A. Defining the Kingdom of God: What the Kingdom of God is What is the Kingdom of God? The idea is so pervasive in Scripture that it is very difficult to be comprehensive. There is much that can be said in trying to give a definition. It must be asserted that the kingdom of God is not a place—though we usually think of kingdoms in geographic terms. It is better understood in terms of the dynamic reign of God. Geerhardus Vos identified three strands which he called its essence: (1) the supremacy of God in the sphere of saving power; (2) the sphere of righteousness; and (3) the state of blessedness. Paul says, "The kingdom of God is . . . in power" (1 Cor. 4:20). The sermon on the mount is, in many ways, an explication of the nature of the righteousness of the kingdom, evident even in the blessedness promised in the beatitudes. The kingdom of God is the sphere in which he reigns—that is— the place where his sovereignty and dominion express themselves. When the Pharisees came to him and asked him when the kingdom was to come, Jesus could tell his hearers, that the Kingdom of God was in their midst. Imagine how confused they must have been when he said "The kingdom of God does not come with observation; nor will they say, ‘See here!’ or ‘See there!’ For indeed, the Kingdom of God is in your midst." It was present in the ministry of Jesus—his teaching, his acts of compassion, his miracles. Isn’t this what Jesus was intending when, after his temptations in the wilderness, he sat in the synagogue in Nazareth and read on the Sabbath Day from Isaiah the prophet: "18 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor; he has sent me to heal the brokenhearted, to preach liberty to the captives, and recovery of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, 19 To preach the acceptable year of the Lord." Luke 4:18&19? These are the acts of the reign of God—proof that he had come on a divine mission—that he was the unique son, who fulfills the words of Scripture. The Pharisees were confused, because they did not expect this kind of kingdom. We said that the message preached by John the Baptist and Jesus was the same. But we must assert an important difference in perspective between them. John preached as the forerunner, in a sense as the last sentinel of the night, proclaiming the dawn of a new day. Jesus was himself the light; he brought the day into existence. Was the kingdom present in John’s ministry? Certainly. But not in the same way that it was with Jesus. John was glad to point to the greater one—great David’s greater son—who was in himself the embodiment of the reign of God. It is interesting to note that when the kingdom is preached, it is often associated with verbs of motion. Just in Matthew’s Gospel we read verbs such as enter, seek, cast out, suffers violence, come upon, gather out, and come (translating three different Greek verbs). The metaphoric language of a physical kingdom helps us to conceptualize the relationship humans have to God’s reign.
B. Defining the Kingdom of God: What it is not One of the most helpful ways of defining something is by negation—demonstrating what something is not. The word of God does this in several places: We are told that the kingdom of God is not of this world. (John 18:36) Jesus clearly teaches us that his reign does not have its origin or primary definition in terms of this world. His own teaching on the kingdom was terribly misunderstood by his religious opponents precisely because they interpreted his teaching in terrestrial terms. His reign is heavenly. It has a divine origin and existence. The kingdom of God is not in word, but in power (1 Cor. 4:20). Paul did not merely have some fine sounding religious words—puffs of air audible to those who listen. When he came to the Corinthians, he could demonstrate to them the true spiritual power of the kingdom. The kingdom of God is not meat and drink—food (Rom. 14:17)—but righteousness, and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit. Paul wants this understood—the passing things of this life, such as food (which by the way is to be consumed to the glory of God, 1 Cor. 10:31) do not make up the substance of the kingdom. When
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Christians divide over such matters, when they cause others to stumble, they have misunderstood the very nature of what the kingdom is all about. They must pursue righteousness: conformity to the covenant standard, the Law of God; peace, the wholeness and wellness attending the presence of God; and joy in the Holy Spirit, the only demeanor appropriate for those who have been cleansed and adopted into the family of God. These things belong together, and are of the very essence of the kingdom. Listen to Hebrews 1:8&9: "To the Son he says, ‘Your throne, o God, is forever and ever; A scepter of righteousness is the scepter of your kingdon. 9 You have loved righteousness and hated lawlessness; Therefore God, Your God, has anointed you with the oil of gladness more than your companions." The son of God sits on an eternal throne, with righteousness in his hand. Because he himself has loved righteousness, because he has made it the object of his affection, he knows joy beyond his companions. Truly, holiness is happiness. Six times, the kingdom is spoken of as an inheritance, but interestingly, only one of those times is the inheritance couched in positive terms, in Matthew 25:34. In that place, Jesus describes the great day of judgment, and welcomes his people into their inheritance. But in the other 5 occurrences (1 Cor. 6:9&10, 15:50; Gal. 5:21; Eph. 5:5), we are told that flesh and blood will not inherit the kingdom, and that those who commit a variety of sins will not inherit the kingdom. Similarly, we are told that there is another group who will not enter the kingdom: certain kinds of religious men. Listen to Jesus words, "Assuredly I say to you that tax collectors and harlots enter the kingdom of God before you. For John came to you in the way of righteousness, and you did not believe him; but tax collectors and harlots believed him . . . the kingdom of God will be taken from you and given to a nation bearing the fruits of it . . . woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you shut up the kingdom of heaven against men; for you neither go in yourselves, nor do you allow those who are entering to go in." (Matt. 21:31, 43, 13:13). These are part of an interesting cluster of verses in Matthew’s account of Holy Week, in which Jesus emphasizes the exclusion of religious formalists from the kingdom.
