
The Invitation Trap: Why Human Effort Cannot Replace Divine Grace
While the sermon offers warm hospitality and a clear call to community engagement, it fundamentally undermines the Gospel by presenting evangelism as a human behavioral goal rather than a Spirit-empowered response to grace. Furthermore, the teaching on the Lord's Supper removes essential biblical safeguards regarding self-examination and worthy participation, promoting a therapeutic view of the sacrament that lacks theological depth.
Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Laodicea — The sermon exhibits the characteristics of Therapeutic Deism and Moralistic Activism. It replaces the sovereign power of the Gospel with human behavioral goals and self-driven evangelism, treating faith as a matter of personal initiative rather than divine grace. This aligns with the Laodicean condition of being lukewarm, self-sufficient, and focused on outward activity without the inward reality of Christ's sufficiency.

