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Living Gospel-Centered
- 01/03/11
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A short time ago a reader of this blog wrote me with rather an interesting question. Here’s what he asked: I was hoping for some guidance on something. I am looking for books about being ‘Gospel-Centered.’ I know that is a buzzword nowadays and it is really intriguing to me. I am a long-time Christian, but am new to this Gospel-Centered idea. Don’t get me wrong, I love Jesus and Scripture and the Gospel, but I’ve never really heard or really understand the Gospel-Centered.
In my church we talk a lot about living gospel-centered lives or cross-centered lives, about applying the gospel to situations in life. So let me share a bit of my experience about what this actually means. And at the end I’ll offer up some suggestions for further reading. I feel like I am far more of a student than a teacher in this area, so I will largely depend on what others have said.
I’d love to know the origins of the phrase gospel-centered. While I cannot produce any proof of where it came from, my sense is that it arises from a combination of various factors: the writings of C.J. Mahaney and Jerry Bridges along with the emphases of organizations such as CCEF and Desiring God. Somehow if you do a smash-up of those men and those organizations, I think you end up with this emphasis on gospel centrality. Maybe someone can offer a more thorough history of the phrase.
Gospel
The first thing we’ll need to do is define gospel. In our church we’ve got a handy little short-hand way of doing this, one that all the kids understand. I’m pretty sure you could go to just about any child in the church, ask “what is the gospel?” and hear this response: “Christ died for our sins and was raised.” When we talk about this during services, we accompany it with a little action. We begin with a closed fist held out in front of us and with each of the first five words we open one finger. “Christ…died…for…our…sins.” And then, with the open hand, we raise it up and say “and was raised.” And that’s the gospel. Of course the gospel can be as simple as those eight words or as complex as many volumes of theological text. But the essential gospel is right there—that Jesus Christ was put to death as an atoning sacrifice for our sins and was then raised back to life.
Gospel-Centered
Living a gospel-centered life is really simply living in such a way that this gospel is central. Thus when any kind of a situation arises we can say, “How does the gospel apply to this situation?” When I am dealing with a particular sin or temptation I can ask, “How can I apply the gospel to this sin?” When I am confused about parenting, how I am to raise my children, I can ask, “What does the gospel tell me about my task in parenting?” The primary reality of the Christian life is this one: Christ died for our sins and was raised. Thus everything else flows out of that gospel and every question is answered in reference to it.
I like how Joe Thorn phrases it: “The gospel-centered life is a life where a Christian experiences a growing personal reliance on the gospel that protects him from depending on his own religious performance and being seduced and overwhelmed by idols.”
Joe points out four fruits of a gospel-centered life:
Confidence (Heb. 3:14; 4:16)
When the gospel is central in our lives we have confidence before God - not because of our achievements, but because of Christ's atonement. We can approach God knowing that he receives us as his children. We do not allow our sins to anchor us to guilt and despair, but their very presence in our lives compels us to flee again and again to Christ for grace that restores our spirits and gives us strength.Intimacy (Heb. 7:25; 10:22; James 4:8)
When the gospel is central in our lives we have and maintain intimacy with God, not because of our religious performance, but because of Jesus' priestly ministry. We know that Jesus is our mediator with God the Father and that he has made perfect peace for us through his sacrifice allowing us to draw near to God with the eager expectation of receiving grace, not judgment.Transformation (2 Cor. 3:18; 1 Thess. 5:23; 2 Thess. 2:13)
When the gospel is central in our lives we experience spiritual transformation, not just moral improvement, and this change does not come about by our willpower, but by the power of the resurrection. Our hope for becoming what God designed and desires for us is not trying harder, but trusting more - relying on his truth and Spirit to sanctify us.Community (Heb. 3:12, 13; 10:25; 2 Tim 3:16, 17)
When the gospel is central in our lives we long for and discover unity with other believers in the local church, not because of any cultural commonality, but because of our common faith and Savior. It is within this covenant community, if the community itself is gospel-centered, that we experience the kind of fellowship that comforts the afflicted, corrects the wayward, strengthens the weak, and encourages the disheartened.
If a person or church is gospel-centered, it tells us that there are other things around which it is not centered. It is not tradition-centered (as, perhaps, fundamanetalist churches may be), it is not pragmatically-centered (as church growth churches often are), it is not culturally-centered as are so many churches today. It is the gospel that stands in the very center of the church or of the believer.