C. Defining the Kingdom of God: Its citizens But if some are shut out or receive no inheritance, then who are the proper citizens and heirs? In reply to the disciples query about greatness in the kingdom, Jesus states that we must become like little children in order to enter. One of the key values of the kingdom is humility: "blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." The disciples missed it with their interest in greatness. In Matthew 19, Jesus rebukes his disciples for keeping the children away, and immediately uses an incident with a young man to teach his disciples that it is very difficult for a rich man to enter the kingdom. The famous interview between Jesus and Nicodemus provides us with some insight: only those who have been born from above, or born again, may see and enter the kingdom. The sons of the kingdom are not naturally born, but supernaturally born. This is the great point of Paul’s ministry as recorded in the book of Acts. When Luke highlights his preaching about the kingdom, it is most often to persuade Jews (and Gentiles) to believe its message. Acts 19:8 "And he went into the synagogue, and spoke boldly for three months, reasoning and persuading concerning the things of the kingdom of God." 28:23 "And when they [i.e. the Jews of Rome] had appointed him a day, many came to him at his lodging, to whom he explained and solemnly testified of the kingdom of God, persuading them concerning Jesus from both the law of Moses and the prophets, from morning till evening." Again, Acts 28:30-31 "Paul . . . received all who came to him, preaching the kingdom of God, and teaching the things which concern the Lord Jesus Christ, with all confidence, no one forbidding him." Believers enter the kingdom. As we noted before, at the day of judgment Jesus welcomes the sheep on his right hand, those who have done the will of the father, into his kingdom. James puts it like this: "Has not God chosen the poor of this world to be rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom which he promised to those who love him?" (James 2:5). That is the bottom line: the citizens of the kingdom are those who have been chosen by God, regenerated by the power of the Holy Spirit, those who are rich in faith and whose lives demonstrate that the work of God in them is real. Age, social status, race are irrelevant. Not everyone who says to Jesus "Lord, Lord, shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he that does the will of his father in heaven." (Matt. 7:21). The difference between the tax collectors and harlots who entered the kingdom and the religious formalists who were shut out is very simple. The former believed, the latter did not.
