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Vol. 2,
No. 1
January -
March 2010
"The Content of the
Gospel of Salvation"
Dr. Charlie Bing
GraceLife Ministries
When sharing the gospel
clearly we should have two
great concerns. First, we
should be absolutely clear
about the condition of
salvation—believe. That
belief must be free from any
works, commitment, or idea
of merit on our part so that
grace remains grace.
The second concern is that
we should be clear about the
content of the gospel, or
what has to be believed. The
content of the gospel is the
person and work of Jesus
Christ, which are
inseparable as the object of
saving faith.
The Person of Jesus
Christ
We are saved by Someone, the
Lord Jesus Christ. Not just
any Jesus, but the One sent
from God who is the Son of
God. There are many things
implied by the designation
Lord Jesus Christ such as
deity, humanity, and
messianic mission. While
someone may not comprehend a
full-blown Christology,
there must be some
understanding of Jesus’
uniqueness and divine
authority. The Gospel of
John, recognized for its
evangelistic intent (John
20:30-31), emphasizes the
deity of Jesus more than any
other Bible book (e.g.,
1:1-3, 14, 18; 5:17-21;
6:69; 7:38; 8:19, 58; 10:30;
20:28). In John the person
of Jesus Christ is the
object of faith in many
evangelistic contexts (e.g.,
John 1:12; 3:16; 5:24; 6:29,
47; 9:35-37; 11:25-26).
The Provision of
Jesus Christ
As the Son of God, Jesus
saves us by what He did for
us; He provided for our
greatest need. We are after
all, saved from something
and to something. As sinners
separated from God, we
needed someone to pay the
penalty that we could not
pay. Jesus paid that price
by dying on the cross. Of
course, a dead savior could
save no one, so Jesus rose
from the dead. His
resurrection shows that the
price has been paid, that
God accepted the payment,
and that He lives to give us
eternal life. Jesus made it
possible for us to pass from
death into life if we accept
His provision (John 5:24).
The person of Jesus can not
be separated from His work.
Jesus is the "Lamb of God"
who takes away the sin of
the world (John 1:29). He
gave His life for us (e.g.,
John 6:51; 10:11-18) as the
supreme sacrifice for our
sins (Heb. 10:5-10). Isaiah
53 speaks prophetically of
Jesus’ substitutionary death
(Isa. 53:3-12) and His
resurrection (Isa.
53:10-12).
Again, there are many deep
and profound intricacies
surrounding Jesus’ death and
resurrection which an
unsaved person may not grasp
immediately. Yet it seems
there must be at least the
simplest understanding that
we are sinners separated
from God, that Jesus removed
the barrier caused by that
sin through His death and
resurrection, and that He
now lives to give us His
life. That is why we see the
preaching of the cross and
the resurrection in the
early church (e.g., Acts
2:23-24, 36; 3:18-20; 4:2,
10; 5:29-31; 10:39-40;
13:29-30; 17:3; 26:22-23)
and why those great facts
were reiterated in the
epistles (e.g., Romans 3—8,
1 Cor. 1:18-24; 2:1-2;
15:1-4; Gal. 3:1; Eph. 1:20;
Phil. 2:8-9; Col. 2:12- 14;
Hebrews; 1 Pet. 1:3, 18-21;
3:18).
The Promise of Jesus
Christ
It is certainly conceivable
that a person can understand
the facts about the person
and work of Christ and yet
not be saved because he does
not apply them to his own
spiritual condition. We
believe Christ for
something, and that is
eternal life. God has
promised us that whoever
believes in Jesus Christ as
the One who died and rose
again will have eternal life
(e.g., John 1:12; 3:16;
5:24; 6:40, 47; 7:38;
10:26-29; 11:25-26;
12:44-50; 20:31). A person
must believe, or be
persuaded, that the promise
is true and true for
himself.
Eternal life has many
implications that a person
may not fully comprehend. It
encompasses eternal
security, forgiveness of
sin, justification, new
birth, glorification, and
other wonderful truths that
will become clearer with
instruction in God’s Word.
Eternal life is also defined
as knowing God through
Christ (John 17:3). A person
must believe God’s promise
for some salvific aspect of
this eternal life.
Some Unknowns
While the gospel’s content
is essentially simple and we
can share it clearly,
questions may remain about
certain situations: How does
a very young child
understand the gospel’s
content? How can a mentally
impaired person be saved?
What happens to babies who
die without any knowledge of
the gospel? How does a Hindu
understand the concepts of
God, sin, Son of God,
resurrection, eternal life?
When we share the gospel, we
must realize that the
communication process has
two components, the
communicator and the one who
receives it. Not always does
the listener process the
information exactly as the
communicator means it. In
other words, there are
barriers in communicating
the gospel such as language,
cultural interpretation,
attentiveness, clarity,
processing,
pre-understanding, and
religious preconceptions.
In light of these unknowns,
we must humbly acknowledge
that a person’s
understanding may not always
be what we think it is.
Thankfully, the Holy Spirit
knows what we do not. While
it is our responsibility to
share the gospel as clearly
as possible, it is His work
to convince (convict; John
16:8) the hearer of its
truthfulness. As we share
the gospel, we must depend
on the Holy Spirit to work
in the hearer to give enough
understanding to bring about
faith (Rom. 10:14-17).
Exactly how the Spirit works
in a person’s understanding
will always remain somewhat
a mystery (John 3:8;
6:44-45, 65). None of this,
however, takes away from the
fact that if we are wrong in
our message, the listener
will be wrong in his faith.
Conclusion
We are called to share the
gospel of salvation which
means that we share the
person, provision, and
promise of Jesus Christ. Why
would we share anything
less? Whether we explain it
in the most basic terms or
in great depth, it is always
the Holy Spirit who brings
the understanding which
prompts faith. We preach the
gospel of grace through
faith alone in Christ alone
and allow God to do the
rest. Certainly that
requires us to communicate
it clearly, but also to pray
fervently.
Used by permission.
"The Content of
the Gospel of
Salvation"
originally appeared
in the Grace Notes
(GraceLife), the
publication ministry
of Charlie Bing. |