Sermon Transcript Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Emotion
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Joy
Sadness
Language
Analytical
Confident
Tentative
Social Tendencies
Openness
Conscientiousness
Extraversion
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Anger
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Good, good, good evening.
Good to see everyone.
Glad that you are here tonight.
It's good that we can come together on Wednesday night and pray.
It just something about being together and pray and we could all pray at home by herself, but it's something about being with other Christians and praying and it is good to hear about Jenny starting to work Marco Marco.
I said, I'm going to text her tomorrow about the lunch.
Would you like me to bring you some lunch, A working woman like that working out hard 9 to 5:30 like that.
So so I may do that may do that tomorrow.
Alright.
Well if you have your Bibles turn to Romans chapter 3, And this is the last sermon on the bad news.
We've been looking at the bad news ever since the Romans 1:18.
And Tonight is the last message.
On the bad news, and I have entitled this message tonight.
God verse Humanity.
Because what I want you to do today, I just don't want you to think of this as a courtroom scene.
That's the kind of mention that throughout.
And Paul is kind of the prosecuting attorney here.
And so, you know, Paul has been telling us that there's something wrong with humanity and he started with the Gentiles or the he started with the Heathen and then he went to the Hypocrites and then he went to the Hebrews, so that covers all of us that covers the Gentiles and covers the Jews and everyone in between and so that covers us all.
And so as I said before, it's the bad news that makes the good news.
Good.
So before we can appreciate the good news, we need to understand the bad news.
And Paul was kind of making sure that we understand the gravity of sin.
So you may think that Paul was kind of a little bit morose or maybe cruel and how he writes about Sin.
And of course, he had a generation that didn't want to hear about Sin and we have a generation that you don't like to hear about seeing at least from the pulpits and places like that.
But if you study the book of Romans correctly, you going to hear about seeing.
So, first of all, he talked about the sin of the Heathen, then he went to the Hypocrites, and, of course, then he went to the Hebrews who thought that?
Because they were God's chosen people that somehow seeing did not affect them.
So he's going to sum it up in this chapter, and this is what he's going to do.
He's going to he's going to read the indictment.
He's going to give evidence of why the indictment is against, man.
So he's going to give the indictment been.
He's going to give the evidence and then he's going to give the verdict.
Now, what happens after the verdict, the sentence?
And after he gives the verdict, he's going to give the sentence.
And when you hear the sentence, it's going to be a surprising since it's not going to be what you think.
So this is this is what makes this really.
I think fun to study and to look at.
So Paul is in the courtroom.
He positions himself as the prosecuting attorney.
And he's bringing human mankind.
He's bringing us up to the Judgment bar of God, and now will man be found guilty, or will he be found innocent?
And then he's going to make a surprise move at the end.
So let's look at it and in Romans chapter 3, and I'm only begin tonight.
In verse 9.
And the first point that we want to look at is the indictment.
Now based on everything Paul has said so far.
This is his conclusion verses 9 and 10.
He says, what then are we better than they?
He says not at all.
For we have previously charged, both Jews and Greeks that they are all under sin.
As it is written.
There is none righteous.
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