The
As Luke opens up Acts he
addresses it to the same person that the Gospel was addressed, a man by the
name of Theophilus. So this is really the Gospel of Luke part two, or the
Gospel of Luke is Acts part one. It is all just part one and part two of the
same story by the same writer. As Luke is writing to Theophilus, especially at
the beginning, there are terms and phrases that are used that assume that we know
something from having already read part one. That is true of the phrase that we
will run into now.
Acts 1:3 NASB
“To these He also presented Himself alive after His suffering, by many
convincing proofs, appearing to them over {a period of} forty days and speaking
of the things concerning the
The Greek
word for “kingdom” that is used is basileia
[basileia] and it refers to a royal administration
or ruling over an entity. So it always involves the authority to rule, it
always involves a group of people who are ruled over, and it involves the ruler
himself. These three things have to come together in order for there to be a
kingdom.
The usage of
the term “
Most of the
time when we hear people talk about Matthew the focus is: Matthew is writing to
present Jesus as the Messiah, the King. He is doing that but even more so he is
answering the question: because Jesus is the Messiah and we expect the King, why
didn’t the King come in? One of the phrases used from the Old Testament related
to the kingdom has to do with the kingdom of heaven, so this would have
significance more for a Jewish audience than a Gentile audience.
To
understand this word, being Theophilus, where do you go to figure out what this
word meant? You would go to Luke. Luke had already written concerning the birth
and the life of the Lord Jesus Christ. The first time we see the phrase in Luke
is
The first
thing that Gabriel said was that He would be called Yeshua (Heb.), which comes from the verb Yasha meaning to deliver or to save. It is the same root as in the
name Joshua and so this indicates His purpose in His human life: that He has
come to save His people. Secondly, Gabriel says that He will be great,
magnified. Third, he says that he will be called the Son of the Most High. This
is really important to understand because the phrase “Most High” in the
Septuagint which is normally used in the Septuagint to translate the phrase El Elyon, the tile “God the Most High”
in the Hebrew and indicates full deity. When Son of” in front of this, this is
a typical Hebrew idiom not who one’s father was but the point that he has the
same identical characteristics. So Son of the Most High means He, Jesus, had
the identical characteristics, all of the attributes of the Most High. We will
come back to the term “Son of Man” where there is that same emphasis, that He
is full humanity. So these phrases “Son of God” and “Son of Man” are titles that
talk about the attributes and characteristics that are very special to the Lord
Jesus Christ. Then fourth, he states that He will be given the throne of His
father David. That is important because of the promise that God made to David
in the Davidic covenant, that his dynasty would be established forever and his
kingdom would be established forever, and the only way there can be an eternal
dynasty and an eternal kingdom is if there is a person who rules who is
eternal; He will not die. So this is the first hint or foreshadowing of the
fact that the person who will reign on the throne of David will be something
other than a finite human; He will be eternal.
He will be
given the throne of His father David. That takes us back to the Davidic
covenant and promise in 2 Samuel 7; Psalm 89:3, 4; Psalm 89:28, 29. The verses
in Psalm 89 is a meditation on the Davidic covenant. Then we are told that He
will reign over the house of Jacob forever. “House of Jacob” is an alternate
name for
So the first
time that we have word “kingdom” mentioned in Luke is in the announcement of
the birth of Jesus by the angel Gabriel, and it makes it clear that He is going
to come and will rule over a physical kingdom that is connected to the kingdom
of David. If you are Jewish and you hear at this time about the
The second
use of “kingdom” in the Gospel of Luke is found in chapter four. Luke
What is the
Some of the
false concepts:
1.
The
first is that the phrase “
2.
That
this refers to a purely earthly socio-economic utopia brought in through human
means. Marx picked up on this idea of this kind of utopic state and sort of
massaged it and brought it into his Marxist philosophy that eventually the
workers will overcome the capitalists and bring in the utopic state. This was
picked up in what was called the social gospel at the end of the 19th
century. Liberal theology and the social gospel movement stared to pick up
socialistic ideas for social justice, various Marxist ideas, and the idea that
the role of the church is to bring in the kingdom. This is a liberal post-millennial
view rather than a conservative post-millennial view—evangelicals who believe
in the Bible, that it is the literal Word of God, but they just believe that
Jesus comes at the end of the Millennium, that the church will bring it in but
it is done through the power of the Holy Spirit, it is not a manipulative
thing. But in the liberal view of post-millennialism it done through
government, social programs, the church’s primary mission is to solve the
problems of poverty, disease, etc. It comes out of the late 19th
century and it fits within the rise of progressivism that was taking place at
the same time. It borrows the idea of a future perfect state but then it twists
it into something that is different.
3.
Another
view of the
4.
A
view we may run into among some evangelicals is that the
5.
Then
there is the view that the
Sometimes
these will be mixed together but they are the basic ones.
If we are
going to think about a kingdom there are some basic inherent concepts: three
key things that are part of the idea of having a kingdom:
1.
The
right to rule or the authority, the sovereignty or the dominion of the ruler
over a domain. It may not be exercised yet but what you just have is the
authority that is given to a ruler. For example, Luke 19:11-17 we have a
parable that Jesus tells of a nobleman who goes off to a far country to receive
for himself a kingdom, and then he will return. So he is given the authority
when he goes off to the far country but he doesn’t have the domain yet until he
returns. That is a very important parable for understanding the principle that
Jesus is going to leave and go to heaven at the ascension and when he is gone
He will be given the authority but it is not until He returns and exercises
that authority that there will be the kingdom. This is an important parable
showing that we are not in any form of the kingdom today. The kingdom is
something that is future. The idea is that someone is invested with authority
to rule but they are not exercising it yet.
