
The Sufficiency of Christ: Why We Need No Add-Ons
While the sermon effectively communicates the theological sufficiency of Christ and the futility of adding works to grace, it critically fails in its application. The conclusion collapses into a synergistic appeal, commanding unregenerate listeners to 'receive' and 'ask' for salvation, thereby undermining the very doctrine of monergistic grace the sermon sought to uphold.
Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Sardis — The sermon presents a 'name that it is alive, but is dead' orthodoxy. While it correctly identifies the sufficiency of Christ's work, it fundamentally undermines the Gospel by attributing the decisive act of salvation to human will and decision-making. This synergistic error reduces the Gospel to a moralistic appeal for human action, resulting in a dead orthodoxy that lacks the power of the Holy Spirit's monergistic regeneration.

