The word "gospel" simply means "good news." The
gospel is the news that Jesus Christ came into the world and lived the
life we should have lived but did not and died the death we should have
died but do not have to die. He did this so we may be restored in relationship
to God, to one another, to ourselves, and to our world - no matter who
we are, where we have been, what we have done, or what has been done
to us. When we rest and rely on Jesus alone for our hope, we are brought
into new relationship to God and empowered to live in that new relationship
so that we increasingly become the people we were created to be.
The great
reformer Martin Luther rightly said that, as sinners, we are prone
to pursue a relationship with God in one of two ways.
The first
is religion/performance and the second is the gospel. The two are antithetical
in every way.
Religion says that if we obey God He will love us. The gospel says that
it is because God has loved us through Jesus that we can obey.
Religion says that the world is filled with good people and bad people.
The gospel says that the world is filled with bad people who are either
repentant or unrepentant.
Religion says that you should trust in what you do as a good moral person.
The gospel says that you should trust in the perfectly sinless life of
Jesus because He alone is the only good and truly moral person who will
ever live.
The goal of religion is to get from God such things as health, wealth,
insight, power, and control. The goal of the gospel is not the gifts
God gives, but rather God as the gift given to us by grace.
Religion is about what I have to do. The gospel is about
what I get to do. Religion sees hardship in life as punishment from
God. The gospel
sees hardship in life as sanctifying affliction that reminds us of Jesus’ sufferings
and is used by God in love to make us more like Jesus. Religion is about
me. The gospel is about Jesus.
Religion leads to an uncertainty about my standing before God because
I never know if I have done enough to please God. The gospel leads to
a certainty about my standing before God because of the finished work
of Jesus on my behalf on the cross.
Religion ends in either pride (because I think I am better
than other people) or despair (because I continually fall short of
God’s commands).
The gospel ends in humble and confident joy because of the power of Jesus
at work for me, in me, through me, and sometimes in spite of me.