girl realizes the gospel is never old news while reading book

The Gospel Is Never Old News

All these headlines were breaking news at one time, but now they’re old news:

  • “Titanic Sinks Four Hours After Hitting Iceberg”
  • “ON THE MOON! And It’s ‘One Giant Leap for Mankind’”
  • “Diana Dead”

For many Christians, the gospel isn’t much different. I don’t know about you, but for most of my life, I thought of the gospel as good news for unbelievers but old news for believers. Boy, was I wrong.

News flash: The gospel isn’t mainly for your lost neighbors.

The Gospel Is Still for You, Believer

But don’t just take my word for it. In Romans 16:25, Paul writes to believers, “Now to him who is able to strengthen you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ.”

Did you catch that? It’s the gospel that strengthens us as believers. The simple, familiar story of Jesus’ death, burial, and resurrection on our behalf.

Here’s another verse, written about believers, that clues us in that the gospel isn’t mainly for our lost neighbors:

“The gospel, which has come to you, as indeed in the whole world it is bearing fruit and increasing—as it also does among you, since the day you heard it and understood the grace of God in truth” (Col. 1:5–6).

Is the gospel bearing fruit and increasing in you and me? (Hint: If we’re not regularly rehearsing gospel truths, it probably isn’t.)

I like how Tim Keller puts it: “The gospel is not just the ABCs but the A-to-Z of the Christian life.”

Remind Yourself of the Gospel

The gospel is meant to change everything about our lives. Everything. Paul understood that, which is why he reminded the Corinthians believers over and over of the gospel:

Now I would remind you, brothers, of the gospel I preached to you (1 Cor. 15:1).

We need to daily remember the gospel, too. Here’s a video I recorded several years ago that will help you do just that.

Receive the Gospel

Paul goes on, “Now I would remind you, brothers, of the gospel I preached to you, which you received.

At one point, you received the gospel by faith for the first time. You believed it. Are you continuing to? When you hear the gospel for the 3,000th time, do you sigh because you’ve heard it before? Or do you gladly receive and believe the gospel each time you hear it?

Blogger Dane Ortlund says it like this:

At the most fundamental level, I am an irreversible “believer” the rest of my life, by the grace of God. But at another level I move from believer to unbeliever (from exercising faith in Christ to forsaking faith in Christ) dozens of times, hundreds even, each day.

At the doctrinal level we look to Christ with sustained, consistent permanence. But in our everyday experience we keep faltering, keep swiveling away from Christ and looking to other saviors—even Christian saviors like Scripture memory or service in the church.

Ouch. Been there, done that. You and I need to continually believe and receive the gospel. To cherish it. Paul was convinced that nothing is more important than the gospel:

“I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received” (1 Cor. 15:3).

Dust off the Gospel Daily

If the gospel is so important, how can you grow in your understanding and appreciation of it?

  1. Realize you’re not more loved by God if you grasp all the gospel implications for everyday life. You and I are accepted by faith in Christ alone.
  2. Embrace the hard truths of God’s holiness and your sinfulness. I first learned the importance of this from The Gospel-Centered Life curriculum. As your awareness of God’s holiness and your sinfulness grows, Christ and the cross He bore will only become sweeter to you. Don’t be scared to take ownership for your sin. Christ came to die for sinners. You have a Savior, and He does not condemn you (Rom. 8:1).
  3. Repent and believe each day, all day long. Repent of forsaking Christ in favor of a works-righteousness, and believe again in Christ’s perfect righteousness applied to you. Repent and believe. Repent and believe. As my friend Kelly Needham says, “Repentance—not performance—is the work of a Christian.”
  4. Observe how the New Testament authors communicated, and imitate them. Over and over, the New Testament authors begin with a gospel declaration (who we are in Christ), followed by a gospel expectation (how we are to live in light of this). Watch for this pattern, and communicate this way with others (including your kids). When you share a gospel obligation, don’t leave out the related gospel declaration.
  5. Read gospel-centered resources. Here are a few recommendations:

The Gospel Isn’t Old News

The fact that the Titanic sunk and mankind left footprints on the moon and Princess Di died doesn’t have a whole lot to do with your everyday life, does it?

But if you’re “in Christ,” the fact that Jesus died, was buried, and rose again has everything to do with your everyday life. Everything.

Is this a newsflash for you? Have you tended to think of the gospel as good but old news or as good news for today and tomorrow and the day after?

This post has been refreshed; it originally appeared on ReviveOurHearts.com.

paulwrites.com

Paula (Hendricks) Marsteller is a compassionate, bold Christian communicator offering you gospel hope, thought-provoking questions, and practical help along the way.

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