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D. Defining the Kingdom: Declaring a mystery It is important to note that although the message of the kingdom is to be preached, it is still a hidden message. Jesus himself frequently spoke of the kingdom in parables—explicitly stating that he did so because the "mysteries of the kingdom of heaven" have been given to his disciples, but not to outsiders. It is in some sense a secret kingdom, not like Tolkien’s hidden kingdom of Gondolin, rumored to exist but sealed to visitors, but rather present in a very real sense, though invisible to the eyes of those without knowledge. Many understand its truths, because their eyes have been opened to understand them. But many others will hear the same words and walk away shaking their heads, wondering why some seem so interested and willing to take these words seriously. At root, we are thrown back to the sovereignty of God in this. He has chosen to reveal the nature of his reign to some, and allow them to participate, while others are on the outside. The Lord Jesus himself could rejoice that his sovereign father, lord of heaven and earth, had hidden the truth from the wise and prudent while revealing it to babes. Tax collectors and sinners crowd in, while the self-righteous are justify out. The gospel of the kingdom is something that is to be preached throughout this age. When Jesus’ disciples were looking for information on the future, our savior included in his reply some teaching about the present —the gospel of the kingdom must be preached throughout this age—in all the world as a witness to all nations—before the end will come. Men and women live their lives as if there were no kingdom, as if in Peter’s words, nothing has changed "since the fathers fell asleep." They marry and are given in marriage, they work and play and eat and drink as if there were nothing beyond the tedium of their existence. But they must be called to see that they are fallen creatures in a fallen world, rebels against their rightful Lord, at every moment deepening their condemnation by failing to bow the knee before him. The nations rage, the people plot in vain. And all the while the King in heaven laughs, for his purposes can not be resisted, and his work shall conquer. This is what we must preach. God reigns. He is sovereign over all. His kingdom is an eternal kingdom. Unless men and women and boys and girls repent, they will perish. The kingdom of God exists. It is real. While it is not visible to the human eye, it may be discerned with the eye of faith. And that believing vision ought to captivate us for the service of God. We are his children, we are his representatives, we are his servants. All that we do, and all that we say, ought to be governed by this perspective. We must occupy until he comes. We must press on, confronting men with this message: God reigns. He is gracious, he is longsuffering, he is kind, and he commands you to leave your selfishness and become his servant. Are you weary and burdened? He will give you rest. This is true hope for the future.
2. The Kingdom of God is Always at Work, even when we do not perceive it to be so Having said all these things, there is still one more fact that we must remember. It is found in the words of Hebrews 2 that we read earlier. While we know all of this truth about the kingdom of God, we do not yet see it in its final and consummate form. It is still, "the world to come." In fact, as we look around, we can hardly say that we see pervasive evidence of the presence and power of the kingdom of God in its glory. Neither did the writer of Hebrews. He said, "we do not yet see all things put under him." We live in a day of increasing wickedness, of the open toleration and even promotion of the most vile kinds of sin. Our society is saturated with addictions to pleasure, profit and power. The evening news and the daily newspaper recount over and over the terrible reality of sin in the world. But it is not just out there. The professing church is departing, or in many cases, has departed, from any semblance of sober, Scripture-based religion. Post-modernism is invading even the evangelical church. Truth is not truth, sin is not sin, God is not God. Religion is based on emotion, truth is determined by opinion polls, sin is excused as a kind of psychological peccadillo, while God is becoming whatever He will be. We face everything from the blab and grab televangelists to Evangelicals and Catholics Together to the Jesus Seminar. When the news media reports on religion, it often does so in a mocking way. And, there is false
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religion, especially resurgent Islam. Someone has said that the greatest world-wide threat to the church is Islam. In a column published earlier this week, George Will stated that in any given week, there are more people in England who attend mosques than attend Church of England services. Here in America, there is a growing acceptance of Islam, and other non-western religions into the holy pantheon. Mormonism is also on the upsurge. The most recent fascicle of the Trinity Journal includes an important article on the lack of interaction between evangelicals and a growing number of well-trained and highly-equipped Mormon apologists. They are winning the battle. Don’t these things trouble you? They are an utter contradiction of all that we have said. We seem to be regressing. Where is the kingdom of God? we ask. This is not unusual. In every age, even since Jesus’ ascension to the right hand of God, the church has lived in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation on earth. To the eye of the casual observer, and perhaps even sometimes to the Christian believer, the reality of the kingdom of God may seem like a pipe dream—a lot of nice religious slogans without any substance in the world of space and time. If we grapple with this, we should not be surprised. We are not alone, nor are we the first to wrestle with the contradictions present. Asaph struggled deeply with this in Psalm 73, as did the preacher in Ecclesiastes, Jeremiah in Lamentations, and the Psalmist who sat down by the rivers of Babylon and wept in Psalm 137. Perhaps most instructive is the experience of Habakkuk.
