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What is the message of the Gospel? Try on two of the titles from Christian bestsellers of recent years: The Purpose-Driven Life. Your Best Life Now. Especially surprising is Victoria Osteen’s Love Your Life, which immediately brings to mind John 12:25, “He who loves his life loses it, and he who hates his life in this world will keep it to life eternal.”
The message of the Gospel is being muffled in the United States. The power of the cross has been reduced to a self-esteem seminar, and the transition has been so subtle and deceptive that few professing Christians recognize the shift. Souls are at stake. And if we are truly saved, we should have a burden for the lost such that anything short of the pure, unadulterated, scandalous message of the cross of Jesus Christ should chill us to the bone.
So what’s wrong with the modern gospel (small g) message? Doesn’t it cover the bases? The ABCs of salvation: Admit you are a sinner, Believe Jesus died to save us from our sin, and Confess Jesus as Lord. But the intellectually honest Christian will notice something is wrong. After all, if salvation is simply an easy-peasy, A-B-C, pray-to-receive-Jesus rite, why did Jesus tell the rich young ruler to sell all that he had, give the money to the poor, and follow Him? Why did He warn numerous times of the cost of discipleship?
How did the Gospel of our Lord become so man-centered?
And what can we do to fix it?
“The Gospel is a scandal because it awakens man from his slumber and refuses to let him rest on such an illogical footing. It forces him to come to some conclusion – how long will you hesitate between two opinions? … The true gospel is radically exclusive. I never thought I would have to say this to a bunch of evangelicals,” says Paul Washer, director of HeartCry Missionary Society. The exclusivity of the Gospel, he says, is what makes it scandalous and subjects us to persecution.
And the seeker-sensitive movement in evangelicalism has moved in the wrong direction. If we do not proclaim the exclusivity of Christ, Washer says, “Christianity ceases to be Christianity; we cease to be Christian; Christ is denied and the world is without a Savior.”