TADB 146: Gospel Drift

The gospel isn’t just forgiveness from sin—it’s life under a risen King.

Maritime travel during the age of exploration was full of uncertainty. Inaccurate maps, superstition, and primitive technology made the seas perilous. However, one constant guided sailors: the North Star—Polaris. Fixed in the night sky, it helped navigators reorient and stay on course.

The gospel works in a similar way. Jesus and His Kingdom are meant to be the steady point that guides our faith. However, throughout history, cultural trends and theological shifts have pulled the church off course. What started as a gospel centered on Christ and His Kingdom has often shifted into something narrower, man-centered, and focused on sin.

Gospel Lenses: Our Lens Shapes What We Believe

Everyone views life—and Scripture—through lenses. Just as a telescope or microscope highlights some details while filtering others, our spiritual lenses are shaped by background, temperament, culture, and tradition. They influence what we notice and what we overlook.

Like eyewitnesses describing the same event but recalling different details, Christians can interpret the same Scriptures differently because of their perspectives. If we are unaware of these filters, we risk confusing our partial view with the full truth. And when our gospel view is shaped more by tradition than by the story of Christ, distortion creeps in.

The Resurrection Lens of the Early Church

For the earliest believers, the resurrection was the key to understanding Jesus’ life, death, and identity. It represented victory, exaltation, and the coming of God’s Kingdom.

Peter emphasized this focus when choosing Judas’ replacement: someone who had been with them “from the baptism of John to the day he was taken up,” to become “a witness with us to his resurrection” (Acts 1:22). Luke summarized the apostles’ ministry in the same way: “With great power the apostles continued to testify to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus” (Acts 4:33).

The resurrection summarized Christ’s entire story—His shame and glory. Early Christian symbols emphasized this focus. Instead of crucifixion images, believers used the ichthys (fish), Chi-Rho monogram, the Good Shepherd, the dove, or the anchor. These symbols pointed not to defeat but to life, hope, and kingship.

Paul shared this same North Star. Luke concludes Acts by describing Paul’s final years.

“He welcomed all who came to him, proclaiming the kingdom of God and teaching about the Lord Jesus Christ with all boldness and without hindrance” (Acts 28:30-31).

The earliest gospel lens was cleard: Christ at the center, the Kingdom in focus, and the resurrection as the guiding lens.

The Gospel to the Nations

From Pentecost onward, the gospel spread rapidly across three continents. But growth brought theological challenges. The first three centuries were marked by debates over Christ’s identity—fighting errors like Docetism (denying His humanity), Arianism (denying His divinity), and Modalism (denying the Trinity).

In response, church leaders crafted creeds like the Nicene Creed (325 AD) to maintain focus on the incarnation and lordship of Christ. These efforts kept the gospel anchored in the risen King, even during cultural storms.

The Post-Constantinian Shift

Everything changed with Constantine’s conversion and the Edict of Milan (313 AD). Christianity transitioned from being a persecuted minority to holding political power. With many new converts, the church focused more on structure than the message. The emphasis on the resurrection waned, replaced by efforts to preserve the institution.

Art mirrored this change. Early crosses showed Christ as reigning; by the 12th century, crucifixes depicted Him suffering. The focus of the gospel shifted from His resurrection victory to His crucifixion sorrow. Jesus as King—too intimidating for secular and church authorities—became less prominent than Jesus as the humbled sufferer.

The Reformation and the Narrowed Gospel

The Protestant Reformation correctly reaffirmed the truth of salvation by grace through faith. However, in emphasizing justification, it often shifted the focus of the gospel. The atoning death of Christ became the central point, while His resurrection and reign received less emphasis. The gospel was presented with courtroom imagery—sin, guilt, and acquittal—more as a transaction than a process of transformation.

Revivalism and the Sin-Centered Gospel

The Great Awakenings of the 18th and 19th centuries intensified this trend. Preachers like Jonathan Edwards and Charles Finney emphasized sin, judgment, and repentance. Salvation was presented as rescue from hell rather than restoration to Kingdom life.

Hymns reflected the same focus. George Bennard’s The Old Rugged Cross (1913) cherished the cross but only faintly eyed the crown. The cross became the destination rather than the doorway.

This message resonated in a Bible-literate culture, but today, in a biblically unfamiliar world, a sin-centered gospel often confuses more than it clarifies.

The Present Drift

Much of modern evangelicalism presents the gospel as: “God loves you. Jesus died for your sins. You can have an abundant life.” True, yes—but incomplete. Missing is the risen, reigning King. Without Him, faith drift into apathy: forgiveness without mission, security without transformation.

