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.
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Anger
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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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Sometimes, things at home are just bad.
The bills pile up.
Aunt Sally is sick again and the family needs you to travel to care for her.
The dog needs surgery, a meeting was inadvertently missed, and the tires need replacing all while you are at your busiest in life.
Sometimes the bad things happen because of us:
We haven’t learned boundaries, so we think everyone else’s problem is ours.
We didn’t budget properly.
“I had no idea Christmas was coming again this year!” or “You mean to tell me it gets cold in the winter and a trailer house doesn’t hold the heat like a brick and mortar home?
Well, now I know!”
Sometimes we are forgetful or even worse, too lazy to take care of things.
We don’t like the word lazy, so we use the phase, “I put it off.”
Other times bad things happen and its not our fault.
You just bought tires, and now you need more because you hit a board with nails in it at 9pm on the way home from the basketball tournament.
The mortgage company hit your bank account for two payments this month instead of one and now you have penalties to other companies because you had insufficient funds.
Or you get a sickness that the doctors can’t figure out or maybe even like some of you can attest to like me-a family member with lung cancer and they didn’t smoke a day in their lives.
In this passage today, we see the Jewish people in a bind.
You might say they were being extorted.
Today we are briefly going to look at this passage in light of what the Jewish people were feeling and how that can relate to us.
ex•tor•tion
(14th century)
1 : the act or practice of extorting especially money or other property; especially : the offense committed by an official engaging in such practice
2 : something extorted; especially : a gross overcharge
ex•tort
Today we are briefly going to look at this passage in light of what the Jewish people were feeling and how that can relate to us.
[Latin extortus, past participle of extorquēre to wrench out, extort, from ex- + torquēre to twist — more at torture]
(1529)
: to obtain from a person by force, intimidation, or undue or illegal power
They were struggling so bad, they were selling their kids into slavery.
They were mortgaging their lands and crops and homes.
They were mortgaging their property to pay the kings taxes.
And what was happening was wrong.
Should they be working to buy their food and pay their light bill?
Yes!
The previous chapter told us how hard they were working!
In fact, the Bible takes a hard line on this; especially in regards to believers.
2 Thess.
Today we are briefly going to look at this passage in light of what the Jewish people were feeling and how that can relate to us.
Believer-take care, not advantage
Check out what was going on here in chapter five.
They have sold their kids off.
Notice what verse 2 says.
There is a slight textual variant in one of the words here.
The word translated “many” is one gutteral sound difference from the word “mortgage” that you see in verse 3.
As I was studying this, I asked myself, “why would the writer record the complaint as “our kids are many, we need grain” AND “we’ve mortgaged our lands and mortgaged money to pay the king’s tax?”
So I contacted a Hebrew scholar friend, and he found this interesting as well.
He agrees that it probably sound read, “we have mortgaged our sons and daughters that we might buy corn.”
They are in bad shape!
Selling off their kids!
Not only that, they...
Mortgaged their land and vineyards and houses.
They were already poor!
Now they’ve been forced to mortgage what little they have left.
They had to borrow money to pay the king’s tax
You see, the Persians are akin to Americans in that they were famous for building projects that took a lot of money that drained the national treasury.
The Babylonians were one of the first nations to start a taxation on those they conquered and the Persians followed suit.
What is the take-away for the believer?
As a Christian, we don’t force a poor person into a worse situation.
Can we always give them what they want?
No.
Can we always offer them help they need?
Yes.
Every single time.
Make a practice never to lead money to someone struggling.
Gift it to them.
Don’t hold conditions over the person you are helping.
Believer-recognize and do
Nehemiah 5:6-
Notice what Nehemiah did here.
He recognized the situation.
He took time to think about what was going on.
He publically rebuked those in sin.
The take-away for the believer is:
Christian, you recognize when your brother/sister is being harmed.
Recognize when a lost person is being abused and be their advocate.
Be careful not to speak out of haste.
Spend time in prayer.
When you encounter those in sin, deal with it Biblically.
Believer-your lifestyle IS a witness
Please be sure to mark this down, highlight it, and save these notes.
You all know what I think about “lifestyle evangelism.”
Generally it’s a cop-out for those who don’t want to open their mouths and share the Good News.
It’s a way a person can feel good about evangelism, yet not really be Biblical about it.
But, at the same time, we need to remember that without a life or a lifestyle backing our words, the Gospel will not only be hindered, but damage for the future will occur.
There is something to be said about the way we “walk” as Christians.
Friend, when you are sharing the Gospel with someone at the front of Wal-Mart, there will inevitably be someone there listening to you and will see you again in the back of the store on the phone.
Be careful what you are saying.
They are listening.
Believer, people love to say, “the Bible says not to judge,” but are the first to judge you when they know you go to church and hear you bad-mouthing a fellow member, maybe even the pastor, deacon, or Sunday School teacher publically.
Christian, we sit as a group, pray over our meal, and leave a Gospel tract, but we are the worst complainers of food that we didn’t make and dishes we don’t have to wash, nastiest to the wait staff, and notoriously bad at tipping.
Friend, eat what comes out, smile at the waitress, and love someone well with at least a 20% tip!
How many of you have worked as a waiter/waitress?
How many of you funded your 401k doing so or have gotten rich as a waiter/waitress?
Our lifestyle is A witness.
In closing today, I want to encourage you to help the poor among us and those who are not Christians.
Use generosity as
a tool to witness.
Be sure to use words when you witness though.
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The Gospel message is a precious one.
God’s design was perfect.
In the beginning the Bible says, “It is good.”
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