3. The gospel is not everything;
“meaning it must be distinguished as an
announcement of news, distinct from its results and
implications”
4. The gospel is not everything;
“meaning it must be distinguished as an
announcement of news, distinct from its results and
implications”
The gospel is not a simple thing.
5. The gospel is not everything;
“meaning it must be distinguished as an
announcement of news, distinct from its results and
implications”
The gospel is not a simple thing.
“meaning it cannot be packaged in a single standard
form.”
7. What is the gospel?
“The gospel is good news announcing that we have been
rescued or saved. Because we are alienated from God,
we are psychologically alienated within ourselves —
we experience shame and fear (Gen 3: 10). Because we
are alienated from God, we are also socially alienated
from one another, and from nature itself. “vertical”
relationship with God. All human problems are
ultimately symptoms, and our separation from God is
the cause. The reason for all the misery — all the
effects of the curse — is that we are not reconciled to
God.”
8.
9.
10. Keller writes, “The primary cause of all of our
alienations [is] our separation from God.”
11. Keller writes, “The primary cause of all of our
alienations [is] our separation from God.”
discouragement and depression
love and relationships
sexuality
family and parental expectations
self-control
your motive for witness
obedience to human authority
guilt and self-image
joy and humor
12. Keller writes, “The primary cause of all of our
alienations [is] our separation from God.”
How has the gospel mended this primary ailment in
you and how has it helped curb the many other
symptoms that flow from it? How does this experience
prepare you to minister to alienated people?
14. What is revival?
“...all revivals are seasons in which the ordinary
operations of the Holy Spirit are intensified many-fold.
In revival, the ordinary means of grace produce a great
wave of newly awakened inquirers, soundly converted
sinners, and spiritually renewed believers.”
15. What is revival?
“...all revivals are seasons in which the ordinary
operations of the Holy Spirit are intensified many-fold.
In revival, the ordinary means of grace produce a great
wave of newly awakened inquirers, soundly converted
sinners, and spiritually renewed believers.”
16. What is revival?
“...all revivals are seasons in which the ordinary
operations of the Holy Spirit are intensified many-fold.
In revival, the ordinary means of grace produce a great
wave of newly awakened inquirers, soundly converted
sinners, and spiritually renewed believers.”
17. What is revival?
“...all revivals are seasons in which the ordinary
operations of the Holy Spirit are intensified many-fold.
In revival, the ordinary means of grace produce a great
wave of 1) newly awakened inquirers, 2) soundly
converted sinners, and 3) spiritually renewed
believers.”
18. What is revival?
“...revival is not a historical curiosity; it is a consistent
pattern of how the Holy Spirit works in a community
to arrest and counteract the default mode of the
human heart. It is surely relevant to ministry in
twenty-first-century global cultures, as it is relevant in
every culture.”
19. What is revival?
“...Revivalist ministry emphasizes conversion and
spiritual renewal, not only for those outside the
church, but also for those inside the church. Some
need to be converted from clear unbelief; others need
to see, to their surprise, that they’ve never been
converted; still others need to sense their spiritual
stagnation.
20. Have you ever experienced spiritual renewal in a
corporate setting as described in this chapter? If so,
how would you describe it? How did it differ from a
more personal experience of renewal?
21. How can you bring more of a gospel renewal focus to
your existing ministry?