What is the Gospel? Chapter 2

August through September Reading. One Chapter a week.
The Gospel and Personal Evangelism by Mark Dever: (Amazon link)

Summary

In Chapter 2, Mark Dever answers the most basic question in evangelism: What is the gospel? The gospel is not advice for life but the good news of what God has already done in Christ. It begins with the bad news, that we are sinners under God’s judgment—and then proclaims the good news: Jesus lived the perfect life we could not live, died the death we deserved, and rose again in victory over sin and death.

The gospel is about substitution, not self-improvement. Changed lives are the fruit of the gospel, not the gospel itself. Our task is to faithfully proclaim the biblical message of Christ crucified and risen.


Thoughts & Application

“The gospel is not about how we can make ourselves right with God. It is about what God has done to make sinners right with Himself.”

  • Don’t trust in self-improvement or religious effort. Rest in Christ’s finished work, and call others to do the same.

“The gospel must include the bad news of our sin and judgment, otherwise the good news of Christ’s death and resurrection makes no sense.”

  • Be honest about sin. Only then does the glory of the cross shine.

“We must be clear: the fruit of the gospel is not the gospel itself. Changed lives are evidence of the gospel, not the message we proclaim.”

  • Share Christ, not yourself. Good works support the message but never replace it.

“To get the gospel wrong is to have no gospel at all. To get it right is to hold out the very words of eternal life.”

  • Guard the message. Clarity is essential because eternity is at stake.

Closing Challenge

This week, practice sharing the gospel in two minutes or less. Keep it clear, biblical, and centered on Christ. Pray for one opportunity to share it faithfully. Remember: we don’t save—God does—but He calls us to be His witnesses.

A People on Mission: Colossians 4:2-6

My sermon notes for Sunday morning, August 17th. Remember, these are my personal study notes and not a manuscript of the sermon. The notes are provided as an outline each week for our Tabernacle Church family. The church provides the services through. YouTube by Sunday afternoon. You can find Sermon Notes, Family Devotional Guides, Prayer List, and other resources at our Church Website.

Colossians 4:2-6

INTRO

  • On mission, everyday, and everywhere
  • We have blueprint for EVERYDAY EVANGELISM

Pray First – vv. 2–3a

Continue steadfastly in prayer, being watchful in it with thanksgiving. At the same time, pray also for us…

Passion, Purpose, Persistence, Praise

  • Continue steadfastly in prayer– to persist, remain devoted
  • Being watchful – to be watchful, stay awake. FOCUSED
  • With thanksgiving– thankful, grateful. You salvation and calling.
  • Prayer is where we must start. Ephesians 6:18
  • Begin each day by praying for open doors, gospel awareness, and courage to speak.

Seek Gospel Opportunities vv. 3b-4

…that God may open to us a door for the word, to declare the mystery of Christ… that I may make it clear, which is how I ought to speak.

God Opens the Door

  • Acts 14:27. For the Gentiles.
  • The Holy Spirit does what He does. Stirs the heart.

We anticipate and walk through

  • AS WE PRAY… WE PRAY WHEN YOU….

We speak Jesus

  • The mystery of Christ– mystery; the gospel once hidden, now revealed
  • that I may make it clear – visible, plain, unmistakable
  • We have the opportunity, because we HAVE what everyone needs… THE GOSPEL
  • Not just talk, but GOSPEL TALK. Romans 1:14-17 (last week)

Seize Gospel Moments – v. 5

Walk in wisdom toward outsiders, making the best use of the time.

Make a Difference Everyday

  • Live intentionally. Walk– to walk, live, conduct oneself)
  • Speak truth. Wisdom – wisdom; skillful application of truth
  • Make every moment count. Making the best use of the time – to redeem, buy up, seize every opportunity

Strive for Gospel Relationships – v. 6

Let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how you ought to answer each person.

Speak with Grace and Truth

  • Gracious – kindness, humility, compassion.
  • Salt – truth, clarity, and even a winsome sharpness.
  • Grace makes the gospel attractive; salt keeps it pure.

Engage People Personally

  • each person – evangelism is personal.
  • Listen carefully, discern the heart, then respond.
  • 1 Peter 3:15 – prepared, gentle, and respectful.

Meet Them Where They Are, Speak the Truth They Need

  • Never water down truth to avoid offense.
  • Never crush the hearer with harshness.
  • Our aim isn’t to win an argument, but to win people to Christ through repentance and faith.

