The Gospel Lifestyle: Six Values Worth Actually Living
Most of us have heard the word “gospel” so many times it barely registers. It’s become background noise in church culture. But the word itself means good news. And good news, by definition, changes things.
At Cornerstone Fellowship, we’ve been thinking hard about what it looks like to not just believe that good news, but to actually live it. What we’ve found is that following Jesus isn’t a set of rules to manage. It’s a way of life organized around six values. And honestly, they are harder than they sound.
We are compelled by the words and actions of Jesus in all we do.
Jesus is our starting point and our lens. Not a denomination. Not a political party. Not a particular reading tradition. When we look at the whole of Scripture, we read it through what Jesus said and did. His words and actions are the key that unlocks everything else.
That’s not a shortcut. It’s actually more demanding. Because Jesus raised the standard. He didn’t just say don’t murder. He said don’t treat people as disposable. He didn’t just say follow the rules. He said love people the way I have loved you.
We ask, “What does love require?” in every situation.
This question replaces the checklist. The old religious approach was about avoiding the wrong things. Jesus came along and said the whole thing can be summed up in one command: love one another.
So the question we keep coming back to is: what does love require here? In this conversation. In this vote. In this relationship. In this moment.
That question closes every loophole. It’s also a lot harder to answer than checking a box.
We live life in community with each other.
The individualism baked into American culture works against this one. We are trained from birth to prioritize our own needs, protect our own interests, and measure success by personal gain. Jesus built his entire movement in the opposite direction.
Community isn’t a small group program. It’s a way of living together where people are known, where everyone contributes, and where the Gospel gets tested and proven in real time. You can’t follow Jesus well alone. The New Testament doesn’t really make room for that.
We live life on mission with each other to restore all things.
God is not watching the world fall apart from a safe distance. He is actively at work restoring what is broken, and he has invited us into that work. Not someday. Now.
That means church isn’t a place we go to feel better. It’s a team assembled for a restoration project. And the work is already underway in our neighborhoods, our schools, our workplaces. We don’t have to go far. We just have to show up.
We seek to share any advantages we have with those who are less advantaged.
This is where things get uncomfortable. Most of us work hard to protect the advantages we have. That’s a deeply human instinct. But Jesus modeled something different. He gave up the greatest advantage imaginable to come be with us.
Following him means looking honestly at what we have, what we’ve been given, and asking who is going without. And then doing something about it. Not just volunteering at a food kitchen while voting to keep housing unaffordable. The whole thing. Generosity and justice together.
We include everyone, especially those not like us.
Jesus spent most of his time with the people respectable society avoided. That wasn’t accidental. It was the point. The people the religious establishment had written off were exactly who Jesus was most drawn to.
The Church has often gotten this backwards. Sunday morning remains one of the most segregated hours of the week. But the Gospel Lifestyle pushes against that. It asks us to open our homes, our tables, our circles to people who are different from us. Not because it’s polite. Because the Kingdom of God has no insiders and outsiders.
These six values aren’t a program. They’re a direction. A way of orienting your life around what Jesus actually taught and lived. We’re all somewhere on that road. The invitation is to keep moving.
If you want to go deeper on any of these, we’d love to talk. Or better yet, come find a community at Cornerstone and live them out with us.









Login To Leave Comment