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The Kingdom of God
What
does the “Kingdom of God” mean? I suspect all Christians would give a
differing answer, for theories are plentiful. Some say that the kingdom
of God was an entirely spiritual phenomenon. Verses such as Luke 17:21,
with Jesus proclaiming that the kingdom of God is within you, indicates
some kind of spiritual aspect to the kingdom. The spiritual phenomenon
is almost always identified as salvation, and being born again. Another
idea is that the kingdom of God is everything that belongs to God and
will be answerable to him (such as people), and thus the kingdom is God
(as the creator) looking over his created kingdom. Others take a more
literal and concrete conception of the kingdom, and define it as the
coming reign that God will over the earth (known as the “millennium”),
following the tribulation that culminates in the Second Coming of Jesus
Christ.
There
is one last theory, which focuses more on the political and social
circumstance of Christ’s sayings, and one that I believe is far more
accurate and realistic. The Kingdom of God,
for John the Baptist and Jesus Christ was imminent, social, but at the
same time was concerned with a person’s inner being. Since John the
Baptist’s message was that the son of God was coming, it makes most
sense that when he spoke “the kingdom of God is at hand” he is telling his listeners that the son of God will usher in the kingdom of God with him. Speaking of the kingdom of God as something far in the future, or a portion of God’s creation is missing the point of the phrase. Jesus preached the kingdom of God, and it was revealed to Israel through the life of Jesus and later on the lives of his disciples.
This
is by no means a thorough study of what the phrase exactly means, but
one specific passage stood out to me as revealing Christ’s conception
of the kingdom. It is Luke 22:24-29:
24 And there was also a strife among them, which of them should be accounted the greatest.
25 And
he said unto them, The kings of the Gentiles exercise lordship over
them; and they that exercise authority upon them are called benefactors.
26 But
ye shall not be so: but he that is greatest among you, let him be as
the younger; and he that is chief, as he that doth serve.
27 For
whether is greater, he that sitteth at meat, or he that serveth? is not
he that sitteth at meat? but I am among you as he that serveth.
28 Ye are they which have continued with me in my temptations.
29 And I appoint unto you a kingdom, as my Father hath appointed unto me;
Here,
the disciples are beginning to bickerover which will receive the
highest honour in the new social order that Jesus was preaching. Jesus’
response was interesting, as he did not deny that he was seeking to
bring about a new social order. Rather, the disciples were rebuked for
misunderstanding the nature of the kingdom of God that Jesus was initiating. The kingdom of God
is social, and it is visible, but it is not based on temporal power and
authority (Jesus gave the example of the Gentiles and the rulers of
this world lording over their subjects in their kingdoms.). Instead, it
was based on servitude and altruism. Trying to overcome the disciples
apparent lust for honour, prestige, and power, Jesus said that in his
kingdom the greatest among them shall serve the others.
Jesus
himself proved to be the ultimate example of this. The most striking
example is when Jesus washed the feet of his disciples with his hair.
Found in John 13:1-20, Jesus, the lord of his disciples, showed
complete humility and humbleness by serving his followers in this way.
Peter’s reaction again demonstrated how the disciples did not
understand that Christ’s kingdom was not a typical one based on
traditional authority, but on self-sacrifice. As followers of Christ,
we are supposed to emanate the kingdom of God
as a social entity, one based on love, forgiveness, and humility. Since
over the centuries the ideals of Jesus have been separated from the
ideals of “Christianity”, the challenge of achieving this is greater
now than it ever has been.
-- By Timothy Neal
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