
The Empty Anchor: Why Psalm 23 Needs the Cross
While the sermon provides a gentle, pastoral application of [Psalm 23](https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Psalm+23&version=KJV) for personal comfort, it fundamentally fails to present the Gospel of Jesus Christ. By omitting the cross, the resurrection, and the necessity of repentance, the message reduces Christianity to a self-help strategy for managing anxiety and mortality. This approach, while emotionally soothing, leaves the congregation spiritually malnourished and unaware of their need for a Savior.
Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Laodicea — The sermon exhibits the characteristics of the Laodicean church, characterized by therapeutic deism and a focus on self-sufficiency and comfort rather than the transformative power of the Gospel. By reducing the Christian faith to a tool for psychological soothing and ignoring the core message of Christ's atoning work, the preaching fails to address the spiritual deadness of the congregation, offering a lukewarm, self-centered message that lacks the heat of true repentance and faith.

