Community Bible Church (San Antonio, TX)

⚠️ Biblical Warning: Mark & Avoid This church or ministry consistently demonstrates a teaching trend that deviates from sound doctrine. The majority of evaluated sermons align with biblical warnings of compromise, moralism, therapeutic self-help, or false teaching.

Read the Biblical mandate for marking and avoiding.
Primary CharacteristicSardis
Theological Profile
Faithful (Philadelphia/Smyrna)Orthodox/Cold (Ephesus)Compromised (Pergamum)Critical Error (Laodicea/Sardis/Thyatira)
Majestic ancient stone arch bridge spanning a vast chasm, supported by a colossal natural rock pillar etched with indecipherable runic carvings, heavy atmospheric fog, piercing a majestic mountain peak rays, national geographic style, photorealistic, 8k.

The Power of El Gabor: Relying on Divine Strength

The sermon effectively communicates the necessity of divine empowerment for the Christian life, using engaging cultural illustrations to make the concept of 'El Gabor' accessible. However, the homiletical strength is severely undermined by a critical theological error in the evangelistic appeal, where salvation is presented as a transactional result of human prayer and physical action rather than a sovereign gift of grace.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Sardis — The sermon presents a 'name that it is alive, but is dead' orthodoxy. While it maintains the external form of Christian teaching, it fundamentally corrupts the core message of salvation by substituting the monergistic work of God with a synergistic transaction of human decision. This reliance on the 'sinner's prayer' and physical responses as the mechanism for regeneration renders the spiritual life dead, as it places the burden of salvation on human effort rather than divine grace.

Read MoreThe Power of El Gabor: Relying on Divine Strength
National geographic photography, massive ancient stone monolith standing alone in a vast desert canyon, raging dust storm swirling around the base, single piercing shaft of golden sunlight illuminating the weathered surface, intricate indecipherable carved runic symbols on the stone, hyper-realistic, 8k.

The Ministry of Presence: Finding God in the Storm

The sermon offers a warm, relatable narrative about God's presence, effectively using personal stories to connect with the congregation. However, it suffers from a significant homiletical imbalance by presenting spiritual disciplines as behavioral commands for intimacy rather than responses to Gospel grace, shifting the focus from God's work to human effort.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Pergamum — The sermon demonstrates a significant homiletical imbalance, leaning heavily toward moralism and behavioral commands for spiritual growth rather than anchoring the Christian life in the grace of the Gospel. This reflects a 'Pergamum' state where the teaching tolerates a compromise between Gospel truth and self-effort, resulting in weak boundaries regarding the source of sanctification.

Read MoreThe Ministry of Presence: Finding God in the Storm
Massive weathered millstone with indecipherable ancient runes, resting on arid earth, clear spring water seeping from beneath the stone's edge, macro detail, national geographic realism, soft sunlight.

The Danger of Self-Powered Salvation: A Father’s Day Warning

While the sermon offers rich narrative illustrations and pastoral encouragement for fathers, it contains a critical theological error regarding salvation. The pastor promotes a synergistic view where human action (prayer/hand-raising) effects salvation, which fundamentally contradicts the Gospel of Grace. This error requires immediate correction to ensure the congregation rests in Christ's finished work rather than their own performance.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Sardis — The sermon presents a 'name that it is alive, but is dead' orthodoxy. While it maintains a veneer of biblical narrative and moral application, it fundamentally undermines the Gospel by teaching Synergistic Soteriology. By framing salvation as a transactional human decision (the sinner's prayer) rather than a monergistic work of God's grace, the sermon fails to proclaim the life-giving power of the Gospel, resulting in a dead, works-based theology.

Read MoreThe Danger of Self-Powered Salvation: A Father’s Day Warning
National geographic photography, solitary massive granite cornerstone resting on solid bedrock, raging turbulent river crashing around base, piercing sunlight through storm clouds, hyper-realistic stone textures, cinematic lighting.

