Sermon Review

Golden rays of light filter through wooden blinds, illuminating a dusty bookshelf. the light dances across the spines of worn leatherbound books, hinting at the wisdom held within. a tattered journal sits on a shelf, its pages brimming with prayers written in a shaky hand. the light shifts, casting shadows that echo the darkness of unanswered petitions. the bookshelf stands in a room empty except for a simple wooden chair, waiting for a prayer warrior to claim their place before the eternal light.

A Review of ‘Sunday Sermon’ by Will Kranz at The Cove Church

The sermon is a topical exposition of Matthew 6, structured as six 'alignments' a believer must perform. This framework establishes a moralistic, duty-driven foundation for prayer that is not sufficiently grounded in the mediatorial work of Christ. The imperative (what we do) overshadows the indicative (what is done for us). This weakness culminates in a soteriological error during the call to salvation, which presents a synergistic model of conversion, placing the decisive action on the sinner's will. The message is well-intentioned but theologically anemic, reflecting the condition of Sardis: the form is present, but the life-giving power of the Gospel is obscured.

Read MoreA Review of ‘Sunday Sermon’ by Will Kranz at The Cove Church
A barren cross in a desert, with fading footprints leading away, symbolizes the choice to follow or reject the sacred presence's atonement.

The Cross and the Choice: An Analysis of the Trial of Jesus

The sermon is a strong, Christ-centered exposition of John 18-19, commendable for its focus on the substitutionary atonement and its correct handling of passages like 1 Peter 2:24. The central weakness lies in its soteriological application, which defaults to decisionism ('What will you do with Jesus?'). This man-centered framing of the response to the gospel makes the sermon theologically weak, despite its orthodox content.

Read MoreThe Cross and the Choice: An Analysis of the Trial of Jesus
A rusty, weathered clock face, its hands moving rapidly in both directions, the numbers and lines blurred and worn down to nothing.

The Danger of a Good Idea: When ‘Do More’ Drowns Out ‘It Is Done’

The sermon correctly affirms foundational doctrines like Total Depravity and justification by faith. However, its homiletical structure is pretextual, using Philippians 3 as a launchpad for a topical sermon on human responsibility ('The ball is in our court'). This results in a moralistic message that, while not heretical, is theologically anemic. It emphasizes the imperatives of Scripture (what we must do) at the expense of the indicatives (what Christ has done), leading to a 'try harder' application rather than one powered by grace. A 'Major Caution' is also noted for imprecise language regarding divine guidance ('God is telling me'), which risks confusing the congregation about the sole authority of Scripture.

Read MoreThe Danger of a Good Idea: When ‘Do More’ Drowns Out ‘It Is Done’
A single, wilted rose, its petals crumpled and brown, lies on a bare wooden table illuminated by a shaft of golden light. in the foreground, a few small pebbles are scattered.

Beyond ‘Thriving’: A Theological Review of ‘Finding Purpose in Your Singleness’

The pastor effectively addresses the challenges of singleness, commendably pointing to union with Christ as the source of completeness and upholding a biblical sexual ethic. The sermon's significant weaknesses are structural: 1) A therapeutic hermeneutic ('Thriving') that uses the Bible as a support text for a pre-determined self-help theme. 2) An extremely low public reading of Scripture, starving the congregation of the Word itself. 3) A soteriologically weak altar call rooted in decisionism, which mislocates the decisive action in salvation from God's sovereign grace to man's choice.

Read MoreBeyond ‘Thriving’: A Theological Review of ‘Finding Purpose in Your Singleness’
A sapling, barely visible, reaches desperately for the sun's rays. the rays filter through a dense forest canopy, but the light is not enough. the sapling is hungry for more.

When ‘Hunger’ Leads to Error: A Review of ‘Listen to your Hunger’

The sermon is a topical exhortation on responding to divine conviction, framed as 'spiritual hunger.' However, it is fundamentally compromised by two critical errors: 1) A synergistic framework that presents God's grace and calling as conditional upon human effort, suggesting God will 'move on' if ignored. 2) The promotion of a non-Trinitarian soteriological formula, explicitly linking salvation to being 'baptized in Jesus' name' and speaking in tongues as evidence of receiving the Holy Ghost, which contradicts the scriptural command of Matthew 28:19 and corrupts the doctrine of God.

