Theology of Works

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The Cost of Grace: Why Participation Matters

While the sermon correctly identifies the biblical call to active service and warns against spiritual idleness, it fundamentally distorts the nature of grace. By teaching that spiritual fullness is a reward for human effort rather than a sovereign gift, the message shifts from the Gospel of Grace to a system of moralistic achievement. This creates a dangerous framework where believers are judged by their productivity rather than their faith.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Thyatira — The sermon exhibits active moralistic heresy by subordinating the sovereign gift of grace to human effort and participation. This aligns with the Thyatiran archetype, which tolerates a blending of truth with compromising doctrines that elevate human works over divine grace.

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