Theology

What is the Gospel? The Good News of Jesus Christ Explained | Bible Companion

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Bible Companion Editorial Team

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The word gospel' means good news. But good news against what backdrop? Understanding the gospel requires understanding the problem it solves -- and the magnitude of what God has done in Jesus Christ. This article traces the gospel from its Old Testament foundations through the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus, examining what Paul calls 'of first importance' (1 Corinthians 15:3) and why it changes everything.

What is the Gospel? The Good News of Jesus Christ Explained

The word gospel' means good news. But good news against what backdrop? Understanding the gospel requires understanding the problem it solves -- and the magnitude of what God has done in Jesus Christ. This article traces the gospel from its Old Testament foundations through the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus, examining what Paul calls 'of first importance' (1 Corinthians 15:3) and why it changes everything.

The Problem the Gospel Solves

The gospel is only good news if we understand the bad news first. Genesis 3 records the catastrophic rupture between humanity and God -- what theologians call the Fall. Adam and Eve chose autonomy over trust, and the consequences cascaded through all creation: alienation from God, from each other, and from the created world. Paul summarizes the universal human condition in Romans 3:23: all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God The wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23) -- not merely biological death, but spiritual separation from the source of all life, all meaning, and all love. The gospel does not begin with Jesus; it begins with this diagnosis, without which the cure makes no sense.

The Gospel Promised: Old Testament Foundations

The New Testament gospel did not appear without preparation. Immediately after the Fall, God promised a coming one who would crush the serpent's head (Genesis 3:15) -- the first glimmer of the gospel in Scripture. Abraham was told that in his offspring all nations would be blessed (Genesis 12:3; 22:18). Isaiah 53, written around 700 BC, describes a suffering servant who would be wounded for our transgressions, crushed for our iniquities, with the chastisement that brought peace upon him and by whose stripes we are healed (53:5). Paul declares that this gospel was announced beforehand to Abraham (Galatians 3:8) -- the gospel has deep Old Testament roots and represents the fulfillment of centuries of divine promise.

The Gospel Accomplished: Death, Burial, and Resurrection

Paul provides the most compact definition of the gospel in 1 Corinthians 15:3-4: Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures Each element is load-bearing. Christ died: he eternal Son of God entered into human death, experiencing the full weight of divine judgment against sin as our substitute. He was buried: his is not metaphor -- the death was real, witnessed, and certified. He was raised: he bodily resurrection is the vindication of Jesus identity, the defeat of death, and the firstfruits of the new creation (1 Corinthians 15:20). The cross without the resurrection is tragedy; the resurrection without the cross solves nothing. Both are essential.

What the Gospel Demands and What It Gives

Mark 1:15 records Jesus first public proclamation: The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel". The gospel calls for two responses: epentance (turning from sin, self-rule, and the idols we trust) and faith (entrusting ourselves to Jesus as Lord and Savior). What does faith in the gospel receive? Romans 5:1 -- justification: being declared righteous before God not on the basis of our performance but on the basis of Christ's. Romans 8:1 -- no condemnation. Romans 8:15 -- adoption into God's family. Ephesians 1:13 -- sealing by the Holy Spirit. 2 Corinthians 5:17 -- new creation. The gospel is not merely a transaction that secures our afterlife; it is a transfer of kingdoms and an entirely new identity.

Why the Gospel Is Still Good News Today

The gospel addresses the deepest human longings: the need to be truly known and fully accepted, the guilt that no achievement can silence, the fear of death, the hunger for meaning and belonging. Every human culture has developed religious systems of earning divine favor through performance. The gospel announces the opposite: it is finished (John 19:30). God's solution to the human problem is not a program to follow but a Person to trust. Theologian J.I. Packer wrote that the gospel is not good advice -- it is good news. Advice says: here is what you must do. News says: here is what has been done for you. The difference is everything. In a world of exhausting self-improvement projects, the gospel announces rest: come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest (Matthew 11:28).

Key Verses

  • 2 Corinthians 5:21" — For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.

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