Summary
Life coaching can give useful advice, but it becomes a tradition of men when the sermon becomes practical technique without divine authority, sin, cross, repentance, and holiness.
Scripture does not merely improve life skills; it judges, saves, trains, and forms the people of God.
Core Scripture
2 Tim 3:16-4:2; Col 1:28; Eph 4:11-16; Luke 24:46-47; Acts 20:27
These texts are treated as the controlling biblical witness for this appraisal, not as detached slogans.
Key terms
noutheteo [admonish]; didasko [teach]; teleios [mature]; metanoia [repentance]
Technical terms are included only to clarify the biblical issue. The final authority is the contextual meaning of Scripture.
Short diagnosis
Life coaching can give useful advice, but it becomes a tradition of men when the sermon becomes practical technique without divine authority, sin, cross, repentance, and holiness.
Scripture does not merely improve life skills; it judges, saves, trains, and forms the people of God.
Exegetical basis
2 Tim 3:16-4:2 gives the first line of judgment. The text must be read in its own context, with its grammar, authorial intent, and canonical place controlling the conclusion.
Col 1:28 adds the second witness. Together, these passages show that the church may not use experience, popularity, sentiment, or visible success to cancel what God has commanded.
What the tradition says
This tradition says, in effect, that the sermon reduced to life-coaching may be accepted as spiritually harmless because it feels practical, compassionate, relevant, safe, or successful. It asks the church to measure the matter by immediate effect rather than by divine command.
What Scripture says
Scripture says that every practice, claim, emphasis, and spiritual instinct must be tested by the Word of God. 2 Tim 3:16-4:2 is not an ornament on the page; it is part of the governing witness by which this tradition is judged.
The deeper error
The deeper error is misplaced authority. The sermon reduced to life-coaching becomes dangerous when it moves the centre from God to man, from revelation to instinct, from repentance to self-protection, or from ordered obedience to whatever seems useful in the moment.
Philosophical appraisal
At the philosophical level, this tradition assumes that reality may be organised around human comfort, visibility, feeling, control, or success. Scripture says reality is theocentric [God-centred]: all things exist from God, through God, and to God. The church is sane only when it receives reality as God defines it.
Psychological-spiritual appraisal
At the psychological-spiritual level [the inner life of will, affections, conscience, and desire], this tradition trains the soul to resist correction. It makes the conscience lighter where Scripture makes it heavier, and heavier where Scripture gives liberty.
Church consequence
The church consequence is formation by false instinct. A congregation may still use biblical language while its habits teach people to avoid the cross, evade repentance, mistrust correction, chase experience, or prefer institutional comfort over obedience.
Needed correction
Preach counsel from the text, but never reduce the pulpit to therapy, productivity, or personal development.
Summary warning
If the sermon reduced to life-coaching is allowed to stand above Scripture, it will not remain a small preference. It will become a discipling power, shaping what the church fears, loves, excuses, and calls faithful.