THE WHAT NOW

The lost world is perishing, and we must think and live as people on mission. As Southern Baptists, we celebrate the lives and sacrifices of our missionaries, but the real question is, are we willing to live the same way in our own communities?

  • Pray for the people.
  • Invest your life — meet people and learn their culture.
  • Look for open doors where God is already at work.
  • Clearly share the gospel at every Spirit-led opportunity.
  • Patience…we are in it for the long haul.

The Daily Disciplines of a Great Leader: Time in the Word

Knowing the Playbook

Intro
Every man needs a foundation. Without it, life drifts and crumbles under pressure. God’s Word is that foundation—the ultimate playbook shaping how you think, speak, and act.

This post is part of a leadership series inspired by Donald Whitney’s Spiritual Disciplines for the Christian Life. Whitney unpacks timeless practices that train believers for godliness. Just as athletes train daily, men must practice these disciplines to grow in Christlikeness and lead with integrity.
📖 Whitney’s Book


Chapter 1 Overview
Whitney reminds us that Bible intake is the cornerstone of every spiritual discipline. It takes multiple forms—hearing, reading, studying, memorizing, meditating on, and applying Scripture. Each practice deepens your grasp of God’s truth and sharpens obedience. Without a steady intake of Scripture, men lose direction, conviction, and the spiritual stamina to lead well.

Leadership Application – Knowing the Playbook
A man who neglects the Bible leads by reaction, not conviction. God’s Word doesn’t just inform—it transforms. It renews your mind (Rom. 12:2), guides your steps (Ps. 119:105), and anchors your life in truth. If you want to lead with clarity, courage, and faithfulness, you must first be led daily by the Word.

Practical Step + Resource
Pick a Bible reading plan and stick with it. Consistency is more important than speed.

Call to Action
Don’t just know the Word—live it. Commit to daily Bible intake this week, not just for others, but to be personally led and shaped by Christ.

Family and Marriage Conference – Sept. 19 & 20

Mark your calendar for the Family & Marriage Conference, Friday–Saturday, September 19–20, at TAB. Through God’s Word, we’ll focus on building strong marriages, equipping parents, and renewing our homes in the gospel. With teaching, Q&A, and fellowship, it will be a weekend of encouragement.

We hope you’ll join us—and invite another couple to come along!

Our guest speak is Pastor Logan Williams from Faith Bible Church in Sharpsburg, GA.


  • Beginning with a Coffee and Dessert Bar
  • Coffee and Pastries


Childcare is provided—please let us know if you need it.


A Church Built on Discipleship: Titus 1:10-16

My Bible study notes for Wednesday night, August 13th. Remember, these are my personal study notes and not a manuscript of the sermon. They are provided as an outline each week for our Tabernacle Church family. You can find Sermon Notes, Family Devotional Guides, Prayer List, and other resources at our Church Website.


Titus 1:10-16

Week 2 – Protects the Flock

INTRO

  • Most churches say that they want to make disciples, but what kind are we making?
  • In a world where truth is fuzzy and doctrine is downplayed, the church must remain clear, grounded, and bold.
  • Paul reminds Titus that discipleship is rooted in truth and shaped by godliness.
  • If we’re going to be a church built on discipleship, we must take truth seriously.
    • We must pay attention to what’s being taught.
    • We must consider what’s at stake—our homes, our church, our witness.
    • We must handle false teaching biblically and lovingly.
    • And we must remember that a changed heart is always the goal.

Pay Attention – v. 10

[10] For there are many who are insubordinate, empty talkers and deceivers, especially those of the circumcision party

  • Many – false teaching is not rare; expect it. Matt. 24:4–5, 2 Peter 2:1–3
  • Insubordinate – rebellious, refusing godly authority.
  • Empty talkers– they sound spiritual but say nothing of substance.
  • Deceivers – mind-corrupting misleaders.

We must fix our attention on biblical truth, especially in a world that no longer sees doctrine as essential.

We live in a culture where feelings often outrank facts, and where many churches trade clarity for comfort. But Paul warns Titus that deception is real—and it often comes cloaked in religious language. If we’re going to be a church built on discipleship, we must be a people who care deeply about truth.

Understand what is at Stake – v. 11

[11] They must be silenced, since they are upsetting whole families by teaching for shameful gain what they ought not to teach.

