Doctrine
Gospel
Study the gospel as the good news of Christ’s saving work, grace, repentance, and hope.
Browse: Gospel Foundations
The gospel is the center of the Christian faith. It is not one topic among many, but the message that makes sense of sin, grace, redemption, and life in Christ.
Scripture presents the gospel as good news, not advice. It announces what God has done through Jesus Christ to rescue sinners and reconcile them to Himself.
Quick help
Short audio and search—alongside Scripture—for this theme.
Key Scriptures
Start with these passages—each opens in the Bible reader when the reference can be anchored cleanly.
Walk this out
Truth is not only for the mind—it meets you where life is concrete and close.
- AnxietyWhen your mind won’t quiet down, Scripture speaks to the weight of worry and points you to God’s care, prayer, and peace.
- FearWhen danger feels near or the future feels unstable, Scripture names fear honestly and points the heart to God’s presence and promises.
- PeacePeace in Scripture is trust at rest: reconciliation with God, a guarded heart, and calm that does not depend on easy circumstances.
Where to read in Scripture
Primary places to start, then supporting context—each card opens the chapter (verse anchor when it helps).
Primary chapters
Supporting chapters
Related passages
Big idea
The gospel is the good news that God saves sinners through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
What Scripture shows
The gospel is news about Christ, not self-help
The gospel is news about Christ, not self-help. Scripture centers the gospel in Jesus and His saving work—His righteous life, atoning death, and victorious resurrection—not in human improvement schemes.
That distinction matters. Advice tells people to try harder; the gospel announces what God has accomplished for those who could not save themselves. The Christian life flows from that announcement, not around it.
The gospel addresses sin, judgment, mercy, and reconciliation
The gospel addresses sin, judgment, mercy, and reconciliation. It is comprehensive and serious: sin is real, judgment is just, and mercy is offered in Christ. Reconciliation is not a vague feeling but peace with God through the cross.
Because the gospel names sin honestly, it can offer comfort honestly. Forgiveness is not denial of wrong; it is the removal of guilt through Christ’s sacrifice and the gift of new life in Him.
The gospel changes life
The gospel changes life. It calls for faith and repentance—turning from sin to Christ—and it sustains ongoing trust in Him. The same grace that justifies also transforms, because the Spirit unites believers to Christ.
That means the gospel is not only the entry door; it is the daily environment of the Christian. Growth, obedience, hope, and endurance all grow from remembering what God has done and who Christ is.
Related topics
Hand-picked next steps—explore themes that often travel together in Scripture.
Guided lessons
Stay in Scripture
Read or listen whenever you want a steady place to return.

