
The Danger of Self-Powered Christianity
While the sermon offers personal anecdotes and a desire for spiritual vitality, it fundamentally compromises the Gospel. It teaches that human choice initiates salvation (Synergism) and that speaking in tongues is a necessary threshold for spiritual power (Coercive Evangelism). These errors strip the congregation of assurance and place the burden of spiritual success on their own shoulders rather than on Christ's finished work.
Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Sardis — The sermon exhibits a 'name that it is alive, but is dead' condition. While it maintains a Christian vocabulary, it fundamentally undermines the Gospel by teaching that human choice triggers regeneration (Synergism) and that spiritual empowerment is contingent upon specific signs like tongues (Decisionism/Coercive Evangelism). This replaces the finished work of Christ with human performance and conditional obedience.