With that drift, we have moved from:

  • Converts to decisions
  • Repentance to penitence
  • Transformation to transaction

The Gospel Drift at a Glance

Era  Center  FocusLens
Early Church  Christ  Kingdom  Resurrection
Medieval Church  Penitence  Church  Crucifix
Modern Church  Sin  Man  Cross

For an expanded version comparison between a Christ-centered and a Sin-centered gospel, (click here).

A Call to Recenter

When GPS detects a wrong turn, it doesn’t scold. It simply says: Recenter. That is the message of the gospel today. We must rediscover the full story of Christ—His humiliation and His exaltation.

A gospel that focuses only on sin without a kingdom perspective leaves believers spiritually malnourished. However, a Christ-centered, kingdom-focused, resurrection-oriented gospel brings transformation, hope, and purpose. We are not just saved from sin—we are saved for the Kingdom.

Following the North Star Again

The gospel of the risen King must once again be our North Star. Amid cultural confusion and theological drift, He alone remains fixed.  It is time to recenter.

For Reflection

  1. Which “gospel lens” most shaped your early discipleship—cross, crown, or both? How did it form your expectations of the Christian life?
  2. Where do you notice today’s drift from transformation to transaction?
  3. If you explained the gospel to a biblically unfamiliar friend, how would you include both cross and crown?

TADB 145: The Gospel’s Lost Kingdom

Have we lost the Kingdom from our gospel? Why is it important?

“He appeared to them over a period of forty days and spoke about the kingdom of God.”
—Acts 1:3

What would happen if we attempted to preach the gospel like Jesus did—yet overlooked the one theme He emphasized more than any other?

That’s the question that shook me as I revisited the teachings of Jesus and the early church. I found myself rethinking not only what the gospel is, but how it relates to discipleship, mission, and the identity of Jesus Himself. To my surprise, the Kingdom of God wasn’t just a peripheral theme in Scripture—it was central. Yet, in my own theology and practice, it had become virtually invisible.

This realization led to a series of questions:

  • What is the gospel of the Kingdom that Jesus proclaimed?
  • Why is the Kingdom often absent from our modern evangelism and discipleship?
  • What occurs when we leave out the Kingdom from our message?
  • And most importantly, how can we reclaim what Jesus continually preached?

Understanding the Kingdom Concept

When John the Baptist and Jesus announced, “The Kingdom of God is at hand,” their audience immediately envisioned something political. First-century Jews longed for the restoration of the Davidic monarchy. They imagined freedom from Roman occupation and the return of national glory. Many hoped Jesus would be that king—some even tried to make Him one by force.

But Jesus rejected their expectations. He withdrew from the crowds and instead redefined the Kingdom on His terms.

Today, we face a different challenge. Most modern Christians read “Kingdom of God” without any clear mental image at all. What do we picture when we come across this phrase in Scripture?

Theologian R.C. Sproul described the Kingdom as “wherever God reigns.” John Piper referred to it as “God’s kingly rule—His reign, His action, His lordship.” In a sense, this encompasses the entire universe—there is no inch of space where God is not sovereign.

Yet Scripture depicts the Kingdom more clearly. Graeme Goldsworthy, in The Gospel and Kingdom, summarizes it as:

  • God’s people,
  • in God’s place,
  • under God’s rule.

According to Goldsworthy, the Kingdom began in Genesis with God reigning over humanity in Eden. But rebellion broke that rule, leading to exile. From that point on, the biblical story becomes a drama of restoration—the King reclaiming His reign over His people in His place.

The Good News of the Kingdom

Jesus began His public ministry with these words: “The time is fulfilled, and the Kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe the gospel” (Mark 1:15). His teaching consistently returned to this theme. For more than three years, Jesus described, illustrated, and personified the Kingdom.

Consider some of His key statements:

  • The Kingdom has come near—it is both present and future (Mark 1:15).
  • It is spiritual, not political (John 18:36).
  • It requires a new birth to enter (John 3:3).
  • It begins small but grows expansively (Matthew 13:31–32).
  • It’s of infinite value—worth giving up everything for (Matthew 13:44).
  • It is within you, among God’s people (Luke 17:21).
  • It is a gift from the Father (Luke 12:32).
  • It is real now, but invisible (John 18:36).
  • It has a distinctive culture (Matthew 5–7).

Jesus didn’t just talk about the Kingdom—He lived it. The question we must ask is: Does our gospel reflect this Kingdom message? Is it shaping our discipleship, our evangelism, and our understanding of mission?

The Kingdom Thread in the New Testament

The theme of the Kingdom didn’t end with Jesus; it continued throughout the New Testament. Consider this timeline of the kingdom.

