
The Danger of Partial Obedience: Why God Demands Full Compliance
The sermon offers a passionate call to personal responsibility and obedience, effectively using analogies like baking and farming to illustrate the necessity of following God's complete will. However, the theological foundation is compromised by erroneous teachings on human nature and Christ's incarnation, and the homiletics lean heavily into moralism, failing to anchor the call to obedience in the power of the Gospel and the Holy Spirit.
Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Pergamum — The sermon exhibits significant theological compromise through the introduction of erroneous anthropology and Christology, alongside a homiletical imbalance that leans heavily toward moralism. While it maintains a veneer of orthodox language, the underlying teaching tolerates a 'two-nature' framework and a biological view of Christ's sinlessness, which weakens the boundaries of sound doctrine and aligns with the Pergamum archetype of teaching that accommodates worldly or compromised theological frameworks.

