The “gospel” is a hot topic in evangelicalism today yet Matt Chandler
is concerned, and rightly so, that Christians are not always using the
word to mean the same thing (p. 13). Chandler wants to sharpen our
definition under the heading “The Explicit Gospel,” however he seems to
use the term in at least two ways. First, he fears that too many church
goers have assumed they understand the good news but have never been
taught explicitly what the gospel entails. They have confused the true
gospel with “Christian Moralistic Therapeutic Deism” (pp. 13, 203). Such
people need a clear, “explicit” presentation of the good news. This
leads to the second use of the “explicit” gospel, that of the “full
gospel” (p. 111) (not to be confused with the full gospel of
Pentecostalism). The full gospel has two prongs, the first of which the
author calls “the gospel on the ground” and the second he terms “the
gospel in the air.” The book is then divided into three parts, the first
devoted to the gospel on the ground, the second to the gospel in the
air and the third to implications and applications.
In the first section, the “gospel on the ground” is described as what
evangelicals traditionally have understood the gospel to mean – the
gospel of redemption involving God, man (sin), Christ and response.
Chandler’s understanding of this prong of the gospel is solid and
helpful. Despite a couple of crude remarks (pp. 28, 41) he richly points
the reader to a God-centered approach to the Lord, the Bible and a
godly life instead of a man-centered one (pp. 32-35). We must be careful
to not worship God’s good gifts but the Giver Himself (p. 36). Chandler
emphasizes the horribleness of sin, man’s depravity and God’s wrath
(pp. 40-51), and demonstrates that the law can diagnose our sin problem
but not cure it; only the substitutionary sacrifice of Christ can
appease God’s wrath, atone for our sins and make us right before a Holy
God. But this good news demands the response of faith (pp. 84-85).
Chandler makes clear that the preaching of the gospel on the ground will
not always awaken hearts – more often it hardens hearts (pp. 63-82) and
thus our ministries will be judged by God on our faithfulness, not on
numbers (pp. 72-77). Chandler exposes the modern mistake of some who
avoid presenting the explicit gospel, choosing rather to just “hang out”
and live incarnationally. He states, “We are never, ever, ever going to
make Christianity so cool that everybody wants it. That is a fool’s
errand” (p. 80). Amen! The gospel must be verbally presented or people
will never understand the message (pp. 80-82). Continue at Gary Gilley
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