Read MoreWhen ‘Hunger’ Leads to Error: A Review of ‘Listen to your Hunger’
A single shaft of light pierces the darkness, illuminating a weathered wooden door. beside it sits a small stone, worn smooth by countless hands reaching for the knob.

Finding Purpose or Finding God? A Review of “God’s Purpose for You”

The sermon is built on an expository framework from Luke 4, which is commendable. However, its hermeneutical lens is anthropocentric, using the text primarily as a vehicle to address the modern felt need for 'purpose.' This therapeutic framing, combined with a soteriologically weak altar call rooted in Decisionism, results in a message that is orthodox in its affirmations but anemic in its theological depth, prioritizing human fulfillment over divine declaration.

Read MoreFinding Purpose or Finding God? A Review of “God’s Purpose for You”
A tarnished brass compass, its edges worn smooth from years of use, lies open atop a crinkled, yellowed map. a shaft of golden light illuminates the compass needle, which wavers slightly before settling on a distant horizon, while the map's folds and creases cast deep shadows across the weathered paper.

The Gospel of Vision: When Self-Help Replaces Salvation

This sermon replaces biblical exposition with the principles of therapeutic deism and self-help. It subordinates the Gospel to the goal of personal achievement, employing a pretextual hermeneutic with a dangerously low text-to-talk ratio. The message is built on an anthropocentric framework where God is a facilitator for human ambition. Furthermore, the pastor claims direct prophetic authority for his central theme, creating a different gospel focused on man's potential rather than God's glory and the finished work of Christ.

Read MoreThe Gospel of Vision: When Self-Help Replaces Salvation
A small plant's purple crayon lies abandoned in the dirt, its once vibrant color faded and cracked. rays of golden sunlight filter through the branches of a gnarled oak tree, illuminating the crayon like a spotlight on a stage.

The Danger of the Purple Crayon Gospel: When Faith Becomes a Tool for Self-Realization

The sermon is built upon a pretextual framework, using a children's story as its chassis and subordinating Scripture to it. Theologically, it promotes a Word of Faith definition of faith as a creative force that brings the unseen into the seen, a significant doctrinal error. Hermeneutically, it treats the account of Noah's Ark as a mere moralistic example of dream-building, completely missing the redemptive-historical typology pointing to Christ. The text-to-talk ratio is exceptionally low, starving the congregation of the Word. The message is anthropocentric, focusing on human potential and ambition rather than the glory of God in the work of Christ.

Read MoreThe Danger of the Purple Crayon Gospel: When Faith Becomes a Tool for Self-Realization
Through a weathered wooden door, a shaft of golden light illuminates a path leading away from a stone church building. the door is cracked open just enough to glimpse a distant horizon of swaying wheat fields, suggesting the church's message extends far beyond its walls.

Beyond the Building: Reclaiming Jesus’s Message of the Kingdom

This is a strong, corrective sermon that rightly recenters the church's mission on the proclamation of the 'Gospel of the Kingdom' rather than on attractional, numbers-based metrics. The pastor provides excellent, biblical definitions of repentance and discipleship. The primary areas for refinement are in sharpening the distinction between the Church and the Kingdom to avoid a false dichotomy, and in strengthening the articulation of God's sovereign grace in the call to salvation to prevent a drift toward a synergistic understanding.

Read MoreBeyond the Building: Reclaiming Jesus’s Message of the Kingdom
In a dimly lit chapel, shafts of golden light illuminate a baptismal font. drops of water, captured in mid-air, glow with an ethereal radiance. beneath the font, two streams of crimson liquid - one thick, one thin - converge and swirl together, merging into a single, luminous red river that flows into the font. the thicker stream represents blood, the thinner one water, symbolizing the profound truth that in baptism, our spiritual identity and allegiance supersedes even our earthly family ties.

Water is Thicker Than Blood: Our True Identity in Baptism

The pastor delivers a sound, topical sermon on Matthew 3:13-17, correctly identifying baptism as the sign of a believer's new identity in Christ. The central proposition is that this new identity, rooted in grace, redefines our primary allegiance and serves as the foundation for holiness and unity. The sermon effectively connects the indicative (who we are in Christ) to the imperative (how we are to live), particularly in a socially fragmented context. The overall theological framework is sound and pastorally applied.

