Jesus is a Jew,
with a Jewish name.1 Even archaeology bears this out. Some people have trouble
with this, others can’t get enough. There are hundreds of variations of belief
among those who claim to be followers of Jesus of Nazareth. Much of what he
said and did is speculation from interpretation. What all can agree on however,
is that he is God’s anointed one, in Greek we say christos, from the Hebrew Meshiach which is where we get the words Christ and Messiah. These are not
proper nouns, but titles. He was anointed to “bring salvation”, which is what
his name means; Yahweh’s salvation, or Yahweh brings salvation.
His very own words in regards to his message were, “I
have not spoken on my own initiative, but the Father who sent me has given me a
command, namely, what to say and how to say it...”2 I want to examine a little
closer what Jesus’ mission was, and what this gospel or good news was that he
preached. What is the purpose of Christianity? There are many more that could
be cited, but here are a few that point out some key elements:
“I came to call sinners to repentance” (Luke 5:32), “I
came to save that which was lost” (Luke 19:10), “he came to destroy the works of
the Devil” (1 John 3:8). There we have three important elements in the ministry
and mission of Jesus. How exactly did he do that? Luke 4:43 "I must preach
the kingdom of God… I was sent for this purpose."
Ask just about anyone what the gospel message of
salvation consists of and they will likely answer, “Jesus died for our sins,
rose from the dead and ascended to the Father”. I don’t think there have been
many people who have actually raised the question of, “is this really what the
Bible teaches”?
To see the message that Jesus proclaimed, we need to start in
Genesis. We cannot pick up in the NT in the middle of the plot, and expect to
get the entirety of the message. His message is rooted in the Hebrew
scriptures.
If we go to the gospels and read the testimony of Jesus
preaching the gospel, and remember that Jesus was commissioned by God to give
the “gospel of salvation,”3 what was it that Jesus presented to the public as
“the gospel”? Was it his death and resurrection he centered on? Not according
to Matthew, Mark and Luke.
Now I want to say up front, if there is no death and no
resurrection, our faith is pointless. His death, burial, resurrection and
atonement for sin are no doubt part of the gospel, but is that all there is to
the gospel, and is this actually what Jesus preached?
In Matthew 3:2, John the immerser came saying the same
thing, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand." What is also
interesting about John is that he even asks Jesus if he is the “coming one”4 or
should they keep looking?5 If someone of John’s caliber is preaching the “good
news/gospel” shouldn’t he more so than anyone know the death and resurrection
theme?
Mark 1:14-15 Jesus picks up the same theme John had been
announcing; “the kingdom”. Jesus makes his first imperative declaration by
saying, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and
believe in the gospel." If this is the foundation of the gospel, God’s
kingdom, then we could safely say that the death and resurrection is what
unfolded as time went on.
The problem is that there seems to be a divergence from
the gospel that Jesus preached and the gospel that many modern Christians
preach. What is the this kingdom of God that he preached?
Jesus was proclaiming this kingdom of God message in the Galilee, and it
is clear that the audience of Jesus (in the Galilee)6 was privy to this
kingdom. All of the prophets had foretold of this kingdom, especially Daniel,
and they had great expectancy of a time when God would rule through the “coming
messianic figure”, in Jerusalem on the throne of David. Jesus never redefines
the kingdom as anything other than what the prophets had said. The Sadducees
knew, for they opposed any prophets as being from God. They only accepted the
Torah 7 and nothing further. They also denied any type of bodily resurrection,
which we find is a key element in the kingdom and life in the “age to come”.
It is important to note, that at this point, he did not
say a word about his death and resurrection. He has commanded repentance (which
is an about turn; a change of course; a new direction) and to believe and grab
a hold on the gospel of the kingdom of God.
In Luke 4:43, he gives us the very reason for his
ministry: "I must preach (proclaim) the kingdom of God…I was sent for this
purpose." In Luke 9:2, 6 Jesus is sending his disciples with the same
gospel message, “And He sent them out to proclaim the kingdom of God…departing,
they began going throughout the villages, preaching the gospel…”
What was this message about? Was it about the death and
resurrection of Jesus? Absolutely not! It is known to serious readers of the
Jesus story that he preached “the gospel”, and what is a startling fact when
you examine in detail his context and his content,8 you find that he is not
talking about his death, burial and resurrection at all. That should have bells
and whistles going off. It is clear he is preaching the gospel, but he is not
saying at that point anything about his death, and what is even more amazing is
that when he does reveal his death and resurrection privately in the last third
of his ministry (Matthew 16, Luke 18); his disciples did not believe it, “But the
disciples understood none of these things, and the meaning of this statement
was hidden from them, and they did not comprehend the things that were said.”
