SPECIAL TOPIC: THE KINGDOM OF GOD
In the OT YHWH was thought of as the King of Israel (cf. 1 Sam. 8:7; Ps.
10:16; 24:7-9; 29:10; 44:4; 89:18; 95:3; Isa. 43:15; 44:6) and the Messiah as
the ideal king (cf. Ps. 2:6; Isa. 9:6-7; 11:1-5). With the birth of Jesus at
Bethlehem (6-4 b.c.) the kingdom of God broke into human history with new power
and redemption (new covenant, cf. Jer. 31:31-34; Ezek. 36:27-36). John the
Baptist proclaimed the nearness of the kingdom (cf. Matt. 3:2; Mark 1:15). Jesus
clearly taught that the kingdom was present in Himself and His teachings (cf.
Matt. 4:17,23; 10:7; 12:28; Luke 10:9,11;
11:20; 17:21; 21:31-32). Yet the kingdom is also future (cf. Matt. 16:28;
24:14; 26:29; Mark 9:1; Luke 21:31; 22:16,18).
In the Synoptic parallels in Mark and Luke we find the phrase, “the
kingdom of God.” This was a common topic of Jesus’ teachings involved the present
reign of God in human’s hearts, which one day will be consummated over all the
earth. This is reflected in Jesus’ prayer in Matt. 6:10. Matthew, writing to
Jews, preferred the phrase that did not use the name of God (i.e., Kingdom of Heaven),
while Mark and Luke, writing to Gentiles, used the common designation, employing
the name of deity.
This is such a key phrase in the Synoptic Gospels. Jesus’ first and last
sermons, and most of His parables, dealt with this topic. It refers to the reign
of God in human hearts now! It is surprising that John uses this phrase only
twice (and never in Jesus’ parables). In John’s gospel “eternal life”is a key
metaphor.
The tension with this phrase is caused by the two comings of Christ. The
OT focused only on one coming of God’s Messiah—a military, judgmental, glorious
coming—but the NT shows that He came the first time as the Suffering Servant of
Isaiah 53 and the humble king of Zech. 9:9. The two Jewish ages, the age of
wickedness and the new age of righteousness, overlap. Jesus currently reigns in
the hearts of believers, but will one day reign over all creation. He will come
like the OT predicted (cf. Revelation 19)! Believers live in “the already” versus “the not yet” of
the kingdom of God (cf. Gordon D. Fee and Douglas Stuart’s How to Read The Bible
For All Its Worth, pp. 131-134).
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