A. Habakkuk’s trouble summarized: Where is the kingdom of God? His name means "embracer" or "wrestler" and that is what he did. He lived in a day of outward religion, but he knew that most of it was just a show and a sham. At the beginning of his book, he comes before God with a complaint full of strong emotion. He is perplexed, because he sees the holy city inhabited by idolaters, deceivers, adulterers, thieves, and murderers—treacherous, violent men. His perplexity might be reduced to this question: "Where is the kingdom of God?" And so he cries out to the LORD, asking him how long he will allow this to endure. God responds, but not in the way that Habakkuk expected. The LORD tells him that he has plans to judge the wicked in the city—and he will do so by sending an invading army of Babylonians to sack it. The receipt of this information causes Habakkuk to be even more perplexed. Since God is a holy God, how could he possibly use such an unholy instrument to achieve his purposes? After asking his second question, he waits, knowing that the Lord will correct him. The reply, recorded in chapter 2, has three threads: (1) God will judge Israel, and punish Babylon, while saving a remnant of his people ("the Just shall live by his faith," 2:4); (2) the kingdom of God will ultimately triumph—"the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the LORD as the waters cover the sea" (2:14); and (3) most basically, the Lord is free to do whatever he pleases—"the LORD is in his holy temple. Let all the earth keep silence before him" (2:20). Throughout these encounters, Habakkuk is wrestling with the nature of the Kingdom of God. He knows that it is one thing, but what he sees is something quite different, and he cannot put these things together. In chapter 3, we see how he puts his perplexity into perspective. Please turn there briefly.
B. Habakkuk’s Worship: The Kingdom of God is real The inscription to the chapter is of great importance. Notice that our English translations call this a prayer of Habakkuk. It is a special kind of prayer, a tephillah. This is a word describing a special kind of composition, in which the theme is proposed at the beginning, and then opened up in the following verses. Verse 2 provides the two-fold theme: revive your work in the midst of the years, in wrath remember mercy. Verses
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3-15 expound the first of these ideas: God’s work in history; and verses 16-19 pick up the latter notion: mercy in the midst of wrath. Habakkuk humbly bows before the Lord, having heard His speech. Now he prays. His wrestling is over. Notice how this works in the two parts of the prayer. In the first section, the prophet reviews the work of God in history, highlighting three great events: creation in verses 3b-6, the exodus in verses 7-9a, and the conquest in verses 9b-15. God rules over the earth as its creator, and he ruled over the exodus and the conquest in both judgment and redemption. Habakkuk is seeking to remind God’s people (this is a liturgical prayer—apparently for public worship) that God has been active for Israel—and this is what he asks him to "revive." To carry on this work whatever it may be—whether redemption or judgment—to show his holy power and his might. In the second part of the prayer, the "wrestler" bows down before the Lord, accepting the reality of his wrath, knowing that it will be mixed with mercy. Notice how he expresses his fear in verse 16. He uses four expressions to describe the depth of his emotion: "my body trembled," "my lips quivered," rottenness entered my bones," and "I trembled in myself." We would say, "I was shaking from head to toe." Outside and inside, throughout all that he was, there was a tremendous fear. Why? Notice the first words of 16a, "when I heard." Heard what? NOT the words of 3-15, but rather of 16b— judgment—the terrible destruction of Jerusalem. He understood what was going to happen, and he was overwhelmed with emotion at the prospect. Can you blame him? How would you feel if you knew that a nuclear bomb would soon detonate near the home of your loved ones? Or if you looked up and saw a tornado on the horizon? Our author could envision the events of the future. Perhaps he imagined himself standing outside of the city, surveying its destruction. Plumes of smoke rising up to heaven; the walls breached and broken; the city gates smashed or hanging uselessly on their hinges. He sees dead bodies lying in the streets, hears the cry of the wounded and bereaved, and worst of all, contemplates pagans invading and desecrating the sanctuary of God. As he brings these things to his mind, his body is convulsed in reaction. What else but profound fear would be appropriate for a godly Jew? The prophet does not stop with his fear. In verses 17-19 he says some amazing things about the work of God. Verse 17 is of great importance. We must not miss its significance. At first glance, it may only appear to be some words about agricultural failure—but it is really much more—these words have tremendous covenantal significance. Listen to Deuteronomy 8:7-10: "7 For the LORD your God is bringing you into a good land, a land of brooks of water, of fountains and springs that flow out of valleys and hills; 8 A land of wheat, and barley, and vines, and fig trees, and pomegranates; a land of oil olive, and honey; 9 A land in which you shall eat bread without scarcity, in which you will lack nothing; a land whose stones are iron, and out of whose hills you can dig copper. 10 When you have eaten and are full, then you shall bless the LORD your God for the good land which he has given you." Here, the same type of terminology is used to describe the good blessings that belong to the land of promise. God intended that his people enjoy all the benefits of the land when they entered in. When Habakkuk used these terms, every Jew would have understood immediately his meaning. He was contemplating the end of all the good blessings of the land of milk and honey. Notice the "though" at the beginning of verse 17, and the "yet" of verse 18. Habakkuk is brought to the place in which he has changed—though all the holy land becomes a desert, yet, he will rejoice in the LORD. Nothing else matters: God is always the same God—he is always Habakkuk’s God. He has taken his eyes off of others, and off of the confusion of the events of this earth, and has placed them on God. He can rejoice in the LORD, because he is God. He will do as he pleases—he will always be our God—even when we don’t understand his purposes. Verse 19 returns again to covenantal language. (CF. 2 Sam. 22:1, 33&34). The high hills were the places of triumph in the land. This was a figure in the OT for victorious possession of the land. The high places were the last and most difficult to conquer. Those able to walk on the high hills like deer are those who have conquered and who rule the land in peace. The prophet knows what God will do.
