Buff Scott Jr.
Junior
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2023
- Messages
- 378
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“THE KINGDOM AGE”
[Is it future or is it current?]
[PART 2 - Finale]
[Is it future or is it current?]
[PART 2 - Finale]
Let’s begin by affirming that Heaven’s testimony validates the truth that the kingdom [reign] of God existed in the first century of the redeemed community. Certain converts of Philip were immersed after Philip told them the “good news of the kingdom of God and the name of Jesus Christ” [Acts 8:12]. Here the acceptance of the Good News and the Kingdom of God are aligned. Paul argued persuasively about the kingdom of God for three months [Acts 19:8]. The context places everything current at the time and in the present tense.
The apostle Paul synthesized the Kingdom of Christ and the Kingdom of God when he wrote, “No immoral, impure or greedy person—such a man is an idolater—has no inheritance in the Kingdom of Christ and of God” [Eph. 5:5].
Here the Kingdom is credited to belonging to both God the Father and Jesus the Son—in other words, one and the same Kingdom or reign. And this was in the first century! Paul spoke of certain Jews who were “workers for the Kingdom of God” [Col. 4:11]. This is set in the present tense—the first century.
John says we are [present tense] a “kingdom of priests” [Rev. 1:6]. Peter says we are “a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood” [I Peter 2:5]. Jesus’ current reign consists of a holy priesthood. Every believer is a priest. We offer up our own sacrifices through our High Priest, Jesus Christ.
Jesus told Pilate, “My kingdom is not of this world” [John 18:36]. “My kingdom” is in the possessive tense. Jesus is saying, and the context confirms it, “My kingdom is not like kingdoms of this world.” Jesus even admitted to being a King [v. 37]. Our Lord has always, since the geneses of the human family, been King. There has always been a kingdom—in every era. The holy nation of believers is simply another phase of the Lord’s kingdom and His Kingship.
The core of my projection is that God’s new or current kingdom [reign], the kingdom of Christ, was ushered in on the first Pentecost following the ascension of our Lord, as chronicled in Acts 2. Prior to that occasion, the new reign or kingdom is alluded to as a future event. But after Acts 2, it is referred to in the present tense. Jesus took his place on “David’s throne” [symbolically speaking] as King of the new kingdom [Acts 2:30-31].
As there can be no kingdom without a king, there can be no king without a kingdom. If Jesus is now King, and he is, He has a kingdom. He reigns in the hearts of his subjects, redeemed believers. “The kingdom [reign] is within you,” Jesus told his followers. Peter speaks of an “entrance into the eternal kingdom” or Heaven itself [2 Peter 1:11]. That “eternal kingdom” is an extension of our current kingdom, the redeemed community.
So why would our Lord return to Planet Earth to reign as King for a thousand literal years, as is assumed by many believers [chiefly Baptist believers], when He is now King of His kingdom on Planet Earth and has been for over 2,000 years? Consequently, the following quotations from a future terrestrial kingdom advocate is as fictitious as biblical “dreams” can be:
“We must remember that while we have been privileged to witness the rebirth of the Nation of Israel, this is not the Kingdom age...Let’s study what the Bible says about the Kingdom of God and the Messiah’s role in restoring God’s Kingdom on Earth.”
“Jacob dreamed he saw a ladder that reached to heaven” and “angels were ascending and descending upon it” [Gen. 28:12]. His dream was initiated by Divine providence. It is my persuasion that too many of my brothers have contrived their own dream of a future kingdom that reaches across the horizons of earthly cultures but not to Heaven—a dream not launched by Divine providence.
The apostle Paul synthesized the Kingdom of Christ and the Kingdom of God when he wrote, “No immoral, impure or greedy person—such a man is an idolater—has no inheritance in the Kingdom of Christ and of God” [Eph. 5:5].
Here the Kingdom is credited to belonging to both God the Father and Jesus the Son—in other words, one and the same Kingdom or reign. And this was in the first century! Paul spoke of certain Jews who were “workers for the Kingdom of God” [Col. 4:11]. This is set in the present tense—the first century.
John says we are [present tense] a “kingdom of priests” [Rev. 1:6]. Peter says we are “a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood” [I Peter 2:5]. Jesus’ current reign consists of a holy priesthood. Every believer is a priest. We offer up our own sacrifices through our High Priest, Jesus Christ.
Jesus told Pilate, “My kingdom is not of this world” [John 18:36]. “My kingdom” is in the possessive tense. Jesus is saying, and the context confirms it, “My kingdom is not like kingdoms of this world.” Jesus even admitted to being a King [v. 37]. Our Lord has always, since the geneses of the human family, been King. There has always been a kingdom—in every era. The holy nation of believers is simply another phase of the Lord’s kingdom and His Kingship.
The core of my projection is that God’s new or current kingdom [reign], the kingdom of Christ, was ushered in on the first Pentecost following the ascension of our Lord, as chronicled in Acts 2. Prior to that occasion, the new reign or kingdom is alluded to as a future event. But after Acts 2, it is referred to in the present tense. Jesus took his place on “David’s throne” [symbolically speaking] as King of the new kingdom [Acts 2:30-31].
As there can be no kingdom without a king, there can be no king without a kingdom. If Jesus is now King, and he is, He has a kingdom. He reigns in the hearts of his subjects, redeemed believers. “The kingdom [reign] is within you,” Jesus told his followers. Peter speaks of an “entrance into the eternal kingdom” or Heaven itself [2 Peter 1:11]. That “eternal kingdom” is an extension of our current kingdom, the redeemed community.
So why would our Lord return to Planet Earth to reign as King for a thousand literal years, as is assumed by many believers [chiefly Baptist believers], when He is now King of His kingdom on Planet Earth and has been for over 2,000 years? Consequently, the following quotations from a future terrestrial kingdom advocate is as fictitious as biblical “dreams” can be:
“We must remember that while we have been privileged to witness the rebirth of the Nation of Israel, this is not the Kingdom age...Let’s study what the Bible says about the Kingdom of God and the Messiah’s role in restoring God’s Kingdom on Earth.”
“Jacob dreamed he saw a ladder that reached to heaven” and “angels were ascending and descending upon it” [Gen. 28:12]. His dream was initiated by Divine providence. It is my persuasion that too many of my brothers have contrived their own dream of a future kingdom that reaches across the horizons of earthly cultures but not to Heaven—a dream not launched by Divine providence.