
The Invisible War: Finding Strength in Crisis
Dr. Hitchcock delivers a compelling exposition of [Daniel 10](https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Daniel+10&version=KJV), effectively highlighting the reality of spiritual warfare and the importance of prayer. However, the sermon's application leans heavily into moralism, instructing the congregation on *what* to do (pray, seek vision) without sufficiently explaining *how* or *why* they are empowered to do so through the Gospel. This creates a burden of performance rather than a response of grace.
Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Pergamum — The sermon exhibits a compromised theological stance by presenting a moralistic response to crisis. While the teaching is not heretical in the sense of denying core doctrines, it suffers from homiletical imbalance, reducing the Christian life to behavioral imitation and spiritual disciplines without anchoring them in the sustaining grace of the Gospel. This reflects a 'Pergamum' state where the church tolerates a diluted message that relies on human effort rather than the power of the Spirit.

