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The Gospel is Bigger Than You Think

Why a Comprehensive Gospel Creates Lasting Kingdom Impact

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The Gospel is Bigger Than You Think

By: Anthony Delgado
Narrated by: Jason E Young
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About this listen

Baptisms are down, church doors are closing, and once-faithful Christians are leaving their faith. This issue has puzzled many for years. Some suggest focusing on discipleship and Christian education, while others create programs to help the Gospel “stick.” However, the problem lies in the Gospel proclamation itself. The solution isn’t a new Gospel but a bigger, historical, and more comprehensive one. The Gospel is Bigger than You Think offers a thorough approach to the biblical Gospel, broadening the listener's perspective and creating lasting Kingdom impact.

Part I: The Gospel Proper

This part clarifies the biblical meaning of the Gospel and presents the Kingdom Gospel as the core narrative. Jesus' message was that the Kingdom of God is at hand, from which all of Christ’s works flow, culminating in the eternal Kingdom of God.

Part II: The Gospel’s Effects

Five Gospel spokes extend from the Kingdom Gospel image. Gospel Victory illustrates Christ’s triumph over sin, death, and rebellious beings, culminating in His cosmic reign. Gospel Family examines adoption and estrangement from Adam’s fall, showing how followers are adopted as sons of God and regenerated by the Holy Spirit. Gospel Restitution analyzes the first goat of the Day of Atonement, emphasizing the need for a perfect blood sacrifice, paralleling the Lord’s Supper. Gospel Repentance focuses on the second goat, symbolizing repentance by sending sin to its source. Gospel Transformation considers the image of God given to Adam and Eve and its relation to being conformed to Christ’s image, encompassing themes of glorification and deification.

Part III: Conclusion

Gospel Simplicity addresses childlike faith. While a child may not grasp the Gospel’s depth, faith can be received in a childlike manner. This book offers a comprehensive view of the Gospel and a framework for fruitful conversations.

©2024 Anthony Delgado (P)2024 Anthony Delgado
Evangelism Salvation Theory Spiritual Growth
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bigreader

Easy read, a thorough look at the Gospel. Written at the popular level, but great for all audiences.

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This is the bomb - so lit

I loved everything about this book! It’s accessibility and its content - the last chapter of being like a child is gold! Listen to this book - it will change your life and view of the Kingdom!!

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Kingdom Gospel for the win

In this book, Delgado examines what he calls “the gospel of Middle America.” This is a kind of “cultural folk religion” that is focused on individualism and individual salvation. Within this presentation of the gospel, there is a higher value placed on conversion than on transformation. This gospel presentation relies heavily on short, pithy “evangelistic tools”, such as the Four Spiritual Laws or the Romans Road. However, according to Delgado it suffers from several deep flaws. For one, it glosses over at best and perhaps erodes at worst much of the communal and collectivist culture in which the Bible was formed. As he rightly notes, “there is no gospel without the Bible and no Bible without the Church.” Often, a focus on an individualistic interpretation of the biblical text creates an environment where the historical traditions and confessions of generations past are seen with either apathy or perhaps even skepticism. This skeptical eye extends all the way back into the foundational Scriptures of the apostles: the Hebrew Bible itself, what Christians call the Old Testament. This can cause what Delgado calls “functional Marcionism” – a subtle and unacknowledged yet very active resistance to the ancient near east and Jewish context of the Scriptures. Much of Delgado’s book is an extended project to recover that ancient worldview: to envision what he calls a “bigger” gospel, one that is more than “Jesus only, New Testament only.”


But the expansiveness of this view of the gospel is not limited to just ancient text in ancient context. It is also highly relevant to the Christian culture of today. In highlighting the focus on conversion over transformation, Delgado notes that it is no accident the modern American church has encountered numerous scandals of moral and spiritual failure. While he does not cite names, I would extend his supposition to such figures as Ted Haggard, Bill Hybels, Mark Driscoll, Ravi Zacharias, and sadly far too many others to comprehensively name – in addition to institutional organizations such as Calvary Chapel, Covenant Life Church, Hillsong, and Word of Faith. All of these share a common theological and cultural DNA: the gospel of Middle America, with all its Protestant evangelical trappings. By focusing on “number of souls won” and not “number of souls transformed”, I would personally claim that this quasi-gospel message has done incalculable harm to the real depth and breadth and beauty – as well as the actual truth – of the true Gospel we find in the pages of Scripture. But as always on this podcast, my goal is not to bash and tear down, but to lament, repent, and reconstruct. And in this regard, Delgado’s book is incredibly valuable in many respects: both by naming the virus, describing its symptoms, and by offering a healing balm that will be much more likely to actually transform its hearers. As he puts it: a gospel that is “bigger than you think.”

Overall, would I recommend this book? Without a doubt, my answer is “yes”. I found it to be a necessary and invaluable retrieval of the ancient worldview and contextual understanding of the Scriptural story, and as someone whose work revolves around the harm done by the institutional Church and church people, I resonated thoroughly with his assessment of the problem and the solution to the dilemma facing the people of God. We in the evangelical Protestant world, without a doubt need to do better at transforming our lives to the Kingdom Gospel. A large portion of the blame for this lies in church structures and institutions that emphasize the single commitment or “moment of decision” as a marker of spiritual health and blessing. St James and the prophet Micah, however, tell a different story: the religion that God accepts as pure and faultless is to visit the vulnerable in their time of need, to aid the weak in their distress, to make justice and righteousness roll down like a rushing waterfall. We have been so concerned with what we consider to be correct theology, and pointing out the sins of the world, that we have neglected to be transformed by that Gospel and be a light to that world. I do have some significant reservations about his chapter on Gospel Restitution which I will address in a separate format and place. But I don’t want that to detract from what is overall a highly relevant, well-written, and desperately needed breath of fresh air in the arena of practical theology. If you are considering buying a book for yourself or your loved one this holiday season, or just to fill out your bookshelf, you will not go wrong with The Gospel is Bigger Than You Think.

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