If we were trying to prove the only one gospel claim in a court of law, would we win?
There seems to be a lack of evidence.
cc:
@Hazelelponi
If this were a court of law, the first question would be
jurisdiction.
What authority governs the case?
If Scripture is not admitted as authoritative evidence, then no theological claim—
including the denial of “one gospel”—can ever be proven. Everything reduces to opinion. At that point, the question isn’t whether there is one gospel, but whether Christianity itself can make truth claims at all.
But if Scripture
is admitted as evidence, then the record is clear.
Paul does not appeal to personal preference, denominational consensus, or later tradition. He explicitly grounds the gospel in
public, historical, and revealed facts, and then warns—under divine authority—that deviations from that message are not alternative interpretations but distortions.
“I would remind you, brothers, of the gospel I preached to you… that Christ died for our sins… that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day.”
(1 Corinthians 15:1–4)
“If we or an angel from heaven should preach to you a gospel contrary to the one we preached to you, let him be accursed.”
(Galatians 1:8–9)
That is not ambiguity; it is a legal-style boundary statement.
So the issue is not a “lack of evidence.”
The issue is whether Scripture’s testimony is being allowed to testify.
If it is, then there is
one gospel, defined by God, attested by the apostles, and guarded by explicit warnings against alteration.
If it is not, then the discussion has already abandoned any non-arbitrary standard of truth.
What no one has done, is disagree that Paul, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, provided us with an explicit working definition of the word "Gospel." or otherwise refute the claim, using Scripture, that it's an authoritative definition for the Christian.