Articles

Articles

Moralizing Over the Gospel? / As An Anchor for the Soul

Moralizing over the Gospel?

(by Doy Moyer)

If not careful, one can easily conflate the gospel with mere moralizing, perhaps thinking that preaching the gospel is equivalent to pushing moral and political issues. This is a problem on at least two counts: First, this approach doesn’t save souls. Second, just getting people to change moral views is not the essence of the gospel. 

While Christians understand that immorality without repentance will condemn (Gal. 5:19-21; 1 Cor. 6:9-10), and that God does call us to holiness (1 Pet. 1:13-16), we also need to understand that the need for the gospel is due to the fact that we are all moral failures. All of us are guilty of sin (Rom. 3:23). We all stand condemned and in need of salvation, and just changing our moral views or becoming “better” people is not what fills that need. Further, never do we reach a point where we no longer need the gospel message, for none today can claim perfection. We can only claim forgiveness. While grace does not excuse sin (Rom. 6:1-2), the need for grace will never go away (1 John 2:1-2). We will never be able to rely on ourselves, as that will surely lead to further failure. We’ve all tried it and failed miserably. 

One reason that moralizing doesn’t work is that it gets the cart before the horse and focuses the attention upon imperfect Christians rather than God. Of course we should stand for moral values, but even if we get people to change their moral views, and if we get more moral laws on the books, these actions haven’t saved a single soul. Moralizing alone will only condemn because it shows a violated standard without a remedy for redemption. 

This also leads people to think that a moral failure (sin) for a Christian necessarily means that the Christian is a hypocrite. Why? Because the message doesn’t stress grace and forgiveness. It just stresses the importance of moral action. When morality is the main issue, and one fails, then the whole system is seen as a failure and the world is quick to point that out. A Christian certainly can be hypocritical, but confession, repentance, and seeking forgiveness are not acts of hypocrisy. Christians who do this are doing exactly what Scripture tells them to do (1 John 1:7-10).

The gospel is needed precisely because we are failures. Since “gospel” is good news, there are two vital components to the gospel that need to be understood and proclaimed: 

1. All of us are guilty of sin (Rom. 3:23), and we cannot save ourselves just by changing moral habits. For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not as a result of works, so that no one may boast (Eph. 2:8-9). To moralize the gospel is to turn it into a works-based system, and this is not the gospel. 

2. Christ, by His grace, died to offer forgiveness, and any message that doesn’t include this is not the gospel. In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of His grace which He lavished on us (Eph. 1:7-8a). 

Only when we seek and teach God’s grace and forgiveness through the cross of Christ will we then be spreading the gospel. Once people accept what Christ has done for them, morals begin to change. People will repent, not because morals are forced on them politically, but because they will desire the grace and forgiveness only God can provide, and repentance is the only viable response (Acts 2:38; 3:19; cf. Titus 2:11-14).

If our message to the world is filled with the hope of forgiveness, the riches of God’s grace and mercy, and how repentance fits into this, then we will not be presenting an “us vs. them” political type of message; rather, we will present an “all of us are in the same boat and need saving” type of message. What distinguishes the Christian from the world at the most basic level is that the Christian has come to God for that forgiveness. Yes, there are greater implications for how Christians should be living (e.g., not conformed to this world, Rom. 12:1-2), but the focal point of the gospel message must always be this: 

For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received, that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, and that He appeared… (1 Cor. 15:3ff). 

If this real gospel is not accepted, then no amount of moralizing will save souls. The failure of “moralizing over the gospel” is that the message is not the gospel at all. It’s a cheap substitute based on a misunderstanding that we can fix our own problems. Let’s make sure our message properly reflects what God came to do in Christ.

 

As An Anchor for The Soul

(Selected)

The story is told of a young naval officer that was tested by the old sea captain. “What would you do if suddenly a storm sprang up on the starboard?” he asked the young man. “I’d throw out an anchor, sir.”

“What would you do if another storm sprang up aft?”  “Throw out another anchor, sir.” “And what if another terrific storm sprang up forward, what would you do?” “Throw out another anchor, sir.”

“Hold on,” said the old captain. “Where are you getting all those anchors?” “From the same place you’re getting all your storms, sir.”

          We face many terrible storms in life. What a great thing it is to have an anchor of the soul – our hope in Jesus Christ!  THE HOPE SET BEFORE US: WHICH WE HAVE AS AN ANCHOR OF THE SOUL, A HOPE BOTH SURE AND STEADFAST (Hebrews 6:18-19).