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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INTRODUCTION
I used to enjoy playing video games.
The earliest video game system I remember was Pong.
Does anyone remember Pong?
It was a tennis like game with black screen, a white square for a ball, and two rectangular white lines on each side that you had to use to keep the ball from getting past you.
But the first game system I remember having as a child is an Atari 2600.
I had games like Pitfall, Laser Blaster, Asteroids, Pac-Man, and Pole Position.
At some point I graduated to the original Nintendo with games like Super Mario Bros., Duck Hunt, Donkey Kong, Tecmo Bowl, and Contra.
Dad and I used to sit for hours and play 2-player on Contra.
I still remember the code to get unlimited lives: up, up, down, down, left, right, left, right, B, A, Select, Start.
But sometimes with those old systems, the games just wouldn’t work right.
We would take out the game cartridges and try to blow the dust out of them.
Or sometimes you had to get the position just right before you pushed it down.
But sometimes in the middle of the game, it would just glitch out on you.
Or you would get yourself in trouble and you knew there was no chance of passing the next level.
So on the game console there were two main buttons: Power and Reset.
You could either turn it off, or you could hit the reset button.
Even our modern electronic devices, like our computers and cell phones, have these same basic functions.
Sometimes we get too many things running on them at the same time and they run out of RAM (memory), which can cause them to freeze up or glitch out.
We might download something that contains a virus that causes it not to run correctly.
When something like this happens on our computers, we have three options: We can log out, we can shut down, or we can reset.
Just like our electronic devices, we can find ourselves in Crisis Moments in our everyday lives.
So many times we get overwhelmed.
There is no whitespace on our calendars because they are full.
We are trying to do too many things at one time.
Our brains run out of RAM and our heads feel like that spinning circle on the computer screen.
We can also download the wrong type of information into our lives by the things we watch, by the things we listen to, by the environment we choose to put ourselves in, and spiritually we infect ourselves with the virus of discouragement, depression, anxiety, and fear.
And as a result, our spiritual condition begins to suffer.
We begin to pull away from God.
We begin to pull away from church.
We begin to pull away from others.
When we find ourselves in this condition, just like our computers or our game consoles, we have three choices on how we respond: we can Log Out, we can Shut Down, or we can Reset.
People who choose to Log Out try to distance themselves from the problem.
They just check out.
They don't want to admit they have a problem in their life or they don’t want to face their problems.
They just want to find some way to mask it or to justify it.
They think if they focus on someone else's problems, they'll feel better about themselves.
They may still come to church, but they are not engaged.
Their prayer life is not what it once was.
Their Bible study is almost non-existent anymore.
There are a few glowing embers of a former spiritual fire, but no flames.
There is no spiritual hunger.
No desire for the things of God.
They have a form of godliness, but there is no substance, no power.
They look to everything else in the world to fill the sense of emptiness in their soul except the one thing they need: Jesus!
People who Shut Down completely disconnect from others and from God.
They destroy relationships.
They become bitter and cynical.
They completely lose their joy.
They lose their peace.
They quit coming to church, or when they are at church they might as well be 100 miles away.
Their hearts are far from the church and far from God.
They blame everyone else and everything else except the one thing they need to blame: themselves!
But God has given us another option.
When we hit a crisis moment in our lives we don't have to Log Out.
We don't have to Shut Down.
I don’t care what you’ve been through.
I don’t care how difficult it has been.
I don’t care how far you’ve fallen or how dark your present and your future seem to be.
You don’t have to Log Out.
You don’t have to Shut Down.
God is offering you the opportunity to hit the Reset button.
You can start over.
You can begin again.
You can have a fresh start.
Maybe today you just need a Reset.
Let’s look together at John 21.
SCRIPTURE
MESSAGE
Peter had reached a crisis moment in his life
Peter had Logged Out and he was starting to Shut Down.
He had followed Jesus for nearly 3.5 years.
He had heard the powerful sermons.
He had witnessed the miracles.
He had proclaimed boldly that Jesus was the Christ, the Messiah, the Son of the Living God.
But now he had watched Jesus be arrested.
As Jesus was being questioned and flogged by the Roman authorities, Peter had denied that he even knew Jesus.
He had seen Jesus crucified.
To Peter, it felt like it was “the end.”
Game over.
So Peter said, I’m going to go back to what I know: fishing.
He said, I’m going to go back to my former life before I met Jesus.
He was starting to Shut Down.
He must have felt like the call of God on his life was over.
Jesus gave Peter a second chance
Jesus asks Peter a series of three questions.
The first question in Verse 15 is "Simon, son of Jonas, Lovest thou Me more than these?"
Who or what are the "these" that Jesus refers to here?
Perhaps He is referring to Peter's previous claim to love Jesus more than the other disciples (Matthew 26:33).
In other words, Jesus was asking, "Do you love me more than these other disciples?"
It is also possible that Jesus was referring to the fish from the meal they just ate.
Perhaps Jesus was getting at Peter's decision to stop being a fisher for men and going back to being a fisher of fish.
The question Jesus asked was really getting at the heart of what was most important in Peter's life.
Jesus repeats the question two more times, "Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me?"
What is interesting here is the words that Jesus uses for love as He asks these three questions and how Peter responds.
In the Greek, there is more than one word for love.
The one we are all probably most familiar with and have heard before is the word Agape.
Agape love is the highest form of love.
It is the type of love that God has for us.
It is unselfish and pure in its motive.
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