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Gospel

Recently, I watched one of the many “talking heads” online discussing the notion of the Gospel and the idea that many Christians have varying understandings of what the Gospel really is. Indeed, there are many theories of the atonement, and while important, that isn’t our purpose here (I am in the process of writing a short book on the topic, so stay tuned!). Our purpose here is to ask, what is the Gospel in a broad sense and how is it presented in the Scriptures?

In the broadest sense, the term we translate as “gospel” comes from the Greek word, εὐαγγέλιον (euangelion — from which we get the word “evangel”). Literally, the term means: “good news.” The term shows up 89 times in the New Testament and once in the Greek Translation of the Old Testament. Commonly, the term is also found with qualifiers. For instance, it is referred to as “the Gospel of the Kingdom” three times in Matthew (Matthew 4:23; 9:35; 24:14) and similarly, in Mark 1:15, we are to “repent and believe in the Gospel” for the “Kingdom of God is at hand.” It is also referred to as “the Gospel of God’s Grace” (Acts 20:24), the “Gospel of the Son” (Romans 1:9), the “Gospel of Christ” (Romans 15:19; 1 Corinthians 9:12; 2 Corinthians 9:13; 10:14; Galatians 1:7; Philippians 1:27; 1 Thessalonians 3:2; 2 Thessalonians 1:8), the “Gospel of the Glory of Christ” (2 Corinthians 4:4); “God’s Gospel” (2 Corinthians 11:7; 1 Thessalonians 2:2,8,9; 1 Peter 4:7); the “Gospel of your salvation” (Ephesians 1:13); the “Gospel of Peace” (Ephesians 6:15), the “Gospel of the Glory of the Blessed Lord” (1 Timothy 1:11), and an “Eternal Gospel” (Revelation 14:7). In addition, the scriptures make it abundantly clear that this Gospel is something to be preached or proclaimed (Luke 9:6; 20:1; Acts 8:25,40; 14:7,21; 16:10; Romans 1:15; 15:20; 16:25; 1 Corinthians 1:17; 9:16,18; 15:1; 2 Corinthians 2:12; 8:18; 10:16; 11:7; Galatians 1:8,9,11; 3:8; 4:13; 2 Timothy 2:8; 1 Peter 4:6). Curiously, the one reference found in the Greek translation of the Old Testament comes from 2 Samuel 4:10, where we find David slaying a man seeking to profit from killing Saul’s son and seeking to relay his deed as “good news” — a false gospel indeed.

If we are to draw some conclusions from these Scripture references, they should circle around two ideas: the Gospel is Christ’s and the Gospel ushers in the Kingdom of God. In other words, there is nothing about the Gospel that is our doing — it is God’s doing and God’s alone. And though we benefit from it, it revolves around Christ and His doing. Further, the point of the Gospel does not revolve around us gaining happiness either in life or death, it involves Christ making us a part of His Kingdom and, since it is Christ’s Kingdom, He is King and as part of that Kingdom, we must abide by His Law. Hence, in what we know as “The Great Commission” the emphasis is placed on teaching people to be disciples who obey all that Jesus taught. 

So, yes, the Gospel is about atonement, but atonement is just the beginning of the Gospel. It is about remaking the world into a new creation where there will no longer be sin or death. That means that the conclusion of the Gospel is found in the remaking of the heavens and the earth that will come with our Lord’s return, but it also means that the Gospel begins with the very first words of Genesis and the whole history of mankind, as recorded in the Bible, is part of the Gospel. Frankly, the Gospel begins even before God made the heavens and the earth, for this was His eternal plan. And so, to put it simply, the Gospel is not so much about who is saved, but it is about who reigns in His eternal kingdom and how He preserves a people for Himself to be part of that kingdom. Indeed, in that time, every knee will bend and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.

My Land or God’s Land?

“And Jephthah sent messengers to the king of the Sons of Ammon, saying, ‘What do you have against me? For you are coming to me and fighting in my land.”

(Judges 11:12)

You will notice how relationships have now changed in the eyes of Jephthah. Before he was an alien toward the land of Gilead — unwelcome and without a stake in the land. Now he speaks of the land as his and tells the Ammonites that an attack on the land is an attack on him personally. How quickly one’s attitudes can change.

Yet, the character and upbringing of Jephthah begins to demonstrate itself even here. For, though he is now the leader of Gilead and will function as the delivering Judge over the people, the land does not belong to the king. It belongs to God and to God alone. Were he to have spoken rightly, he ought to have said something like, “Why are you fighting against the people of God and fighting on the land that God has set apart for them?” But no, Jephthah, like the pagans in the nations around him, treats the land (and people of the land) as his own.

Now, as we look at the church today, I find it interesting how many people make the same mistake, though with far fewer excuses than has Jephthah. Jephthah didn’t know any better from his pagan culture. People who are part of churches ought to know better. People who have grown up in churches across generations definitely ought to know better and sometimes they are the worst offenders. Jesus is King over the church and that means the church is not “my” church, nor does it belong to any one family or community of people. The church belongs to Jesus. He will defend her, which is something that a king does and he will govern over her which is the other thing that a king does. He will also issue decrees that all those within the church must obey unless they are to find themselves under judgment. The same follows with the church.

We ought not be surprised when confessing Christians have problems understanding that Christ is king over his church because confessing Christians also struggle with the notion that Christ is to be king over their lives. We want things our way. But our way is not an option. Christ’s way is the right option…it is the only option. Jephthah’s worldview is a mess because he has grown up in a pagan society, but recognize the damage that the pagan culture does to our worldview even today.