Read MoreWater is Thicker Than Blood: Our True Identity in Baptism
A lone fishing boat floats on still, glassy waters as shafts of golden sunlight pierce the crimson sea, casting a path to a distant shore.

Beyond the Predicament: Finding Christ in the Red Sea

The pastor delivered an encouraging, application-heavy sermon on Exodus 14. He successfully connected the Red Sea crossing to Christ's deliverance from sin at the conclusion, which is a commendable typological link. However, the sermon's framework is fundamentally therapeutic, using the biblical text as a pretext to discuss the topic of overcoming personal 'predicaments.' This approach, combined with a functionally synergistic gospel call using decisionist language ('invite Him into your heart'), results in a theologically weak presentation that prioritizes temporal relief over the centrality of the Gospel.

Read MoreBeyond the Predicament: Finding Christ in the Red Sea
A lonely candle flickers in a dark room, its feeble light casting long shadows across the rough-hewn wooden table where an empty plate sits, a single stone resting beside it.

Fasting: Is It a Gateway to Power or a Posture of Dependence?

The sermon is a topical exhortation on the benefits of fasting, framed within a series on 'Sowing and Reaping.' While well-intentioned, its theological framework is weak, presenting fasting with a strong therapeutic and transactional emphasis. God is positioned as a respondent to human earnestness, and spiritual disciplines are framed as a 'gateway' to supernatural results. This anthropocentric focus is compounded by two major pastoral concerns: a claim of extra-biblical revelation regarding a future event and the administration of communion without any scriptural fencing of the table.

Read MoreFasting: Is It a Gateway to Power or a Posture of Dependence?
A beam of light pierces a darkened workshop, illuminating a workbench strewn with rusted tools. in the foreground, a block of rough wood grain is sandwiched between two smooth stones, a fine layer of sawdust sprinkling the surface. the image suggests the biblical theme of 'priorities and posteriorities' as a form of spiritual discipline, but questions whether this turns the faith into a self-improvement project.

Is Jesus Your Savior or Your Productivity Coach? A Review of ‘Priorities and Posteriorities’

The sermon is structured not by the biblical text, but by a secular management principle from Peter Drucker. This framework reduces Jesus' actions in Mark 1 to a model of 'effective executive' behavior, leading to a moralistic application focused on human discipline ('what will you not do?') rather than a Christ-centered one rooted in the gospel's power. The indicative of Christ's finished work is largely absent, replaced by the imperative to manage oneself better. The failure to properly fence the Lord's Table during communion further compounds the sermon's structural weaknesses.

Read MoreIs Jesus Your Savior or Your Productivity Coach? A Review of ‘Priorities and Posteriorities’
A frayed rope anchor, severed and adrift, bobs in a turbulent sea. golden light filters through the waves as the sun sets behind a distant storm cloud, illuminating the anchor's weathered links and rusted hook. the anchor's chain trails off into the shadowy depths.

Beyond Betrayal: Finding Christ’s Sovereignty in John 18

The sermon is a topical exploration of John 18, structured as a character study of Judas, the religious leaders, and Peter. The pastor correctly identifies the significance of the 'I AM' statement but builds the sermon's core application around moralism—urging listeners to avoid the failures of the characters. This moralistic hermeneutic, combined with a weak, decision-centric altar call and a very low text-to-talk ratio, results in a theologically anemic message that teaches duty over devotion rooted in Christ's finished work.

Read MoreBeyond Betrayal: Finding Christ’s Sovereignty in John 18
A flickering candle illuminates a dark, rippling pool. its feeble glow dances on the surface, casting mesmerizing shadows. in the depths, ancient stones loom, weathered by countless generations. the candle's light beckons, a warm invitation to rest on the rocky shore. yet the water's undulating rhythm entices, a call to plunge into its cool embrace. here, in this liminal space between shadow and radiance, between stone and wave, the path to peace beckons.

