
The Soul Deficit: Why Self-Help Cannot Replace the Gospel
The sermon is rhetorically engaging and culturally relevant, utilizing personal anecdotes to connect with the congregation. However, it suffers from critical theological errors, including the denial of the necessity of Christ for moral living, the reduction of sin to psychology, and the promotion of a prosperity mindset. These errors compromise the Gospel itself, moving the message from sound doctrine to therapeutic deism.
Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Laodicea — The sermon exhibits the characteristics of the Laodicean church, marked by therapeutic deism and a focus on self-help principles that bypass the necessity of the Gospel. By reducing spiritual brokenness to psychological deficits and suggesting that moral principles work independently of God, the message offers a self-sufficient, 'lukewarm' alternative to the radical grace of Christ.

