from an offspring of your own womb,” in other words, a promise that Abraham would survive all things, come what may, instead Abraham told Sarah, “Say you’re my sister.”
Coward!
Pig!
He let pharaoh flirt with and take his wife for sexual pleasure instead of trusting God.
Thankfully God stepped in and prevented pharaoh from using Sarah sexually, but no thanks to Abraham.
He remained a slave.
He looked to something outside of God and his son.
Abraham could sit on the toilet, but he couldn’t push anything out.
But again, in Luther’s words, “We must progress to the point where we say, ‘God has promised.’”
Abraham failed in this.
These Jews who believed failed.
They couldn’t abide the word “slave.”
They couldn’t – or wouldn’t – handle the truth.
How hard this is, to say only, “God has promised.”
We can barely get out of bed in the morning based on God’s promise.
So God has to do it for us.
Jesus says, “If the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.”
Here come Jesus’ words, but so few.
We can fill hours of talk therapy with our fears, hopes, dreams, rationalizations, explanations, misunderstandings, and even confessions.
God just says, “My Son!” Here’s his word, the Transfiguration word: “My Son.
I chose him.
I love him.
Listen to him.”
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