Building on the Rock: The Danger of Decisional Salvation

The sermon offers compelling illustrations and a strong call to trust God in adversity. However, it suffers from a critical theological failure in its conclusion. By equating a physical gesture and a prayer with the moment of salvation, the message undermines the biblical doctrine of grace, shifting the burden of salvation from God's sovereign work to human decision. This synergistic error must be addressed to restore the clarity of the Gospel.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Sardis — The sermon presents a 'name that it is alive, but is dead' orthodoxy. While it utilizes biblical imagery and maintains a surface-level Christian vocabulary, the core mechanism of salvation is fundamentally corrupted by synergistic error. The teaching relies on human decision and physical gesture (raising a hand) as the transactional entry point to grace, rather than the monergistic work of God. This represents a dead orthodoxy where the form of godliness is present, but the power of the Gospel is obscured by decisionism.

Read MoreBuilding on the Rock: The Danger of Decisional Salvation
National geographic macro shot of a shattered ancient clay vessel with indecipherable runic carvings and luminous gold-filled fractures, resting on rugged mossy stone in a sunlit wilderness canyon, hyper-realistic texture, dramatic natural lighting.

Healing in the Wilderness: From Brokenness to Testimony

This sermon offers a compelling pastoral narrative on finding healing and purpose through suffering, utilizing strong illustrations like Kintsugi and Redwood trees. However, the message is critically compromised by a synergistic approach to salvation at the conclusion, where a human decision is presented as the transactional mechanism for receiving Christ, obscuring the sufficiency of God's grace.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Sardis — The sermon presents a 'name that it is alive, but is dead' spiritual state. While it utilizes rich biblical imagery and pastoral warmth, it fundamentally compromises the Gospel by teaching Synergistic Soteriology. The reliance on a human decision (raising a hand) as the mechanism for salvation replaces the sovereign work of God's grace, resulting in a dead orthodoxy that lacks the life-giving power of the true Gospel.

Read MoreHealing in the Wilderness: From Brokenness to Testimony
National geographic photography, vast arid canyon, massive weathered stone archway with indecipherable ancient carvings, flimsy tattered parchment tag tied to the base with indecipherable scribbles, harsh sunlight, realistic texture.

The Danger of a Decision Without the Savior

The sermon demonstrates strong pastoral passion and cultural engagement, effectively using illustrations to highlight God's majesty. However, it is fundamentally compromised by a synergistic view of salvation that places the burden of decision on the sinner, and a truncated view of God that minimizes His righteous wrath. These errors require immediate correction to ensure the Gospel is preached accurately.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Sardis — The sermon presents a 'name that it is alive, but is dead' orthodoxy. While it utilizes biblical language, it fundamentally undermines the Gospel by teaching Synergistic Soteriology (Decisionism) and misinterpreting the nature of God. The reliance on human decision for salvation and the minimization of God's wrath indicate a spiritual deadness where the core power of the Gospel is absent.

Read MoreThe Danger of a Decision Without the Savior
Colossal weathered stone monolith in vast sun-drenched valley. surface etched with deep indecipherable ancient runic script. golden hour light pierces heavy retreating storm clouds, illuminating stone with warm triumphant glow. national geographic photography, hyper-realistic, 8k.

The Song of Victory: Remembering God’s Faithfulness

The sermon offers strong motivational encouragement regarding spiritual warfare and the power of testimony. However, it is fundamentally compromised by a critical error in soteriology. The conclusion replaces the biblical call to repentance and faith in Christ's finished work with a coercive altar call that equates physical gestures and recited prayers with the transaction of salvation. This shifts the burden of salvation from God's grace to human decision, resulting in a synergistic gospel that is spiritually dangerous.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Sardis — The sermon exhibits a 'name that it is alive, but is dead' spiritual condition. While it maintains an outward appearance of evangelical activity and biblical references, it fundamentally relies on synergistic soteriology and decisional regeneration. The core Gospel engine is broken, as salvation is presented as a human transaction triggered by physical acts and prayers rather than the monergistic work of God's grace.

Read MoreThe Song of Victory: Remembering God’s Faithfulness
Massive weathered stone archway framing a rugged path; shadowed ancient ruins on left, blinding sunlight and distant mountain peak on right; blooming wildflowers in foreground; national geographic photography, hyper-realistic, 8k, cinematic lighting, no elements.

