The Gospel
The gospel is the simple plan of salvation:
We are all sinners in need of a savior (Romans 3:23)
God provides the only way of salvation through Jesus Christ (John 14:6)
We must believe that Jesus died on the cross for our sins, was buried and rose again 3 days later to conquer sin and death. (1 Corinthians 15:3-4)
We must repent of our sins (Luke 13:3), believe in what Christ did for us on the cross and call upon Him to receive Him as our savior (Romans 10:9-10, 13)
If you would like to learn more about this message or share it with someone else, read, download or share the materials below. Each offers a one-page view at a glance and a printer-ready pamphlet/tract pdf ready to take to the printer.
Gospel Tracts
Without a Doubt
This tract starts from a simple idea: deep down, people already know more about God than they admit. It points to two everyday witnesses everyone carries — the awareness of a Creator seen in the creation around us, and the inner voice of conscience that reacts when we do wrong. Instead of arguing from religion, the tract begins with what the reader already senses is true, then gently explains why those signals matter and what they reveal about our standing before God.
From there it moves into what most people don’t know — the full story of why Jesus came and what His death and resurrection accomplished. It connects the reader’s guilt and longing for forgiveness with the gospel itself, laying out a clear, personal invitation to trust Christ. The message is direct, urgent, and hopeful: what you already know about God is pointing you toward what you still need to hear.
Not By Accident
This tract is designed to be left in public bathroom stalls to meet individuals in an ordinary moment. It opens with the idea that finding it wasn’t random. The tract takes the reader from the concept of “fate” to something deeper: God is intentional, and this unplanned encounter may be part of His design to reach the reader personally. From there it challenges comfortable assumptions about goodness, spiritual security and destiny, reminding the reader that everyone will one day stand before God, and that trusting our own works is a risky foundation. It’s meant to gently shake someone awake and turn their thoughts toward eternity.
Then the tract explains the gospel: God’s perfect standard, why none of us meet it, and how Jesus stepped in to solve what we could never repair on our own. It presents a clear invitation to receive Christ, including a simple prayer and practical next steps for growing in faith. The message is direct, warm and hopeful.