False Responses to the Gospel
False Responses to the Gospel
The gospel message is the good news that Jesus Christ died for our sins, was buried, and rose again on the third day, as outlined in 1 Corinthians 15:3-4. The Bible clearly teaches that salvation is received by faith alone in Christ alone. However, many false responses to the gospel have been propagated through man-made religious traditions and pseudo-Christianity. This article will examine seven common false responses to the gospel and contrast them with the biblical truth.
The Only Biblical Response: Faith in Christ
According to Acts 16:30-31, when the Philippian jailer asked Paul and Silas, "What must I do to be saved?", they simply responded, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house." There was no mention of repenting of sins, asking Jesus into one’s heart, or making Jesus Lord of one's life. The only requirement given was to believe on Christ.
Yet, many churches and preachers have introduced responses to the gospel that are not found in Scripture. These false responses distort the simplicity of salvation and mislead people into believing a false gospel. Below are seven common false responses:
1. ROYS (Repent of Your Sins)
The idea that a person must repent of their sins to be saved is a widespread but unbiblical teaching. The gospel is about what Christ did for us, not about what we do for Him. Turning from sin is a work, and salvation is not of works (Ephesians 2:8-9). Nowhere does the Bible teach that repenting of sins is a condition for salvation.
2. Repent and Believe
This phrase, often used without explanation, leads to confusion. While repentance in the biblical sense means changing one’s mind about Christ or works-based salvation, many misuse this phrase to imply turning from sin, which is a false gospel. The Bible never says "repent and believe" in a way that makes repentance a separate act from faith.
3. Asking Jesus into Your Heart
This popular but meaningless phrase is nowhere in Scripture. Salvation is never described as inviting Jesus into one’s heart. Faith in Christ is what saves (John 3:16, John 6:47). This phrase originated from emotional evangelistic movements but has no biblical foundation.
4. Asking to Be Saved
Salvation is a free gift already offered (Romans 6:23). Asking to be saved implies that God has not already provided the way of salvation through Christ. It is unnecessary to ask when God has already given the invitation to simply believe.
5. Making Jesus Your Personal Savior and Lord
This phrase is problematic because it is vague and often associated with lordship salvation, which teaches that one must submit to Christ's lordship to be saved. However, salvation is by grace through faith, not by submission or works. The Bible does not command us to "make Jesus Lord" to be saved—it commands us to believe on Him.
6. Believing in Your Heart
Without proper context, this phrase is often misused to promote emotionalism. Some claim that "head belief" is not enough, but the Bible makes no distinction between "head faith" and "heart faith." Faith is simply trusting Christ alone for salvation.
7. Calling Upon or Confessing
Many misinterpret Romans 10:13 ("For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved") to mean that one must pray or verbally confess to be saved. However, Romans 10:14 clarifies that calling upon the Lord follows belief. John 3:16 and Acts 16:31 confirm that belief alone is the requirement for salvation, without mention of calling or confessing.
Conclusion
The Bible is clear: "He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life" (John 3:36). Salvation is by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone. Any response to the gospel that adds conditions beyond simple belief is a false response. As believers, we must reject false gospels and uphold the biblical truth that salvation is a free gift received by faith.