Christians are always talking about the Good News, and about preaching it and sharing it. But as with anything, eventually terms wear out and names start to become meaningless. The “Good News” may be a term that many of my readers are familiar with but one that has perhaps lost the excitement it once had. And it may be a term that many of my readers have never heard before. So I am attempting to reframe—What is the Good News? What is being celebrated? What is God telling us?
He is telling us that finally, finally, the work He began at the creation of the world can continue. Finally, the gap between us and Him can be closed. Finally, He can redeem us and we can be part of His plan to make the world as it should be.
There are many things in this world that we look at and think, “This isn’t the way things should be.” There are wars and famines and floods, people dying, old and young alike, children sick, families going hungry, people living without shelter. Our thoughts are true: This isn’t how the world should be.
But this is what we choose, unwittingly or otherwise. We choose our way instead of God’s, demand our right to do what we want. We decide that we want to go our own way and be responsible to ourselves alone. And we’ve walked away from God. But there’s this “Good News”. What’s changed?
Jesus lived and died. That is a historical fact, but Christians differ from the rest of the world because we believe He didn’t stay dead. What an amazing thought that is. For someone to die and come back to life? Impossible. But what if we were to accept that this is true? What does that mean?
Jesus defeated death.
The biggest thing that feels wrong and wasteful to us has been reversed.
“The wages of sin is death,” so says the Bible. We have all done wrong things and therefore, we all die. “But,” it continues, “the gift of God is eternal life.” Jesus did nothing wrong. But He chose to die and to use His purity to take on the sins of the world. He had no debt to pay, so His death paid for the debts of us all. And now we are the good news. We are redeemed to God. We are now a part of His work to redeem the world and make it the way it is supposed to be.
It isn’t an easy step to take, I admit, for He asks us to give up everything that we have taken. He asks us to submit once again to Him, to again do things the way that He wants and to again live our lives according to His plan.
But through this, even though we may not see it in this lifetime, we can see and live in the world God intended for us to live in, with things the way God intended for them to be.
Following Jesus is difficult. But there is joy and hope and renewal. Redemption is the process of remaking. Something old made new again, something broken made whole. He asks all, He gives all.
This truly is Good News.

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July 3, 2009 at 11:26 am
Mike Purvis
“It isn’t an easy step to take, I admit, for He asks us to give up everything that we have taken.”
I think I find this step non-easy for (at least) two reasons. The first is the one you mention, which is that it’s simply tough for us to sacrifice our sin; certain behaviours and patterns become deeply ingrained in us.
The other, though, is the practical nuts-and-bolts of what this actually means. Once we’re convicted and have steeled our resolve to this course of action, how do we determine what exactly needs to go, and the mechanism for giving it up? As a functioning member of society, most of my sins are not cataclysmic: they’re little bits of bitterness, ways that I’ve learned to be selfish, conceal my feelings, deceive those around me, indulge myself, etc.
As with many things, it’s an exercise in listening to God—both for identification of these issues, and then for following through on repairing them. I guess I’m just impatient, and not that great at listening. But this is the process of redemption, as you say; peeling back as much as it takes to make us new again. We just have to be as open to the process as we can be. God’s working with us and for us, not against us.
And that is indeed Good News. This is a wonderful post, dear Tara; thank you.