Pressing Toward the Mark: Leaving the Past Behind

Pastor Ed Newton delivers an encouraging and practical message based on [Philippians 3](https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Philippians+3&version=KJV), urging believers to maintain forward momentum in their faith. The sermon is characterized by strong pastoral warmth and relatable illustrations. While the theological foundation is sound, the presentation leans heavily on moral exhortation, requiring a deeper integration of the Gospel's power to sustain the call to action.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Philadelphia — The sermon demonstrates a faithful adherence to the biblical text of [Philippians 3](https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Philippians+3&version=KJV), encouraging the congregation to press forward in their spiritual journey. While the theological engine requires strengthening, the message remains sound, avoiding doctrinal error and maintaining a focus on Christ-centered perseverance.

Read MorePressing Toward the Mark: Leaving the Past Behind
An ancient leather journal rests on a weathered stone table. its cover bears indecipherable ancient scribbles. dark permanent ink has bled through the thick parchment fibers, creating deep, irreversible stains. piercing sunlight cuts through heavy dust motes, illuminating the textured pages in hyper-realistic documentary style.

The Danger of Decisional Faith: Returning to Monergistic Grace

While the sermon offers practical advice for parents to release their children to God, it is fundamentally compromised by a critical error in soteriology. The speaker promotes a 'decision-based' model of salvation and relies on subjective, extra-biblical revelations for spiritual guidance. This shifts the focus from God's sovereign grace to human action and ritual, requiring immediate correction to align with biblical truth.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Sardis — The sermon presents a 'name that it is alive, but is dead' spiritual state. While it utilizes biblical language regarding children and faith, it fundamentally undermines the Gospel by promoting Synergistic Soteriology (Decisionism) and relying on extra-biblical subjective revelations. This replaces the monergistic work of the Holy Spirit with human decision and ritualistic mechanics, resulting in a dead orthodoxy that lacks the life-giving power of the true Gospel.

Read MoreThe Danger of Decisional Faith: Returning to Monergistic Grace
A massive, rusted iron weight resting on a narrow, ancient stone bridge etched with indecipherable runes, causing deep fractures in the masonry, with heavy fog obscuring the path ahead.

The Danger of Self-Powered Faith: A Critique of Word of Faith Theology

This sermon is critically compromised. It promotes the heresy of Word of Faith theology, claiming believers can speak away depression and sin, and employs a decisionist altar call that places the burden of salvation on human action. The core Gospel message is obscured by a focus on self-empowerment and moralistic effort.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Thyatira — The sermon exhibits active heresy through the promotion of Word of Faith theology, which attributes creative, divine power to human speech, and synergistic soteriology, which reduces salvation to a human decision. This represents a fundamental deviation from biblical orthodoxy, aligning with the spiritual adulteration and false teaching characteristic of Thyatira.

Read MoreThe Danger of Self-Powered Faith: A Critique of Word of Faith Theology
Empty ancient stone amphitheater with crumbling seats, wildflowers blooming from cracks, vast mountain backdrop, national geographic photography, natural lighting.

The Danger of Transactional Faith: A Critique of ‘You Weren’t Saved to Sit on the Bench’

While the sermon aims to encourage active participation in the church, it fails to anchor this call in Gospel grace. Instead, it relies on moralistic pressure, offers a prosperity gospel guarantee for tithing, and employs coercive tactics during the altar call. These fundamental errors compromise the integrity of the message, requiring a serious pastoral intervention to realign with biblical orthodoxy.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Thyatira — The sermon exhibits active doctrinal deviations characteristic of the church of Thyatira. It promotes a prosperity gospel framework through transactional tithing guarantees and employs Word of Faith mysticism regarding spiritual authority. These errors fundamentally distort the nature of God's grace and the mechanics of spiritual warfare, moving beyond mere weakness into active heresy.

Read MoreThe Danger of Transactional Faith: A Critique of ‘You Weren’t Saved to Sit on the Bench’