Friday, November 30, 2012

LCS Devotions: Kingdom

With credit to Dr. Wright:


A few years ago I noticed how often I came up against the phrase “Kingdom of Heaven” in my reading of the New Testament. It bothered me that I understood the term in only a shadowy sort of way, especially since it seemed always to be connected to Jesus. We don’t sing about it very often in our songs, and I noticed that when Christians talk about the “gospel”—a term which was almost always connected to the “good news of the kingdom” in the New Testament—we have a lot to say about atonement theology and almost nothing to say about this “kingdom of Heaven,” at least not in any way connected to mustard seeds and pearls of great price. In each of the synoptic gospels, Jesus talked about the kingdom almost exclusively. In fact, the first words of his public ministry were “Repent, for the kingdom of Heaven is near.” (I take it for granted, by the way, that kingdom of Heaven is an interchangeable term with kingdom of God, but that Matthew, observing Jewish scruples, didn’t write the name of God.)

So what might this kingdom of God be about? I’ve heard several explanations that I find unconvincing. Most commonly, that the phrase “kingdom of Heaven” is a shorthand way of expressing “getting saved and going to heaven when you die.” That’s not a bad guess based on what most of us think Jesus was concerned with, but when you try to plug that meaning into the actual texts it doesn’t fit. In the big mainline churches you’ll hear a lot about the kingdom of God when people talk about soup kitchens and other types of humanitarian work. I think that the kingdom work is certainly no less than that, but I’m also pretty sure that it’s more than kindness to small children, old ladies, and stray dogs. It isn’t inner peace of mind, and even though there’s certainly an eschatological element to Jesus’ kingdom teaching, it doesn’t seem to be about the destruction of the space-time continuum either. So if it isn’t “getting saved and going to heaven,” and it isn’t “doing acts of kindness and making the world a better place,” what might this kingdom project be?

If we only had the New Testament documents to examine, it would be hard to answer that question, because no one at any point in the New Testament stops and writes out an exact definition of what the kingdom would look like and why everyone is so excited about it. We do, however, have plenty of other sources from the time and culture of the New Testament, and they are also filled with writings about the kingdom. After looking at those sorts of sources, starting with the literature of the Maccabees, we can get a much clearer picture of what the Jewish expectations were concerning the kingdom of God, and the ways in which Jesus was in continuity with those hopes and also in subversion of those hopes.

The major problems for the Jewish people in the last few centuries B.C. were their Temple, their Land, and their Torah. If you picture yourself as a citizen in the American colonies in the years before the Revolutionary war, you might be getting close to the Jewish mindset about being ruled by the Romans and by their puppet government, the Hasmonean dynasty. (the Herods of the New Testament) In this political climate the people began to talk of the Kingdom of God over and against the Kingdom of Rome. This wasn’t a spiritual or abstract idea at all—the Jews firmly believed that YHWH was their one true ruler and hoped for his enthronement (and Caesar’s defeat) in real time and in the real world. Furthermore, the temple had to be the place for their god-king. Even though a temple had been built when they returned from the Babylonian exile, the presence of YHWH had never returned to dwell there as it had during the time of Solomon when Israel was a mighty nation and YHWH did rule them through his servant-kings. Last of all, the land and the people had to be cleansed of their pagan impurities, most likely through a return to faithful observance of Torah, against the Roman and Hellenistic encroachments on true Torah-keeping. In short, as long as YHWH had not returned to the temple, the kingdom of God had not yet come. As long as the pagans ruled over Israel, the kingdom of God had not yet come. As long as the whole nation of Israel did not keep Torah together, the kingdom had not yet come. As long as the kingdom was not brought by God’s Messiah, the kingdom had not yet come. The kingdom of God hopes in 1st century Israel were concrete and specific. To sum up, the Jewish expectation of the kingdom of God was the saving sovereignty of the covenant god exercised in the vindication of Israel and the overthrow of her enemies.

If we fast-forward 60 years or so from this picture to the letters of the early Christians, we see that something curious has happened. The disciples of Jesus and the first wave of Christians are also talking about the kingdom, but in a different sort of way. Imagine a 5-act play. If the Jews were talking about the kingdom as Act 3—awaiting the climax in Act 4 so that they could get onto the business of putting everything right in Act 5—the early Christians had relocated themselves to Act 5. According to them, the kingdom of God had already arrived, and while there was plenty yet to do and certainly some very important eschatological hopes, there was no doubt for them that Jesus had inaugurated God’s reign in a way that fulfilled Israel’s hopes according to the scriptures. Most curiously, the kingdom story was now told with those Jewish hopes reshaped—Israel was no longer the holy land of the covenant god and his people, but now the whole world. The temple in Jerusalem was no longer the dwelling place of the covenant god, but his spirit lived physically in his followers. Torah was no longer the boundary marker of the covenant people and their code for holiness, but grace and forgiveness instead. No one talked of Caesar’s power as something that YHWH would overthrow—in Jesus, it had been overthrown.

What then do we make of Jesus? Was his language about the kingdom a collection of religious teachings about love and grace, preferring inner observance of the heart over outward legal codes? In the context of the writings before and after him, I think we get a more historical and comprehensible alternative. He began his ministry with the announcement of the kingdom arrival. He told short stories and parables about what the kingdom would look like—a mustard seed, yeast, a sower sowing seed, treasure in a field, a merchant looking for pearls. Many of these stories illustrate how the kingdom would grow through a tiny remnant, others how the kingdom-bringer would suffer and be vindicated. He called disciples to himself and acted in highly symbolic ways to evoke Israel’s history. He emphasized that the nearness of the kingdom ought to bring repentance. He told his followers to seek the kingdom first, and to pray that it would come “on earth as it is in heaven.” He said that the kingdom would suffer violence and violent men would try to take it. He said only those born of water and the spirit would enter it. He talked of the new covenant people as critical to the kingdom task. He cleansed the temple of impurities and redefined observance to Torah. Finally, approaching Jerusalem to die, he mourned over the city since it did not know the time of its visitation—it did not know when or how YHWH was returning to the holy city.

How do we make sense of this in any sort of way for our own day? As the people of Jesus, what do we make of a kingdom that Jesus told us to seek first and to pray for on earth as in heaven if that kingdom story was so far removed from us historically and locally? To be frank, I have more questions than answers, and I ask for and invite everyone’s ideas about how this might look. If we begin to engage with Jesus’ kingdom teaching it does enrich our understanding of the cross and resurrection—surely these events were not merely for private salvation and the expiation of personal guilt (although they weren’t anything less than that either) but in some way the cross brings the kingdom. It is the kingdom of God that defeats evil. It is the kingdom of God that brings YHWH into dwelling with his people. It is the kingdom of God that reclaims the whole creation for his dominion. It is the kingdom of God that rewrites the rules on money, sex, and power. It is the kingdom—the reign of God, and of his Messiah, that speaks into any politics we would try to run on our own, Christian or not. And, I believe, it is the kingdom of God that we must make our central task as teachers of young Christians, whether that be through music, math, or Bible. As fellow citizens of that kingdom, I can’t wait to see what that looks like. Let us pray.

Heavenly father, we pray that you would instruct us what is your kingdom and that by your spirit we would have the understanding to seek it first. We pray that your kingdom would come in this world as it is in heaven, and we thank you in all joy and praise that you have made this possible by the victory of your son Jesus. Help us, father, to be imitators of Jesus in all we do, and we pray that we would be worthy dwellings of your spirit. We pray for our students and the work we have before us today. In your great and holy name, Amen.

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