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    Wednesday, December 23, 2009, 11:13 PM

    With some of the discussion regarding the gospel, I wanted to point out a recent post by Mark Jones titled “The Gospel and Sanctification.” Mark did his doctoral work on the Puritan Thomas Goodwin, so some of the essay references Goodwin’s work regarding the nature of the gospel. Mark concludes the post by explaining:

    All of this is to suggest that just because many in the church today have a faulty idea of “living the gospel”, we need not over-react to this principle by making the gospel to be totally outside of us.  Such an idea would have been foreign to Thomas Goodwin, and I’m sure the Apostle Paul.  Based upon the above, any charge of moralism towards those who make the gospel larger than simply justification by faith is utterly groundless.  Indeed, in my opinion, moralism is best avoided when the gospel includes the whole Christ, who is both for and in us, the hope of glory.

    Read the whole post here.

    1 Comment

      Albert
      December 24th, 2009 | 10:34 am | #1

      James, this is a timely and profitable essay. Thanks for pointing to it. I tried making similar points on other threads, but Jones gives a much more thorough explanation of what is going on in some of our discussions of the gospel.

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