Hold Firm to the Simple Gospel: Nothing More, Nothing Less
Titus 1:9
"He must hold firm to the trustworthy word as taught, so that he may be able to give instruction in sound doctrine and also to rebuke those who contradict it."
Crete was notorious in the ancient world for its moral and religious chaos. Paul quotes one of their own prophets in Titus 1:12: "Cretans are always liars, evil beasts, lazy gluttons." And so, in this infamous environment the emerging church was being upset by some who were unstable gainsayers. Paul would have nothing to do with these people. He warned against them, calling for leaders who brought balanced, courageous, doctrinally grounded leadership.
Paul called these people "empty talkers". Men who were weak, teaching vain falsehoods, messages with no real discovery of salvation in Jesus Christ's mission. Instead they were willing to tickle the ears of the people in order to live a profitable life among the people. They were false prophets like the prophets of old. Their message had no substance, no power, no gospel. It was religious chatter that sounded spiritual but contained zero life-changing truth about Christ’s finished work.
And this was the case, mainly because they were insubordinate. Their conscience was defiled by this administration. Professing to know God, they reject the apostolic teaching. Their motive was shameful gain, using religion as a business. Preaching doctrines that please the people, that build a following and a bank account. They flatter the audience and live off them while leading them away from God.
Now why do this?
Practically speaking.
Why choose this route in their ministry instead of sound doctrine?
The false teachers chose the route of empty talk because, practically speaking, it offered quicker visible success, less personal cost, and direct benefit to their ego and wallet. Sound doctrine, on the other hand, demands rigorous study, prayer, submission to Scripture, and the willingness to be corrected. It forces a person to confront their own sin and align their life with hard truths, like the exclusive sufficiency of Christ’s work, repentance, and holy living. They found it necessary to invent a complex tapestry of godliness in order to make themselves indispensable in the lives of the church people.
Sound doctrine points people directly to Christ and the finished work of the cross. The gospel at its heart is incredibly clear and simple. Once people grasp the simplicity and sufficiency of the gospel, they don’t need a constant stream of new rules, rituals, or "deeper revelations" from a teacher.
It's really very simple:
"For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received: that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day…" (1 Corinthians 15:3-4)
That's it.
You believe this teaching, and you belong to Christ Jesus. Jesus never suggests anything more.
This is what Paul tells Titus elders must "hold firm to" (Titus 1:9). Nothing more needs to be added for a person to be saved and belong to Christ. Jesus Himself never added anything to it. "It is finished." (John 19:30) "Whoever believes in me has eternal life." (John 3:36, 6:47) "Come to me…and I will give you rest." (Matthew 11:28). No extra rituals. No secret knowledge. No additional steps of performance. Faith in the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus, received by grace through simple trust, is enough to make a person a child of God. It's just that simple.
And anyone who tells you that you need more?
They are "empty talkers".
This remains one of the most relevant warnings for ministry today. Many modern "teachers" follow the exact same playbook; motivational content, minimized repentance, maximized audience retention, and monetized platforms. Layers upon layers of life preservers that only their doctrines can sustain.
Anyone who insists you need more; more rules, more experiences, more "higher levels," more submission to their system, more performance, is doing exactly what Paul warned against in Crete. They complicate what God made simple so they can insert themselves between you and Christ. They may sound spiritual, even deeply caring, but they ultimately lead people away from the freedom and rest found in Christ alone.
This is why the qualification is so strong and necessary. An elder who clings tightly to this simple gospel will be equipped to instruct clearly and joyfully in sound doctrine. He'll be capable of rebuking anything that adds to the gospel or steals the glory from the cross.
I understand that life is complex, harsh, unstable, and unpredictable. And so, we all want faith that is able to face those challenges head on with depth and strength, power and structure, stamina and endurance. And our natural instinct is to reach for something equally complex; a faith with layers of structure, powerful techniques, deep strategies, and visible spiritual stamina builders that feel strong enough to match the storms. Everything from ancient guardians, modern gatekeepers; trinkets, relics, artifacts and artworks. Prayer programs, monasteries, colleges, universities, historic buildings and principalities. All these we want as a spiritual system that feels as substantial as the challenges we face. It feels safer. It feels stronger. It makes us feel more spiritual. But that is precisely the instinct Paul is confronting in Titus 1.
That's not what Christ Jesus taught. That's not the simple gospel truth. That's not the richness of His truth. The simplicity of the gospel is not shallow "empty" manmade systems, it is profoundly deep and powerfully sufficient in its simplicity of grace.
Write this on your heart:
Christ Jesus did not offer another religious system to compete with the complexity of life. He offered Himself.
The gospel is deliberately simple because its power does not come from human structure or technique. Its power comes from the finished work of a crucified and risen Savior. And it's profoundly deep. In fact, you can spend your whole life mining the riches of "Christ died for our sins" and never exhaust it. It does not need supplements. Grace is not a starting point; it is the whole foundation. It is an ocean disguised as a cup of cold water. You drink it by faith, and it satisfies and strengthens in ways no elaborate system ever can.
This is why the elder must hold firm to the trustworthy word. If he starts reaching for the visible, the complex, the impressive; the relics, the programs, the new techniques, the pluralism, the relativism, he will soon be unable to give clear instruction in sound doctrine or effectively rebuke the empty talkers. He will have instead joined them.
Man of God, cut out all the religious noise, keep it simple, keep it the gospel.
Amen.