They had been preaching “the gospel” message the Jesus preached.9
In Matthew, Mark and Luke if you add up the chapters
where Jesus’ ministry is described, and where Jesus is this tireless “itinerant
preacher” of the gospel of the kingdom, you will come up with about 30. If this
message of the gospel is just about the death and resurrection, why does it say
that “He warned the disciples that they should tell no one that He was the Messiah - Christ. From that time Jesus began to show His disciples that He must go to
Jerusalem, and suffer many things from the elders and chief priests and
scribes, and be killed, and be raised up on the third day. 10 This is when
Jesus begins talking about death and resurrection. If this is not so, and he
and his disciples had been proclaiming his death and resurrection, why then
after Jesus’ revelation of this to his disciples does Matthew record this:
“Peter took Him aside and began to rebuke Him, saying, "God forbid it,
Lord! This shall never happen to You."11 This is not exactly a likely
response from someone who had been out proclaiming that this Jesus is going to
die for your sins! This is obviously news to Peter, it took him by complete
surprise and blew him away. This reaction to me is puzzling if in fact Jesus
had been preaching about his death and resurrection in “the gospel”. So that
begs the question, “what was Jesus preaching about”?
In Matthew 4:17, “Jesus began to preach and say,
"Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand." Then also in verse
23, “Jesus was going throughout all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues and
proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom, and healing every kind of disease and
every kind of sickness among the people.”12 In chapter 4 of Matthew he is
preaching the kingdom, and in chapter 9 he is still preaching that same
kingdom. He was teaching the people how to live (i.e. sermon on the mount) like
“kingdom” citizens, or as someone who was destined to participate in the coming
kingdom that he was so clearly proclaiming. And to be fair, these passages I
have brought up are by far not isolated. Jesus came beating the kingdom of God
drum.
After Jesus’ death and resurrection, there is no doubt
that the fulfillments of the prophecies “proving”13 that Jesus was the messiah
were added to the gospel, and was preached.14 The gospel of the kingdom was
still the name for the gospel, but now it had been further illuminated in light
of Jesus’ resurrection, and was incorporated into the message of the “kingdom”.
What remains clear is that the good news of the kingdom of God/Heaven,15 was
still the primary message. “But when they believed Philip preaching the good
news about the kingdom of God and the name of Jesus Christ, they were being
baptized, men and women alike” (Acts 8:12). Paul “entered the synagogue and
continued speaking out boldly for three months, reasoning and persuading them
about the kingdom of God” (Acts 19:8). Paul “was explaining to them by solemnly
testifying about the kingdom of God and trying to persuade them concerning
Jesus, from both the Law of Moses and from the Prophets, from morning until
evening…he stayed two full years in his own rented quarters and was welcoming
all who came to him, preaching the kingdom of God and teaching concerning the
Lord Jesus Messiah - Christ with all openness, unhindered” (Acts 28:23, 30, 31). Paul
just like Jesus (Luke 4:43), said, “my course and the ministry which I received
from the Lord Jesus, to testify solemnly of the gospel of the grace of God… I
went about preaching the kingdom…For I did not shrink from declaring to you the
whole purpose of God” (Acts 20:24-27). For Paul, the kingdom was the “whole
purpose of God”.
Jesus’ death and resurrection are a vital part of the
gospel, but they are not the whole gospel. We all know and have heard, “Your
kingdom come”. We were taught to pray for something to come. This is the first
definition Jesus gives to the kingdom of God. It is the time in the future when
God introduces His revolutionary government and reigns with the hand of the one
He has appointed/anointed, and shalom will prevail for the first time since the
garden of God. We are all longing for this, whether we know it or not. This is
a global theme and very participatory for all the saints, according to the
prophets.
The parables that the messiah taught included teaching about
stewardship as preparatory steps in recruiting rulers of this kingdom. Even the
twelve disciples were told that they would judge the twelve tribes of Israel.