So in my experience the gospel-centered Christian is simply the Christian who is always looking to the gospel as the power for change, who is holding up the gospel as his reference point. No matter the situation, he is looking to the gospel and asking, “How does the gospel apply to this?”
Learning to be Gospel-Centered
Here are a couple of articles or conference sessions that are relevant:
- The 2009 Gospel Coalition National Conference offered a few sessions on this topic.
- Here is the gospel applied to quitting smoking
- Gospel-centered preaching
- Gospel-centered
And here are a few books:
- Living the Cross-Centered Life by C.J. Mahaney
- The Gospel for Real Life by Jerry Bridges
- Christ Formed in You by Brian Hedges
- The Gospel-Centered Family by Tim Chester

I am a follower of Jesus Christ, a husband to Aileen and a father to three young children. I worship and serve as a pastor at
Releasing on April 1, The Next
Comments (23)
Great short, concise, synopsis of Gospel Centered.
Thanks for this Tim!
~Josh
Just got Mahaney’s book for Christmas and am looking forward to reading it!
I heard Mike Bullmore address this principle at the Canadian Gospel Coalition Conference last spring, and he spent the time discussing how the gospel is at the centre, and our beliefs flow from it, which in turn influence our behaviour. It was an excellent presentation.
Love the excerpt by Joe Thorn! Thanks for the post…
Thank you so much!
I’m disturbed that the children in your church are being taught an incomplete gospel. It’s all about Jesus but absolutely nothing about God’s wrath and perfect holiness. How do we know the kids are saved if they do not understand this??
The idea of relating Christian discipleship to the gospel has transformed my understanding of Christian living.
The books by C. J. Mahaney and Jerry Bridges have been especially helpful, as well as Michael Horton’s “The Gospel-Driven Life.” Tullian Tchividjian’s “Surprised by Grace” and his forthcoming “Jesus+Nothing=Everything” also speak to the notion of gospel-centeredness.
Since the New Testament roots its imperatives in the indicative realities of the gospel, it is crucial for us to reflect on the ongoing need for the “good news.”
My own attempt to flesh out gospel-centered living can be found in the book “The Gospel is for Christians.”
Thanks, Tim, for this post. I look forward to more of your reflections and interactions on this topic.
Okay, gotta it. But… Why the Gospel in particular? Why not Jesus? Why not the Bible? Why not God’s glory? This concept is also new to me and I can’t distinguish it from old mottos like “What would Jesus do in my place?” or “The Bible is my only standard of faith and practice.” Could you elaborate it a little bit more?
@Daniel, read the recommended books first, then come back and ask if you still need clarification…
The Tim Chester book is out of stock at Amazon, so you might want to try here: http://www.thegoodbook.com/gospel-centered-family
re: comment #6, i think a conversation about God’s wrath and perfect holiness would flow fairly easily out of that definition of the Gospel.
For example, why did Jesus die for our sins?
Why did our sins need to be dealt with in this way?
@Mark, Does any of this books answer this specific question: Why NOT something else (Jesus himself, Bible, God’s glory, etc…)? Which one?
@Daniel I would say that they do. I have read C.J. Mahaney’s Living the Cross Centered Life, and at the onset he brings in 1 Corinthians 15:3-4: “[3]For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received: that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, [4]that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures,”
The key that Mahaney and others indicate is that “first importance”…that which is the most and is of primary importance, is that Christ died for our sins, etc. He didn’t say that Jesus himself was of first importance. He didn’t say that the Bible or God’s Glory was of first importance. The Gospel is.
I believe that cherishing the Bible, God’s Glory, or Jesus Himself is an outflow from the Gospel. Without the Gospel, we would not be able to treasure any of it.
Daniel, if I could offer a response to you, I would say that the Gospel encompasses all of God’s dealings with humanity, and revelation of Himself to humanity. The Gospel is the essential story of all of Scripture, that being God’s planned, finished, and promised work of redeeming us as His creatures.
So I believe that Jesus, the Bible, and God’s glory are all included in this view of the Gospel, as opposed to the way we often view the Gospel which is a short collection of “Christianity 101” summary texts.
