The Gospel and Jesus Christ
Study the gospel as the good news centered in the person and work of Jesus Christ.
Key Scripture
- 1 Corinthians 15:1–4
- 2 Corinthians 5:21
- Colossians 1:13–14
The gospel is about Christ
Paul delivers as of first importance what he received: Christ died for sins, was buried, was raised. The gospel is not a general idea about kindness or spirituality; it is news about a Person and His saving acts in history.
That center protects the church from drifting into moralism or vague theism. Whatever else is taught must serve this announcement—Jesus Christ, crucified and risen, Savior and Lord.
Christ’s death and resurrection stand at the center
The cross is not an unfortunate episode; it is the atonement—sin judged, wrath absorbed, reconciliation purchased. The resurrection is not optional epilogue; it is vindication—Christ victorious over death, firstfruits of the new creation.
To shrink either is to shrink the gospel. A Christ without the cross leaves sin unaddressed; a cross without the resurrection leaves hope incomplete.
The gospel answers the problem of sin
Paul speaks of becoming the righteousness of God in Christ—sinners credited with Christ’s righteousness through union with Him. Colossians describes rescue from darkness and forgiveness—sin’s guilt and power addressed, not ignored.
The gospel is honest about sin’s seriousness—so honest that only God’s action can save. It offers no self-salvation, only Christ.
The gospel must be understood personally, not only intellectually
One can know facts about the gospel and still not rest in Christ. Personal reception means trusting Him—renouncing self-reliance, turning from sin, and receiving His righteousness as one’s only hope.
Intellectual clarity matters; so does the cry of faith. The gospel is to be believed with the whole person—mind, heart, and will united in dependence on Jesus.
Reflect and respond
- How central is Christ in my understanding of the gospel?
- Do I treat the gospel as truth to admire or truth to trust?
- What part of Christ’s work needs deeper attention in me?

