BLACK = PANTONE BLACK C
RED = PANTONE 1788
In the late 1800s Charles Spurgeon warned that the church was drifting from the purity of the gospel. Instead of boldly proclaiming God’s Word, Christians were too careful not to offend in their treatment of Scripture. As a result, Christianity’s influence in nineteenthcentury England was severely weakened.
“Everywhere there is apathy. Nobody cares whether that which is preached is true or false. A sermon is a sermon whatever the subject.”
CHARLES SPURGEON
One hundred years later, John MacArthur is sounding the same alarm. The signs of compromise are all around us: Church-member count has become more important than the gospel. Pastors have turned to the marketing industry to help draw people to services rather than believing in the sovereign power of God. In their efforts toward “relevance” and “conversation,” some seeker-friendly and emergent movements have compromised the gospel and, ironically, are losing their impact on society.
JOHN MACARTHUR is the pastorteacher of Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California, and serves as president of the Master’s College and Seminary. Heard daily on the national radio program Grace to You, he is the best-selling author of many books and
The MacArthur Study Bible. Among his books are Drawing Near, The Freedom
and Power of Forgiveness, The Glory of Heaven, The Keys to Spiritual Growth, Nothing But the Truth, Our Awesome God, Our Sufficiency in Christ, The Pillars of Christian Character, The Power of Integrity, The Second Coming, and Strength for Today.
“ Acceptability in the culture and increased church attendance have subtly but steadily usurped holiness and true worship as the primary objectives of our church gatherings. Preaching the Word and boldly confronting sin are seen as archaic, ineffectual means of winning the world. After all, those things actually drive most people away. Why not entice people into the fold by offering what they want, creating a friendly, comfortable environment, and catering to the very desires that drive their strongest urges? As if we might get unconverted worldlings to accept Jesus by somehow making him more likable or making his message less offensive. “ That kind of thinking badly skews the mission of the church. The Great Commission is not a marketing manifesto. True evangelism does not require salesmen but prophets. It is the Word of God, not any earthly enticement, that plants the seed for the new birth (1 Pet. 1:23). We gain nothing but God’s displeasure if we seek to remove the offense of the cross (cf. Gal. 5:11).”
—from the Preface to the First Edition
CHRISTIAN LIVING
www.crossway.org
W H E N T H E CH U RCH BECOM ES L I K E T H E WOR L D THIRD EDITION
MacArthur calls us back to a firm and humble reliance on the power and sovereignty of God for salvation. Like Spurgeon one hundred years ago, he urges us not to be “carried about by every wind of doctrine,” and to resist salesmanship and shallowness in our proclamation of God’s Word. This third edition of Ashamed of the Gospel includes a new preface and new chapters on how the seeker-sensitive movement has changed in recent years, as well as an epilogue detailing the dangers of some current, equally pragmatic approaches to church growth.