Re: “What would Jesus do?” - this is replaced by “What has Jesus done?”, and perhaps even “What is Jesus doing?” (sure, it helps to know what Jesus might do in a given situation, but there is no good news in that because we can never completely think and act in a manner that He would; that is Law, not Gospel, because Law deals with our ethics and we have already failed that test of righteousness!). The essence of God’s redemptive work is complete in Christ’s life, death, and resurrection - and yet, His saving work continues in us as He prepares us for our glorification and ultimate fullness in Christ. The Gospel, as I have heard so many times in various places, is something that is outside of us and alien to us - freely given and fully initiated by God in love on our behalf. We do not “live the Gospel” or “be the Gospel”, to shamelessly plagiarize the faithful folks at White Horse Inn. Rather, we proclaim the Gospel.
The Bible, rather than simply a utilitarian manual of instructions, is a true and continuing story of redemption, beginning with God’s creation of us and culminating in Christ’s return, authored by God Himself. While it IS a standard of faith and practice, it is a container for His Good News for us, in as full detail as He has determined to reveal to us. In Scripture we see not just those summary Gospel verses but a much deeper significance of how we have historically failed to live up to His perfect standard, and how by His own brilliant plan He would show Himself to be both just and the justifier to all who believe. Promised in the Old Testament and fulfilled in the New Testament, we see Jesus serve as our prophet, priest, and king. We see Father, Son, and Holy Spirit all contribute in the process of our salvation - past, present, and future. When we begin to ponder these truths, my own belief is that our minds are renewed as we grasp God’s magnificence and the extent of His love for us.
Without these full theological truths as embodied in the Gospel, or rather, if we reduce the Gospel to just a few basic facts, it is difficult for me to conceive how we can ever appreciate God’s love to such a degree that it would actually change us, and it is also difficult to imagine how we would have a sound, biblically-based knowledge of the security of our salvation.
I hope that you find this helpful. I am writing off the top of my head so I apologize if I have misrepresented or omitted anything critical!
@Daniel. Many churches and individuals make the claim to be Christ-centered, but when you push them on what that means, you come to find that it is missing essential elements of the good news that Jesus announced and inaugurated through His death, resurrection, and ascension. The Gospel-Centered phenomenon of the past few years has encouraged people to clearly articulate what they actually believe about Jesus and how closely it coheres to Scripture.
Another book that has helped me a great deal is “A Gospel Primer for Christians” by Milton Vincent. He gives 30 reasons to rehearse the gospel to yourself each day (i.e. apply it to life) and then a narrative of the gospel in both prose and poetry form that sums it all up beautifully. Pertinent Scriptures are footnoted throughout.
Radical by David Platt gives a great picture of an overlooked area of the gospel-centered life.
Mike Bullmore’s message on the Functional Centrality of the Gospel is outstanding as it relates to this topic - he draws the connections between the Gospel and doctrines that are true because of the Gospel (Gospel Truths) and implications for our conduct (Gospel Conduct). Available here: http://thegospelcoalition.org/index.php?/resources/name-index/a/Mike_Bul…
Also, this article on the relationship between imperatives and indicatives is very helpful - http://theresurgence.com/2010/10/17/dont-create-a-new-law-for-yourself?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+TheResurgence+(The+Resurgence)
And also recommend listening to anything by Tim Keller.
Gospel Centered Life Conference, Horton, JD Greear, and Tchividjian, Jan. 21-23, Fort Lauderdale. http://www.crpc.org/conference/conferenceoverview
@Daniel, what Dan and A Different Dan and Adam and Rick said! :)
A good book that relates to this question is Michael Horton’s “The Gospel Driven Life”
http://www.amazon.com/Gospel-Driven-Life-Being-People-World/dp/0801013194
Thank you all for the replies and clarifications.
Daniel,
I think your question is excellent.
I agree with Dan Stanley that “cherishing God’s Glory, or Jesus Christ Himself is an outflow from the Gospel”. How else would we know that we too are chosen, and that we are no longer under the Old Covenant?
I appreciate Different Dan’s indepth commentary on the subject.
Hey everyone, I’m about to be helpful for once in this comment thread.
Tim Chester, one of the four authors Tim recommended above, wrote about gospel-centeredness in mid-December. Hope it helps, Daniel: http://timchester.wordpress.com/2010/12/13/has-a-squirrel-got-my-car-key…