Therapeutic Gospel

Golden light filters through stained glass, casting a warm glow across a rustic wooden altar adorned with evergreen boughs. candles flicker, illuminating a weathered stone baptismal font. shadows dance on the rough-hewn walls of the medieval chapel as a 15th-century poem is recited, its message of inner peace and wholeness through welcoming the sacred presence into the mess of one's life resonating through the ages.

The Gospel of ‘Allowing’: A Theological Review of ‘Christmas Eve Service’

The sermon presents a synergistic and therapeutic gospel. Its central thesis, drawn from mystical poetry, posits that Christ's internal birth is contingent upon the sinner's willingness to 'allow' or 'welcome' Him. This makes human will the decisive factor in salvation. Furthermore, sin is primarily defined as horizontal brokenness ('mess,' 'pain'), and salvation is consequently framed as a healing process for personal fulfillment rather than a judicial rescue from divine wrath.

Read MoreThe Gospel of ‘Allowing’: A Theological Review of ‘Christmas Eve Service’
A burning bush, unscathed by flames, casting a warm glow on a dark forest. a metaphor for a church's transformation and rebirth.

When Testimony Replaces Theology: A Review of ‘My Church’

While leveraging emotionally compelling testimonies, the sermon fundamentally errs by substituting a therapeutic framework for the biblical gospel. The core problem addressed is personal pain rather than sin against God, and the solution offered is emotional healing and community rather than justification through faith in Christ. This is compounded by a severe hermeneutical failure in applying Isaiah 43, the platforming of a dangerous claim of extra-biblical audible revelation, and a failure to administer the Lord's Supper according to biblical standards.

Read MoreWhen Testimony Replaces Theology: A Review of ‘My Church’
Golden hour light illuminates a cracked, weathered wooden cross. the light catches on the rough texture of the cross's surface, highlighting its imperfections. shadows lengthen across the cross, giving it an ethereal, almost holy glow. the golden light seems to radiate from within the cross itself, as if it holds some divine power. however, the cracks and crevices in the wood remind us that even this symbol of eternal hope is subject to the ravages of time and decay. the golden light is transient, fleeting, while the wood slowly crumbles. it's a visual metaphor for the danger of a 'just like that' gospel - the appeal of sudden transformation, contrasted with the slow, difficult work of growth and change.

The Danger of a “Just Like That” Gospel: A Review of ‘Sunday Sermon’

The speaker, a gifted storyteller, presents a message centered on the theme of God's sudden intervention, using Acts 16 as a launchpad. While the core facts of Christ's life, death, and resurrection are stated, the sermon's theological foundation is critically flawed. The gospel is framed therapeutically, focusing on immediate circumstantial improvement rather than reconciliation with God. This culminates in a high-pressure, synergistic altar call rooted in Decisionism, which misrepresents the nature of salvation by placing the decisive action on man's will. The use of Scripture is pretextual, and the administration of communion lacks the necessary biblical safeguards.

Read MoreThe Danger of a “Just Like That” Gospel: A Review of ‘Sunday Sermon’
A weathered anchor, encrusted with barnacles, is suspended from a frayed rope. faint shafts of golden light pierce the dark, illuminating the anchor's edges with a soft glow.

The Danger of a Different Gospel: When Positivity Replaces Piety

The sermon presents a synergistic, therapeutic gospel where human-initiated thanksgiving, not divine grace, is the catalyst for spiritual awakening. It redefines the core problem from sin against God to a 'demonic' negative attitude, and the solution from the Atonement to positive thinking. This is rooted in an anthropocentric hermeneutic that uses Scripture pretextually to support a message of American nationalism and self-help. The speaker also claims direct, prophetic communication from God, undermining the sufficiency of Scripture.

Read MoreThe Danger of a Different Gospel: When Positivity Replaces Piety