The time which we now live is essentially a training ground for a future time
when we will become rulers with the messiah.
The gospel of the kingdom has already come in one sense
in the
hearts and minds of those who “love his appearing”.16 In the same sense,
a word from the Almighty can be spoken in the “prophetic perfect” tense of
already happening, because it is as good as if it already has (Revelation 13 “lamb
slaughtered before the world was founded”). The gospel of the kingdom is not
something that originated with Jesus either, but has been coming and will
culminate in the future.17 It will come “with birth pains”. Does the church
today hold a different gospel than that which Jesus taught?
The kingdom message could be described as everything
wrong with the world being made right; God’s will being done on earth, as it
already is done in heaven.
The story of the kingdom is found in Genesis to
Revelation. God made the earth good. God put man on earth and in the garden to
manage it, enjoy it, have dominance over it and be with God in intimacy. God
dwelt with man in perfection, everything was right, there was safety, shalom;
no violence.
Everything was in its proper sphere. Man chose to go
against God’s instruction, and since the times of old, God has been putting the
pieces in place to restore it once again. Jesus has become the ultimate ruler
of God’s kingdom, having won it back through obedience, 18 and this is our
hope; for if God raised Jesus, He can raise us as well.19 This kingdom will be
handed back to the Father as Paul states, “then comes the end, when He hands
over the kingdom to the God and Father, when He has abolished all rule and all
authority and power. For He must reign until He has put all His enemies under
His feet” (1 Corinthians 15).
Restoration is the word. The hope of the believer is not
to escape “hell” and enter “heaven”, this is foreign to the message of the
gospel. It is the hope of the resurrection or parousia. 20 It is the hope of
the kingdom that the messiah inaugurated through the anointing of the Father,
and will culminate in his return to earth with the resurrected saints to bring
about the shalom that has been promised from the very beginning. He has placed
this kingdom in/on our hearts and we can live in the peace of that kingdom, and
spread tastes of that kingdom even as Jesus himself did when he did “the works
of his Father”. It’s not that are to cope with “nasty now and now” with hope of
a “sweet by and by”, our joy can be full now. He has given us the power, the
strength, the armor and the tools, to “overcome the world”. This starts first
and foremost with love (Mark 12:30-31, John 13:35). It is the Fathers love,
because we cannot give what we don’t have. The messiah has placed this
“kingdom” work on us as his followers. What is it we preach? Do we desire to
see, “the period of restoration of all things about which God spoke by the
mouth of His holy prophets from ancient time” (Acts 3:21)?
This has been by no means an exhaustive study of the
kingdom. I am sure I cannot do it justice, but I do hope that we can all come
to the reality that there have been and continue to be important elements
neglected from the entirety of the gospel. Do we want to sound like Jesus when
we speak? Do we want to be on board with God’s plan? This messiah will return
and all his saints with him.21 Christians are also commanded to preach that
same gospel of the kingdom (Matt. 28:19-20; Luke 9:60). How well are we doing
with this task? How well are you doing?
1 Yeshua
2 John 12:49
3 Heb 2:3
4 Zech 9:9, Mal 4:5, Matt 11:3, Luke 7:19-20
5 There is much more to this exchange between John and
Jesus, but it is not pertinent to this discussion.
6 Most of Jesus ministry took place in what is called the
“triangle”. It is a 3x3x3 mile area comprising of the towns of Chorazin,
Bethsaida, and Capernaum.
7 Books of Moses Pentateuch
8 His content came from the Father, and right out of what
most of us call the “old testament”, the Hebrew scriptures
9 Luke 9:6, 60; 10:9
10 Matt 16:20-21
11 Matt 16:22
12 Matt 9:35 is very similar
13 Acts 3, 4, 13, 17
14 i.e. 1 Cor 15
16 2 Tim 4:8
17 This is quite fascinating, but it is quite a rabbit
trail. If you want, look at all the times Jesus makes reference to the kingdom
of Heaven/God is like… and see if you can find the place in the old testament
he may be referencing.
18 Acts 2, Heb 5
19 Acts 17, 2 Cor 4:14
20 Second coming
21 Jude 14
Written by Shaun Rufener edited by Bruce Lyon
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