From the Terror of Sinai to the Rest of Zion: Embracing the Fullness of Your Salvation

An expository message contrasting the fear-based covenant at Sinai with the grace-based New Covenant in Christ. The preacher correctly identifies Jesus as the fulfillment of the 'prophet like Moses' and exhorts believers to move beyond mere 'fire insurance' salvation into an experiential reality of spiritual rest and holiness, grounded in the finished work of Christ.

Read MoreFrom the Terror of Sinai to the Rest of Zion: Embracing the Fullness of Your Salvation
A single seed, planted in fertile soil, sprouts and grows into a mighty oak tree, its branches reaching towards the heavens.

The Law of the Harvest: Is It a Gospel of Grace or a System of Karma?

The sermon misapplies Galatians 6:7-8, reducing a solemn warning about sowing to the flesh (reaping corruption) versus the Spirit (reaping eternal life) into a pragmatic, man-centered formula for achieving temporal success. The core message is a synergistic, works-based system that functionally denies the sovereignty of God and the finished work of Christ as sufficient for all things. Compounded by a failure to guard the Lord's Table, the sermon presents a different gospel from that of the Scriptures.

Read MoreThe Law of the Harvest: Is It a Gospel of Grace or a System of Karma?
A beam of light pierces a dense fog, illuminating a winding stone path that leads to a distant, glowing cross. along the path, small stones are scattered, some smooth and worn, others jagged and sharp. a few resolute saplings push through cracks in the stone, their branches reaching skyward towards the light. in the foreground, a weathered wooden cross rests on a simple altar. a flickering candle burns at its base.

Resolutions or Revelation? Examining the Power Source of the Christian Life

The sermon is structured around the Epiphany narrative from Matthew 2 and is embedded within a formal liturgical service that includes the recitation of the Nicene Creed. The exegesis of the Magi's journey is sound and historically grounded. However, the homiletic application pivots entirely to a moralistic framework, urging congregants to adopt spiritual resolutions and disciplines as the primary means of spiritual growth. This approach presents a synergistic view of sanctification that overshadows the monergistic work of the Holy Spirit. Furthermore, the administration of Communion lacks any biblical fencing of the table, a critical pastoral and theological oversight.

Read MoreResolutions or Revelation? Examining the Power Source of the Christian Life
A barren desert, stretching to the horizon under an azure sky. in the foreground, a single twisted tree, its branches reaching upward like supplicating hands. in the distance, mountains with snow-capped peaks. a shaft of golden sunlight pierces the clouds, illuminating the landscape.

Beyond ‘Skin in the Game’: Is Your Spiritual Hunger Man-Made or God-Given?

This is a moralistic and therapeutic sermon that correctly identifies a common spiritual ailment—a lack of hunger for God—but prescribes a man-centered, synergistic remedy. The core theological weakness is its functional Semi-Pelagianism, where human-initiated action (fasting) is presented as the catalyst for generating spiritual desire and securing a divine response. The gospel is largely absent as the power for sanctification; instead, a spiritual technique is offered, making the sermon theologically anemic.

Read MoreBeyond ‘Skin in the Game’: Is Your Spiritual Hunger Man-Made or God-Given?
Golden candlelight illuminates a weathered altar, casting dramatic shadows across the rough-hewn wood, evoking the passover sacrifice and the obedience required to follow the eternal light's comelementds.

The Passover and the Principle of Obedience: A Theological Review

The pastor correctly identifies the typological fulfillment of the Passover Lamb in Christ, a significant hermeneutical strength. However, the sermon's central proposition reduces the Christian life to the moralistic principle of 'obedience,' creating a "try harder" message that overshadows the gospel's indicative power. While not heretical, this approach is theologically anemic and risks fostering either pride (in those who feel they are succeeding) or despair (in those who know they are not).

Read MoreThe Passover and the Principle of Obedience: A Theological Review
A tangle of rusty copper wires spills across a weathered wooden table, illuminated by a single shaft of golden light. the wires are wrapped around a tarnished turkish lamp, its glass panes fractured and cloudy. a single beam of light filters through, casting a warm glow across the chaotic scene.