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But, doesn’t this contradict verse 17? NO! Here Habakkuk is enabled to look beyond the judgment of Judah by the Chaldeans—he sees the ultimate triumph of God and his people over all oppression from the powers of this world. He comes to see that temporal judgments are only part of God’s plan—but they point to and ensure his victory. Though everything else may seem to fall to pieces, the LORD God will be his strength, and will make him a victor. Habakkuk is no longer a wrestler, now he is a worshipper, and a convinced believer in the ultimate victory of the kingdom of God. Habakkuk reminds us that the reign of God works in two ways. While we tend to think of it in terms of visible expressions of his glory, it is just as much evident in the judicial judgments he sends upon men. Whether he calls them out of their darkness or allows them to proceed deeper and deeper into their sin, he is acting as he pleases. And our response is to bow down before him and worship. We must not interpret the greatness of the kingdom of heaven simply in terms of our own perception of its triumph. It is much more than that. The eye of faith sees a picture much different from the eye of doubt. This is essentially the same thing that the writer to the Hebrews tells us. Turn again to chapter 2 of that book. We do not now see what we would like—all things placed under Jesus’ feet. But, with the eye of faith we see Him, and that ought to be enough. And this author immediately sets the work of Christ in a similar context: the son of man humbled himself "for the suffering of death." He had to be made perfect through sufferings. God’s plan was far different from anything that we might concoct. His experience sets the pattern for our own. In theology, or more properly Christology, we speak about the two states of Christ—suffering and glory. He learned obedience through suffering, and then rose from the dead in great glory. Our experience is the same. Now, we suffer. We endure the opposition of the world, the flesh and the devil. But all the while, we focus our eyes upon Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith. He endured the cross that was set before him, despising its shame, and now sits at God’s right hand. As we focus our attention on him —as we become more and more Christ-centered, we will lose the confusion to which we fall prey. Do we see everything now the way that we think it should be? No. But that does not mean that the kingdom of God is inactive or impotent. To the contrary, we know that He is doing as he pleases. The opposition of the men of the earth is nothing to him. The Kingdom of God is the Kingdom of Christ. He is King of Kings and Lord of Lords. While we may not see all that is happening, we need not fear that he is asleep, or uninterested, or has been deposed. God is on the throne, and His plan is proceeding as he desires. We need not fear, but be comforted. Take your eyes off of the world, and place them on Jesus Christ. Alleluia, for the Lord God Omnipotent reigns. So let us take comfort in the fact that we serve a great king. We may not see all that he is doing. The writer to the Hebrews frankly admits "we do not yet see all things put under him." But we see Jesus, conquering his enemies, one day to be recognized and confessed by all. Every knee will bow, and every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. Our task is to bring this message to the people of our generation—the secular academics, the religious formalists, the party-loving beach ‘dudes’, all of our neighbors and co-workers and schoolmates—as well as the lost in other places. To preach the Kingdom of Heaven is to preach the Lord Jesus. It is to turn men and women and boys and girls away from themselves and their self-centered lives. It is to call them to turn from their sins—to receive forgiveness in Christ—to bow down before His lordship. His kingdom is real—it is active—his enemies are being conquered. This is true hope for the future. Let us go forth with this message to a lost and dying world: "Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand." Amen
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