  • Silenced – to muzzle or gag: urgent action.
  • False teachers often target families—the heart of the church.
  • Their motive? Shameful gain, not Christ’s glory.

Biblical discipleship includes protecting the flock from wolves. (Acts 20:28–31) The souls of our families are at stake. This is why sound doctrine matters.

False teaching doesn’t just mislead minds—it tears apart homes. Paul says entire families were being upset and unsettled. This isn’t a minor issue; it’s a gospel issue. If we don’t protect the truth, we won’t protect the people we love.

Handle the Situation Biblically – vv. 12–14

[12] One of the Cretans, a prophet of their own, said, “Cretans are always liars, evil beasts, lazy gluttons.” [13] This testimony is true. Therefore rebuke them sharply, that they may be sound in the faith, [14] not devoting themselves to Jewish myths and the commands of people who turn away from the truth.

  • Sharply – directly, decisively, not harshly.
  • The goal: restoration
  • sound in the faith – healthy, spiritually whole).
  • Avoid Jewish myths and man-made commands—these distort grace.

Discipleship involves loving correction that points people back to the gospel.

True love doesn’t ignore error—it confronts it with grace and truth. Paul instructs Titus to rebuke sharply, not to shame, but to restore. Correction is not optional in discipleship; it’s essential. If we care about someone’s soul, we must care enough to speak up, not to win an argument, but to win them back to Christ.

A Changed Heart is the Goal – vv. 15–16

[15] To the pure, all things are pure, but to the defiled and unbelieving, nothing is pure; but both their minds and their consciences are defiled. [16] They profess to know God, but they deny him by their works. They are detestable, disobedient, unfit for any good work.

  • Pure – morally clean, inwardly transformed.
  • To the impure, even truth gets twisted.
  • False teachers speak of God, but deny Him by their lifestyle.
  • Unfit – disqualified, worthless for good works.

Discipleship is not just about words (theological truth); it must be backed by godly living.

Sound doctrine must lead to sound lives. It’s possible to say the right things and still deny the truth by the way we live. The credibility of our witness depends not just on what we profess, but how we practice it. True discipleship is marked by integrity, purity, and obedience—where belief and behavior align.


Sources

  • MacArthur New Testament Commentary: Titus (Moody)
  • ESV Expository Commentary: Ephesians–Philemon, Vol. 11 (Crossway)
  • The Expositor’s Bible Commentary: Ephesians–Philemon, Vol. 12 (Zondervan)
  • Authored by Pastor Jon Beck, with a little fine-tuning from “Ezra,” my AI scribe who helps with grammar and organization.

Why Don’t We Evangelize? Chapter 1

August through September Reading. One Chapter a week.
The Gospel and Personal Evangelism by Mark Dever: (Amazon link)

Why Don’t We Evangelize? – Chapter 1 Overview

Summary

Chapter 1 asks the probing question: If the gospel is the best news in the world, why do we so often fail to share it? Mark Dever identifies the common excuses Christians hide behind—fear, lack of preparation, shyness, apathy, laziness, or assuming evangelism is someone else’s job.

Instead of leaving us in guilt, Dever offers encouragement. We are called to pray for boldness, plan for intentional conversations, and remember that evangelism is the joyful duty of every believer. Evangelism is not about results—it’s about faithfulness to proclaim the good news of Christ.


Thoughts & Application

“Evangelism is not something we can delegate only to pastors or missionaries. It is the privilege and duty of every follower of Christ.”

  • Don’t wait for someone else—God has placed people in your life that only you can reach.

Our silence is often driven more by fear of man than fear of God.”

  • Ask yourself: Am I more concerned with someone’s opinion of me or their standing before God?

“God’s sovereignty in salvation should encourage us to share the gospel, not excuse us from it.”

  • Because God saves, our role is to be faithful in proclaiming—He will bring fruit in His time.

“Evangelism is not about eloquence or persuasion. It is about faithfully speaking the truth of Christ crucified.”

  • Don’t wait until you feel “ready.” Speak clearly about Christ and trust God with the results.

Closing Challenge

This week, identify one excuse that most often silences you. Confess it before the Lord. Pray for boldness, and intentionally step into one gospel conversation. Faithfulness is the measure—not results.