Beyond Burnout: When Self-Help Replaces the Gospel

This is a pretextual sermon that uses Mark 1 as a launchpad for a topical message on avoiding burnout. The central hermeneutic is anthropocentric; the pastor's personal narrative about making a lamp forms the sermon's structure, with Scripture serving as an illustration for her point rather than the source of it. Theologically, the sermon is weak, redefining salvation as mere 'transformation' while dismissing judgment, and presenting Jesus primarily as a moral example for stress management rather than a divine Savior from sin. The low text-to-talk ratio and focus on therapeutic outcomes result in a message that is relatable but biblically anemic.

Read MoreBeyond Burnout: When Self-Help Replaces the Gospel
A weathered compass, its once-shiny surface now mottled with rust, lies atop an ancient star map. the compass needle wavers uncertainly between two bright stars in the firmament. in the distance, a church steeple rises, its cross-topped spire shadowd against the night sky.

Is Your Church Guided by Scripture or by Stars?

The sermon is pastorally warm and mission-focused, but it is founded on two significant errors. First, it promotes a form of subjective revelation through the 'Star Word' tradition and the pastor's personal dream, presented as a 'vision from God,' which undermines the sufficiency of Scripture. Second, the explicit practice of open communion disregards the biblical mandate to fence the Lord's Table, placing both the congregation and the sacrament at risk. These errors in bibliology and sacramentology are severe.

Read MoreIs Your Church Guided by Scripture or by Stars?
A lone brick wall stretches into the distance, cracks and crevices adorned with vibrant wildflowers and lush green moss. dappled sunlight from the trees overhead casts a warm, golden glow across the textured surface.

The Form of Godliness: When ‘Faithful Steps’ Miss the Gospel

The sermon presents a clear, memorable, and well-intentioned four-point framework for discipleship. However, its hermeneutic is functionally moralistic, using Christ primarily as an exemplar rather than a substitute. This results in a high-imperative message that places the burden of sanctification on the believer's intentionality and decision-making, rather than grounding it in the power of the atonement. The sermon has the form of discipleship but lacks the Gospel engine, characteristic of the church at Sardis.

Read MoreThe Form of Godliness: When ‘Faithful Steps’ Miss the Gospel
Abandoned door, inviting the viewer to step through it and leave their old life behind to follow the sacred presence.

Beyond ‘Try Harder’: Finding the True Power for a Life of Ministry

The sermon uses the narrative of Acts 3 to advocate for proactive, intentional ministry. While commendable in its aim, the homiletic method detaches the application from its gospel foundation. The sermon's core weakness is its moralistic drift, repeatedly grounding the power for ministry in the believer's decision and willpower ('what if you decided...') rather than in the person and work of Christ. This results in a 'try harder' imperative that is characteristic of a theologically anemic, or Sardis-like, condition.

Read MoreBeyond ‘Try Harder’: Finding the True Power for a Life of Ministry
A frayed rope, its fibers worn through, stretches taut between two ancient stone pillars. golden light streams through cracks in the crumbling masonry, illuminating the fibers straining against the pull.

The Battle for Breakthrough: Is Human Effort Enough?

The sermon is a motivational exhortation built on a moralistic interpretation of Genesis 32. It functionally promotes a synergistic view of sanctification, where human effort is the determinative factor in achieving spiritual 'breakthrough.' The core hermeneutic is pretextual, using the biblical narrative as a launchpad for a message on human persistence, rather than expounding the text's central theme of God's sovereign grace in humbling and renaming Jacob. The result is a sermon that is emotionally encouraging but theologically anemic, lacking the power of the Gospel as the basis for perseverance.

Read MoreThe Battle for Breakthrough: Is Human Effort Enough?
A political rally podium, illuminated by golden hour light, with a bible placed atop the lectern. an american flag is draped over the lectern. the bible is tilted, as if to suggest it may slide off and fall to the ground. the podium is surrounded by stone columns, suggesting a place of worship. however, the podium is cracked, and cracks are spreading across the stone floor. the cracks are filled with rust-colored liquid, as if the very foundation is crumbling and bleeding.

The Danger of a Divided Allegiance: When Politics Becomes the Gospel

The sermon's central proposition is that a successful Christian life is achieved through the believer's effort to know and apply the Bible. This framework is foundationally weak, promoting moralism over grace. This weakness becomes a fatal error when the sermon explicitly conflates the work of God with the actions of a specific political party and administration, binding the consciences of the congregation to a partisan political view. This act of syncretism constitutes a fundamental error.

