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The Differences Between “Religion” and the Gospel

Jun 13th, 2009 by Nathan Finn Print This Post

Because of the craziness involved with the end of the spring semester followed immediately by a three-week summer class, over the past month or so I have not been as active in my blogging. I hope to start blogging in earnest against next week, when I will share my personal thoughts about the GCR Declaration and my hope that a Great Commission Resurgence will become the unifying vision for Southern Baptist churches and the numerous denominational parachurch ministries those churches support. 

For the weekend, I thought I would share some challenging thoughts from Tim Keller, via Tullian Tchividjian’s blog. The following is a comparison between “religion” (in the unbiblical sense of the term) and the gospel, drawn from Keller’s sermons at Redeemer Presbyterian Church. It would be a worthy exercise for every Southern Baptist pastor or other individual who regularly teaches Scripture to meditate on this list and then take a look in the mirror (and let it begin with me).

RELIGION: I obey-therefore I’m accepted.

THE GOSPEL: I’m accepted-therefore I obey.

RELIGION: Motivation is based on fear and insecurity.

THE GOSPEL: Motivation is based on grateful joy.

RELIGION: I obey God in order to get things from God.

THE GOSPEL: I obey God to get to God-to delight and resemble Him.

RELIGION: When circumstances in my life go wrong, I am angry at God or my self, since I believe, like Job’s friends that anyone who is good deserves a comfortable life.

THE GOSPEL: When circumstances in my life go wrong, I struggle but I know all my punishment fell on Jesus and that while he may allow this for my training, he will exercise his Fatherly love within my trial.

RELIGION: When I am criticized I am furious or devastated because it is critical that I think of myself as a ‘good person’. Threats to that self-image must be destroyed at all costs.

THE GOSPEL: When I am criticized I struggle, but it is not critical for me to think of myself as a ‘good person.’ My identity is not built on my record or my performance but on God’s love for me in Christ. I can take criticism.

RELIGION: My prayer life consists largely of petition and it only heats up when I am in a time of need. My main purpose in prayer is control of the environment.

THE GOSPEL: My prayer life consists of generous stretches of praise and adoration. My main purpose is fellowship with Him.

RELIGION: My self-view swings between two poles. If and when I am living up to my standards, I feel confident, but then I am prone to be proud and unsympathetic to failing people. If and when I am not living up to standards, I feel insecure and inadequate. I’m not confident. I feel like a failure.

THE GOSPEL: My self-view is not based on a view of my self as a moral achiever. In Christ I am “simul iustus et peccator”-simultaneously sinful and yet accepted in Christ. I am so bad he had to die for me and I am so loved he was glad to die for me. This leads me to deeper and deeper humility and confidence at the same time. Neither swaggering nor sniveling.

RELIGION: My identity and self-worth are based mainly on how hard I work. Or how moral I am, and so I must look down on those I perceive as lazy or immoral. I disdain and feel superior to ‘the other.’

THE GOSPEL: My identity and self-worth are centered on the one who died for His enemies, who was excluded from the city for me. I am saved by sheer grace. So I can’t look down on those who believe or practice something different from me. Only by grace I am what I am. I’ve no inner need to win arguments.

RELIGION: Since I look to my own pedigree or performance for my spiritual acceptability, my heart manufactures idols. It may be my talents, my moral record, my personal discipline, my social status, etc. I absolutely have to have them so they serve as my main hope, meaning, happiness, security, and significance, whatever I may say I believe about God.

THE GOSPEL: I have many good things in my life-family, work, spiritual disciplines, etc. But none of these good things are ultimate things to me. None of them are things I absolutely have to have, so there is a limit to how much anxiety, bitterness, and despondency they can inflict on me when they are threatened and lost.

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Tags: Great Commission Resurgence, Religion vs. Gospel, The Gospel, Tim Keller, Tullian Tchividjian

4 Comments »

  1. [...] v. the Gospel Posted on June 14, 2009 by bkingr helpful reminder and summary. here is some to get you started, but please do go read all of them. RELIGION: I obey-therefore [...]

    Pingback by Religion v. the Gospel « Interstitial — June 14, 2009 @ 8:23 am

  2. [...] Here is a good post to help you think through this issue in your own life. “The Gospel vs. Religion”- (via Nathan Finn) [...]

    Pingback by The Gospel and Evangelical Pietism! « Matt Capps Blog — June 14, 2009 @ 9:36 pm

  3. Excellent post and good advice.

    Comment by kamatu — June 16, 2009 @ 10:17 pm

  4. [...] Religion vs. The Gospel 2009 June 18 tags: Gospel, Religion by Matthew Svoboda I found this at Between The Times: [...]

    Pingback by Religion vs. The Gospel « Evangelical Village — June 18, 2009 @ 10:29 am

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