It’s not uncommon for Christians to think they can move past the gospel after initially accepting it. “You
come to Jesus by faith”, they argue, “and then you need to white-knuckle it and work hard at
living the rest of the Christian life on your own”. These Christians mistakenly say that the
gospel is the “ABCs” of the Christian life. The Bible, on the other hand argues that the Gospel
is the “A to Z of the Christian life.” The gospel means “good news.” Why would you ever want
to move past good news? Paul asked that very question to the Galatians: “Are you so
foolish? Having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh? ...Does he who
supplies the Spirit to you and work miracles among you do so by works of the law or by hearing
with faith?” (Gal. 3:3, 5).
If the gospel is “good news,” then there must be bad news, right? The bad news is that we cannot have a right relationship with God because we are rotten from the inside out. Even our best deeds are utterly disgusting to God (Isa. 64:6; Phil. 3:8). It’s not just an external problem; we do not just do bad things, we are bad (Rom. 3:10-18). Because of this, the gospel is rooted in God’s self-substitution for sinners. Because we cannot obtain righteousness before God, he must stand in our place as our perfect substitute and obtain an alien righteousness or righteousness not our own for us. God did this through Jesus Christ.
At the center of this self-substitution is the cross. Because our sin is against an infinitely holy God, we deserve infinite, unimaginable condemnation and wrath. Thankfully, Jesus lived the life we should have lived and he died the death we deserve to die. He absorbed the wrath of God for us, and became a curse for us (Gal. 3:13). It is on the cross that Jesus exchanged our sin for his righteousness in order that we might be justified (i.e. declared righteous) before God (2 Cor. 5:21). Those who receive this by faith–not works–are justified (Rom. 3:24-25; see Eph. 2:8-9; Titus 3:5). Therefore, Jesus is our complete substitute Savior. This is good news.
But, this good news is meant for more than to merely save us—it is also the good news we need to live as saved people who are actively fighting their sin and sometimes not fighting it so well. Jesus is still our substitute. He will never stop being our substitute and we must never forget it because it is what keeps us saved. Our acceptance and acceptability with God is never based upon our performance or holiness. It is always based upon Christ’s who was at the cross and is forever in Heaven our substitute.
So, far more than being the ABC’s of the Christian life, the Gospel really is the A to Z of the Christian life.
If the gospel is “good news,” then there must be bad news, right? The bad news is that we cannot have a right relationship with God because we are rotten from the inside out. Even our best deeds are utterly disgusting to God (Isa. 64:6; Phil. 3:8). It’s not just an external problem; we do not just do bad things, we are bad (Rom. 3:10-18). Because of this, the gospel is rooted in God’s self-substitution for sinners. Because we cannot obtain righteousness before God, he must stand in our place as our perfect substitute and obtain an alien righteousness or righteousness not our own for us. God did this through Jesus Christ.
At the center of this self-substitution is the cross. Because our sin is against an infinitely holy God, we deserve infinite, unimaginable condemnation and wrath. Thankfully, Jesus lived the life we should have lived and he died the death we deserve to die. He absorbed the wrath of God for us, and became a curse for us (Gal. 3:13). It is on the cross that Jesus exchanged our sin for his righteousness in order that we might be justified (i.e. declared righteous) before God (2 Cor. 5:21). Those who receive this by faith–not works–are justified (Rom. 3:24-25; see Eph. 2:8-9; Titus 3:5). Therefore, Jesus is our complete substitute Savior. This is good news.
But, this good news is meant for more than to merely save us—it is also the good news we need to live as saved people who are actively fighting their sin and sometimes not fighting it so well. Jesus is still our substitute. He will never stop being our substitute and we must never forget it because it is what keeps us saved. Our acceptance and acceptability with God is never based upon our performance or holiness. It is always based upon Christ’s who was at the cross and is forever in Heaven our substitute.
So, far more than being the ABC’s of the Christian life, the Gospel really is the A to Z of the Christian life.
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