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
0.12UNLIKELY
Disgust
0.05UNLIKELY
Fear
0.09UNLIKELY
Joy
0.71LIKELY
Sadness
0.15UNLIKELY
Language Tone
Analytical
0.87LIKELY
Confident
0UNLIKELY
Tentative
0.4UNLIKELY
Social Tone
Openness
0.92LIKELY
Conscientiousness
0.87LIKELY
Extraversion
0.13UNLIKELY
Agreeableness
0.79LIKELY
Emotional Range
0.67LIKELY

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
Many agree that if we could just love one another, our world would be different.
But whose version of love would we use?
Some think of love in a purely romantic sense, while others are content to say, “live and let live” as their expression of love.
When we read the term love in the Bible, we should be careful not to fill it with our ideas about love but let the text tell us what love is.
As we look at John’s letter, we read that God is love.
And God has expressed His love by sending His son Jesus to become the propitiation for our sins.
A Community in need of love
The command to love is for the Christian community.
If you recall, the community of John’s day experienced false teachers who likewise lived in hate toward others within the community.
The gnostic teachers contributed to a divided community.
(Gnostic: those who emphasized that special knowledge came through special teachers, enabling the believer to become “more spiritual.”)
Those teachers eventually left the church but also left a painful situation.
How should the church go forward in light of its problems?
John’s encouragement is twofold: hold on to the truth of the Gospel and love one another.
God’s untainted truth is foundational to our message.
Our message is expressed in words and deeds, especially in love for one another.
In this letter, John has previously mentioned loving fellow Christians six times, and he will go on to mention eleven times in total.
Don’t be upset with John.
Where does this love come from?
And how should we fulfill this important command?
Love comes from God
In this letter, John has in mind a love that we express to those in the family of God.
Regardless of painful experiences in your personal family or in churches, God intends for your experience in the family of God to be engulfed with a different kind of love.
This love does not originate in ourselves; rather, it comes directly from God.
If we want to know what love is, then we need to know God, for God is love.
John is not saying that love and God are the same things, but that love only exists because it comes from the Creator.
Love originates from God, and the opposite is not true.
God does not originate from love.
When we read scripture, we will discover that God is the Creator.
He does not have a beginning or end.
He is eternal and self-sufficient.
Love is an attribute or characteristic of God’s eternal nature.
And every other attribute, such as His holiness, justice, and mercy, can be characterized by love.
His justice is loving just as his holiness is loving.
We also see love expressed within the Trinity There may be distinctions of the persons (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit), yet there is perfect unity and relationship.
God expressed love in the creation of the world, for He set it in order and sustains it.
But John has in mind a particular moment within history that the believers are to recognize and copy in the church.
If we want to know what love is, we need to look at God.
We could also say that a person never truly knows love until they get to know God.
And as we come to know the God from whom love comes, we know how He loves us.
Love - God Sent His Son
The Bible teaches us that God created all things.
It teaches that humans, through Adam, inherited a natural tendency to sin and a separation from the Creator.
Therefore, all people are born sinners separated from God.
But because of His amazing love, God provided a solution through Jesus.
Even though the Father sent the Son, Jesus willingly humbled himself to come to earth.
Within the Incarnation, we see the cooperation, unity, and activity of the Trinity.
The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are of the same essence that is unique only to God.
Within the godhead of the Trinity, there is perfect fellowship and cooperation
These three are not identical; they interact with one another and their identities are constituted with respect to one another
A key text for understanding the Incarnation comes from the letter to the Philippians.
Although Jesus could rightfully claim a Divine Nature, he willingly lowered himself to become human.
He did not “count equality with God a thing to be grasped.”
Jesus was God in essence, glory, and power but did not “grasp” it, a term often used to describe something that rightfully belongs to someone, especially in a battle.
Through the humbling act of the incarnation, Christ offered Himself as the ultimate solution for our sin.
John tells it this way, “so that we might live through Him.
If we are to learn love from God, our first lesson is to recognize that love involves bringing people back together that were formerly separated.
Humility is an important part of love.
If Jesus had not humbled himself, we would not know the blessings of forgiveness and salvation.
Jesus became our Propitiation
This brings us to the next expression of God’s love.
God’s love is expressed in Jesus becoming the propitiation for our sins.
The term “propitiation” is not a term we use in everyday language.
The concept is ancient, and it may even offend our modern concepts of justice.
Let’s look at a brief definition, then look at the context of propitiation from the Bible.
Propitiation - a sacrifice and removal of Wrath.
It is the covering of sin so that it is no longer remembered nor an issue as something that separates two people.
The idea that God has wrath may offend our modern notions of God.
We may picture someone who has lost control of their anger and emotions to become destructive.
Is this how we should view God? First, we should recognize that God is not like us.
He is Creator, and we are his creation.
He is all-powerful and eternal; we are not.
He is greater, and we must give Him the proper respect, honor, and worship that is due unto Him.
Secondly, God is able to express anger or wrath that does not violate his other attributes.
God is holy; therefore, his anger is holy and just.
God is loving; therefore, his anger is loving and without sin.
No human on earth can exhibit these attributes like God.
Thirdly, we should acknowledge that there are situations where wrath is the only appropriate response to a great offense.
Consider the deliberate killing of innocent children by an attacking military force; we should express anger toward such things.
Is our sin really that bad that God should express wrath?
Can I really believe in a God who expresses wrath toward sin?
If we erode the concept of God’s justice, we eventually eliminate our own concept of justice.
In reality, we become god and decide what is right and wrong.
The concept of propitiation is deeply rooted in the Day of Atonement.
Because of the sin of the people, God provided a way to keep His people close to Himself.
They were sinful, unfaithful, unjust, and inconsistent, but God chose to have a sacrifice bear the wrath of sin so that the people could experience His mercy.
The sins of the people were covered by the blood of the sacrifice.
John affirms that Jesus fulfilled the role of the sacrifice of the Day of Atonement.
But this time, it was the final sacrifice.
It was not the blood of an animal but the body and blood of Jesus Christ.
His sacrifice turned the wrath toward our sin into forgiveness for those who place their trust in him.
Although we are not God and offer a sacrifice again to restore a relationship with others, we can look to God’s example of providing grace as a loving action.
We can express grace and mercy to others.
Imitating our God
If we want to know what love looks like, then we must look at God.
The full picture of love comes into view when we recognize that God saw the situation of separation and acted in a way to solve the problem of sin.
Because sinners can never solve their own problem of sin, God gave us Jesus to become the solution.
Jesus had every right to refuse the solution of humbling himself, but he willingly came to earth in the most humbling way as a newborn infant.
The God who created the universe out of nothing except by the words of his mouth not only took on flesh, but he lived life in obedience to the Father and gave himself as the sacrifice that solved the problem of sin, wrath, and separation.
This is generous love.
< .5
.5 - .6
.6 - .7
.7 - .8
.8 - .9
> .9