2.
A
domain or realm. There is a realm and then there are people, subjects to rule
over. Matthew 21:43; Mark 1:15 talk about the people that will be in the
kingdom or the people that won’t be in the kingdom. Then in Acts 1:6 NASB
“So when they had come together, they were asking Him, saying, ‘Lord, is it at
this time You are restoring the kingdom to
3.
It is
a realm that is ruled in reality. In other words, it is not just a potential or
possible rule. When the nobleman goes off to a far country and is invested with
the authority it is not until it is activated or exercised that there is a
kingdom. That parable was based on a real historical situation. When Herod
Antipas went to
The next
thing we have to understand about the
It is
timeless. Psalm
This is a
universal reign, it is not limited to a reign over the house of
Daniel
chapter four has two or three key statements. This is the chapter where God
challenged the arrogance of Nebuchadnezzar who thought that he was the great ruler
and had all of this power from his own effort. So God humbled him by turning
him into basically an animal for seven years. The purpose of this was to teach
Nebuchadnezzar that he ruled by the authority of God. Daniel
Amos 9:2 NASB
“Though they dig into Sheol, From there will My hand take them; And though they
ascend to heaven, From there will I bring them down.” All of this is to
emphasize the rule of God as timeless and universal. That is one meaning of the
word “kingdom.”
Then we have
another period which is described by Jesus in His parables in Matthew 13—the
parable of the sower, the parable of the wheat and the tares, the parable of
the pearl of great price, and several others—and they all talk about different
mysteries of the kingdom. What is important to understand here is that in some
English translations there is the translation “mystery form of the kingdom.”
What kingdom are they talking about? They are talking about the Messianic
kingdom. So are we talking about a form of the kingdom or just about previously
undisclosed information about the kingdom? He is talking about mysteries or
something that hasn’t been disclosed. What He is revealing at that point is
that the kingdom has been postponed because in the previous chapter the
Pharisees and the Sadducees had accused Him of using the power of Satan to do
all of His miracles and this indicated the ultimate rejection by the people of
the offer of the kingdom. So starting in Matthew 13 Jesus begins to cloak His
teaching in parables so that those who are negative won’t understand what He is
talking about and those who are positive will understand and respond to the
truth. Now He is going to talk about the fact that before the kingdom comes
some other things are going to happen, and he is going to describe the
characteristics of the intervening period of time between the time of the
ascension and the time that He returns and establishes His kingdom. So this is
the period of the mysteries, the church age. Then when Jesus returns at the
Second Advent He will establish His kingdom. This is when there will be a King
who has been given the authority by God to rule, the people over whom He will
rule, i.e. those who have believed in the gospel, and there is a domain which
is the land that God promised to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and the twelve
tribes are given their new allotments in the Millennial kingdom based on the
divisions given in Ezekiel chapters 40-42. Then there is the last phase of the
eternal theocratic kingdom in the new heavens and the new earth.
Then there
is the provision of an eternal dynastic rule, and that is really the foundation
for understanding all of the prophecies in the Old Testament that point to a
future Jewish kingdom that is ruled from Jerusalem by this person who is
referred to as the Messiah. The use of the word Mashiach, the Hebrew word for Messiah, which means anointed or
appointed one, and it is translated into Greek with the Greek word for anointed
appointed one, christos [xristoj]. This term emphasizes Jesus as the
anointed one but the use of the phrase Mashiach
for this Davidic ruler is limited to only four or five or six passages in the
Old Testament. That doesn’t diminish its significance but He is usually
referred to in terms of His role as the son of David, as the one who comes from
the root of Jesse, the one who will fulfill this Davidic covenant. So the
Davidic covenant in 2 Samuel 7 is extremely important.
If we are
not well grounded in the Old Testament then it is very difficult to understand
a lot of things that are going on in the New Testament because it is assumed by
the Gospel writers and assumed by Jesus when he comes that the Jewish people
have a grasp of all of the Old Testament.
The
prediction of an eternal ruler. In 2 Samuel 7 God is going to enter into a
covenant with David, and He addresses David and instructs Nathan to go and tell
him he was not going to let him build a temple, a house for Me; instead I am
going to build a house or dynasty for you.
2 Samuel
7:8-12 NASB “Now therefore, thus you shall say to My servant David,
‘Thus says the LORD of hosts,
“I took you from the pasture, from following the sheep, to be ruler over My
people
2 Samuel
Birth
indicates the birth of a human being. The term “son” here indicates something
that goes beyond simply a human. “Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal
Father, Prince of Peace” are phrases that are used and applied only to God in the
Old Testament. “Everlasting Father” (in some versions) is a mistranslation.
Literally in the Hebrew it means “Father of eternity.” It is a phrase for
describing the eternal one. So this human child that is born is going to be
called Mighty God, Father of Eternity or Eternal One, and Prince of Peace,
indicating that He is more than simply a human. He is true humanity but also
pure deity. He is going to be divine and human, and He is a descendant of David
and will sit on David’s throne.
The second
passage in Isaiah is 11:1, 10 NASB “Then a shoot will spring from
the stem of Jesse, And a branch from his roots will bear fruit.” The stem of
Jesse indicates that the root of Jesse has somehow been cut off and then there
is a restoration that occurs because the Old Testament Davidic line gets
basically stunted. There would be the Babylonian captivity and then a Branch
grows out of those roots, which is a reference to the Messiah. “Then in that
day The nations will resort to the root of Jesse, Who will stand as a signal
for the peoples; And His resting place will be glorious.” Now we see that this
future kingdom doesn’t just have a Jewish orientation but it is also going to
reach out to the Gentiles.