  • John the Baptist announced it (Matthew 3:2).
  • Jesus preached it everywhere He went (Mark 1:15).
  • He instructed His disciples to seek first the Kingdom (Matthew 6:33).
  • He told them to pray for the Kingdom to come (Matthew 6:10).
  • He taught about it for three years (Luke 4:42–43).
  • He sent out the Twelve to preach and show it (Luke 9:2).
  • He sent out the Seventy to do the same (Luke 10:9).
  • After His resurrection, He spent forty days teaching about the Kingdom (Acts 1:3).
  • Philip proclaimed it in Samaria (Acts 8:12).
  • Paul reasoned about it in Ephesus (Acts 19:8) and kept on preaching it even while under house arrest in Rome (Acts 28:23, 31).

The Kingdom of God was not a footnote in early Christianity. It was the headline.

A Summary of the Kingdom Includes:

  • It is governed by the ascended King, who is seated at the right hand of the Father.
  • It is both a current spiritual truth and a future physical realization.
  • It is currently hidden but completely real.
  • It has broken into the domain of darkness.
  • It requires a radical transfer of allegiance.
  • It exists wherever people submit to the King’s rule.
  • It will eventually include a restored creation.
  • It has a counter-cultural lifestyle practiced by its citizens.
  • It spreads by proclaiming the good news of the King and His reign.

The Gospel’s Lost Kingdom

Given this strong emphasis, it’s surprising how little the Kingdom appears in modern gospel presentations. Consider the most popular evangelistic tools:

  • Steps to Peace with God (Billy Graham)
  • The Four Spiritual Laws (CRU)
  • The Bridge Illustration (Navigators)
  • The Roman Road

All of these focus on personal salvation and individual relationship with Jesus—which are certainly part of the gospel. But most neglect to mention the Kingdom. Why? Here are a few possibilities.

Ten Reasons for the Loss of the Kingdom

  1. Dispensational Disconnect
    Classical dispensationalism often views the Kingdom as solely future, ignoring its current reality.
  2. Reduction to Personal Salvation
    The gospel has been simplified to “Jesus died for your sins,” overlooking the larger story of God’s reign and our part in it.
  3. Fear of Misuse
    Some conservative evangelicals avoid “Kingdom” language because of its connection to liberal social reform movements.
  4. Message Complexity
    The Kingdom is a rich, multifaceted concept that doesn’t fit easily into a five-minute gospel presentation.
  5. Revivalism Over Discipleship
    When evangelism emphasizes decisions over long-term discipleship, the full scope of the Kingdom’s claims is often overlooked.
  6. Cultural Resistance
    In democratic societies, the concept of submitting to a king can seem outdated—or oppressive.
  7. Confusion Between Kingdom and Church
    These are related but different. The church is the people of the Kingdom, not the Kingdom itself.
  8. Sharing the Gospel
    Our desire for simplicity and clarity has sometimes sacrificed biblical depth.
  9. Transactional Evangelism
    Gospel presentations often become about “getting saved” rather than entering into a new Kingdom reality.
  10. Assumed Biblical Literacy
    We assume our audience understands terms like “King” and “Kingdom,” but many do not.

Individually, they are crucial. Together, they are lethal.

Rediscovering the Kingdom

To faithfully proclaim the gospel today, we must reclaim the message of the Kingdom. This involves more than just adding a new word to our vocabulary; it calls for a complete reorientation of our gospel presentations, discipleship approaches, and mission strategies.

If the Kingdom is both a present reality and a future hope, then it should influence:

  • Gospel Presentations – Focused on surrender to the King, not only personal gain.
  • Discipleship – Following Jesus as King, not just as an example or friend.
  • Mission – Living as citizens of heaven and representing the Kingdom here and now.

In a world filled with confusion and spiritual longing, we need more than just formulas—we need a King worth following. The gospel we proclaim must be as immense as the story Jesus told: the story of a Kingdom breaking into the world through His humiliation and His exaltation.

Let’s rediscover a gospel that naturally leads to discipleship. Let’s revisit what Jesus never stopped talking about: the good news of the Kingdom of God.

Reflection Questions

  1. Have you noticed the lack of the Kingdom in your faith journey or ministry?
  2. What would happen if the King and His Kingdom became the focal point of your gospel message?
  3. How could your discipleship practices shift to reflect life under the reign of Christ?

3 responses to “TADB 145: The Gospel’s Lost Kingdom”

  1. becky Sorensen

    I have found these blogs very insightful! This last one puts a lot together for me. I see my perspective DOES lack pieces of the Kingdom and I’m challenged to make it more a part of my spiritual journey. Esp as I meet with people and discuss discipleship and becoming an apprentice of Jesus. I have lots of think about! Thanks!

    1. Ron, Great article. Thank you for reminding us of the importance and significance of the kingdom message in the teaching of Jesus. Let us live with this prayer in mind: Father let your kingdom come, Father let your will be done, on earth as in heaven, right here in my heart.

  2. Don

    Oh, this is really good!!!
    I love kingdom living now,
    And kingdom anticipated glory!
    Hail, hail King Jesus.