Romans 1:14-17 – A People on Mission: Obligated, Eager, Bold, Confident, Expectant

My sermon notes for Sunday morning, August 9th. Remember, these are my personal study notes and not a manuscript of the sermon. The notes are provided as an outline each week for our Tabernacle Church family. The church provides the services through. YouTube by Sunday afternoon. You can find Sermon Notes, Family Devotional Guides, Prayer List, and other resources at our Church Website.

Romans 1:14-17

INTRO

  • Paul was set apart as an apostle. FOR THE GOSPEL
  • Rome itself is a byproduct of the mission of the early church.
  • WE HAVE THE SAME GOSPEL AND THE SAME MISSION
  • We are saved and sent. We are sent to share.
  • Over the next few weeks…ON MISSION FOR HIM

Obligated – We Have Been Entrusted with the Gospel – v. 14

  • Because of what we have received.
  • Christ has call us to the world. Everyone. Matthew 28:18-20. His love compels us 2 Corinthians 5:14-15

Eager – We are Passionate about Sharing Christ – v. 15

  • Willing and ready to go and proclaim. Acts 1:8 Starting where you are to the ends of the earth.
  • Rome.  Not the most ideal setting to be a Christian. Some 8 or so years after the letter he lost his life to Nero.
  • In times of disaster and suffering… we should be ready and eager to serve and share.
  • Proactive. Looking. Anticipating.

Bold – We Refuse to Be Ashamed -v. 16a

  • Not ashamed. Refused the shrink under pressure.
  • He was bold because of his conviction.
    • Who God is. Who Christ is. Who he was. Who he is!

Confident – We Trust in God’s Power to Save v. 16b

  • Power. Dynamis. Dynamite
  • Salvation – Redeem. Rescue. To Justify, Sanctify, Glorify… SINNERS
  • Everyone who believes. More than believing facts, but rather trusting… a personal trust in Christ for the forgiveness of sin and
  • It is universal, but exclusive. For all nations, but one must believe.
  • He was confident because he knew that it was God and the power of the Gospel that brings hope and change. 1 Corinthians 1:18; Ephesians 2:8-9
  • We have nothing to fear, when our confidence is in the Gospel.
  • THEY KINGDOM COME…THY WILL BE DONE.

Expectant – We Live by Faith, From Start to Finish – v. 17

  • For in it. The Gospel.
  • The righteousness of God is revealed.
  • Righteousness. Being right in the sight of God
  • Revealed. Unveiled. Make known.
  • For the Gospel to do what it does…BRING CHANGE.
  • From faith to faith. From the start to the finish it is about faith. My trust in Christ to be saved and live out the saved life.

Titus 1:1-9 – A Church Built for Discipleship

My Bible study notes for Wednesday night, August 6th. Remember, these are my personal study notes and not a manuscript of the sermon. They are provided as an outline each week for our Tabernacle Church family. You can find Sermon Notes, Family Devotional Guides, Prayer List, and other resources at our Church Website.

Titus 1:1-9
Week 1 – We Must Have a Plan

Discipleship must be at the heart of all we do – vv. 1-3

Notice Paul’s heart as he writes to Pastor Titus.

Faith

  • Trust in Christ. Assurance of salvation.

Knowledge

  • More than facts. Trusting in truth.
  • Belief that has impact.

Godliness

  • A life shaped by our devotion and reverence toward God

Entrusted

  • Sacred stewardship.

This is the same message/desire given by Christ to His disciples. Matthew 28:18-20

This was Paul’s motivation in life. Lead others to KNOW Christ, GROW in Christ. GO for Christ.

We must have a plan and strategy as a church – vv. 4-5a

This is why I left you in Crete

  • The local church matters. We cannot do the CHRISTIAN LIFE alone. We will always be lacking something.

Put what remained in order

  • Complete what is lacking. It was planted, not growing.

Appoint

  • Place with purpose. Structure. Order

The local church is essential for discipleship, both for my personal growth and for the collective body of Christ. We must take it seriously.

So goes the leadership, so goes the church – vv. 5b-9

Elders

  • Their calling and character.
  • Lead, strengthen, guide the church toward their purpose.

Above reproach

  • Not perfect, but blameless. Unchargeable.
  • From the top down. We must have leadership expectations.

He must hold firm (tightly)

  • Trustworthy word
  • (sufficient, inerrant, infallible)

Teach

  • Give instruction in Sound doctrine

Rebuke

  • To expose, convict, or correct error

Where we raise the bar of accountability and expectations will define who we are and what we attract.