Read MoreThe Danger of a Divided Allegiance: When Politics Becomes the Gospel
Ancient stone steps ascend a craggy cliff face, a shaft of golden light illuminating the path to a distant, weathered cross.

Beyond Moralism: Finding Christ in the Faith of Abraham

The sermon is a topical character study of Abraham, intended to encourage faith and persistence. However, its hermeneutic is fundamentally moralistic, treating Abraham as a behavioral model to be emulated rather than as a redemptive-historical figure whose faith pointed toward Christ. This Christless approach, combined with an anthropocentric focus on the listener's personal 'dreams' and an extremely low amount of Scripture actually read to the congregation, results in a theologically weak message that lacks the power of the gospel.

Read MoreBeyond Moralism: Finding Christ in the Faith of Abraham
A weathered wooden ladder, its rough-hewn rungs ascending into golden light eelementating from an unseen source above. the ladder's base is firmly planted in a bed of rich, dark soil, with small green sprouts and tender young shoots just beginning to emerge.

Is Your Faith a Capacity to Build or a Gift to Receive?

While delivered with passion, the sermon is fundamentally flawed. It operates on a moralistic and synergistic framework, presenting faith as a human 'capacity' that triggers divine action. This is compounded by serious errors in bibliology, including a direct claim of extra-biblical revelation ('God told me') and an instruction for the congregation to engage in a non-biblical practice of 'prophesying' over their year. These errors undermine the Gospel and the authority of Scripture.

Read MoreIs Your Faith a Capacity to Build or a Gift to Receive?
A beam of golden sunlight streams through an ornate church window, illuminating a scene of love and compassion. dust motes dance in the radiant light.

The Source of All True Love: An Analysis of 1 Corinthians 13

This is a sound, topical exposition of 1 Corinthians 13, structured around the priorities of love: for God, family, church, and neighbor. The sermon correctly grounds the believer's ability to love in the monergistic work of God giving a new heart, effectively distinguishing between common grace and the regenerate affections. The applications for family and church life are biblically robust and pastorally applied. The message is Christ-centered, evangelistically clear, and doctrinally faithful.

Read MoreThe Source of All True Love: An Analysis of 1 Corinthians 13
A dense forest, illuminated by shafts of golden sunlight piercing through the canopy. in the distance, a lone structure stands at the edge of the forest, poised to either venture deeper into the woods or turn back towards civilization. the structure is shrouded in shadow, with only the faintest shadow visible.

Beyond Resolutions: Finding the True Power for Spiritual Growth

The sermon uses Matthew 22 (The Great Commandment) as a text to frame a New Year's call for spiritual commitment, using a gym membership as the primary analogy. While well-intentioned, the message functions as moralism, presenting the highest demand of the Law (love God perfectly) as a goal to be achieved through human effort and discipline. It lacks a sufficient grounding in the Gospel, failing to articulate that the power for sanctification comes from Christ's finished work, not human resolve. This results in a 'try harder' message that can lead to either pride or despair.

Read MoreBeyond Resolutions: Finding the True Power for Spiritual Growth
In the inky darkness of space, two celestial bodies race toward earth: a fiery comet blazing across the sky, and a distant star, cold and remote. the comet blazes brightly, but burns out quickly, streaking across the heavens in a momentary burst of light. the star, however, remains constant, its light traveling across vast distances to illuminate the darkest of nights. in this cosmic metaphor, the comet represents a vague, impersonal spirituality, while the distant star symbolizes the specific, saving work of the divine light the sacred presence. as we celebrate the sacred presencemas, let us fix our gaze on the one who is the true light of the world.

Is Christ a Cosmic Force or a Crucified King? A Review

The sermon is fundamentally in error, substituting the gospel with a syncretistic, therapeutic message. It redefines sin as horizontal, presents salvation as the realization of an inherent inner light (Universalism), and appeals to extra-biblical phenomena ('the universe') as a source of revelation. Christology is reduced from the incarnate God-man to an impersonal cosmic force, and the Lord's Supper is administered without biblical safeguards.

Read MoreIs Christ a Cosmic Force or a Crucified King? A Review