The next thing I've been chewing on:
Jesus taught continuously "the Kingdom has drawn near you" when someone was healed or delivered or blessed in some way. He taught us to pray "Your kingdom come on earth as in heaven." What did He mean? What's He talking about? Usually when I think about the kingdom of heaven, I think about the Revelation picture of Jesus returning as the conquering hero on a white horse setting up His throne on earth. That things will continue to go to hell in a handbasket until He returns to set things straight. So is the kingdom here now, or is it coming later? What I've been taught is that the "kingdom" Jesus is referring to is mostly just the spiritual aspect of our lives; that yes, it does affect the way we live but it's more of a set of principles to live by than an actual "nation", so to speak.
True? Not sure anymore. I read this morning about Jesus teaching on the kingdom in parables. He taught on how valuable it is and how the righteous will be separated from the wicked at the end. But He also taught on how it's like leaven that a woman worked through a bunch of flour, until it had influenced the whole batch. With parable on the tares, He taught how both the wheat and the weeds grew to maturity, and it was easy to distinguish between the two. But there's still not a whole lot of answers to timing there.
So which is it? Is the "kingdom" actually supposed to superimpose itself over governmental structures, economies, education systems, etc? Are we actually supposed to disciple nations, not just people in those nations? Or do we just hang in there while the world goes to pot, try to get a bunch of people saved and look forward to Jesus coming back? The answer is super important, because it determines not only my role but the role of believers as a whole.
Close up, the works look the same: extending compassion, helping others out, loving big, healing the sick, etc. But behind the works, the heart is vastly different. With one, you watch the news and say "yep. Times are getting crazy, everything is in chaos, just like Jesus said." With the other, you watch the news and say "alright, this needs to change, the kingdom needs to draw near this situation." and we have a responsibility to do just that.
And that's what I've been wrestling with. The thought, idea, doctrine, etc. of working to bring the influence the kingdom of heaven into every realm of society seems futile when the world is only going to get more and more dark and chaotic until Jesus comes. But I guess that's the question: who's responsibility is it? The kingdom of heaven will be brought to influence upon every realm of society, but is it our responsibility to do that now, or do we hold out and wait for Jesus to do it at the end of the age?
That's the question I'm after right now. Until next time!
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
The First
So, my first real blog post. Not for Banner City Media, my business; just mine. For the past few months I've felt like I'm going crazy because I don't have an outlet for the passion I feel burning inside of me. So, like most mid-20s generation Y-ers, I start a blog to voice my...voice.
I guess the current thing right now that I'm chomping on is the issue of obedience. Obviously, it's important. Duh. But I think we've totally skewed what Jesus was talking about. It's not obedience in the sense of "do what you're told", or "obey your master." Over and over Jesus is teaching us how to live like royalty. In the same gospel where the big discussion is on obedience (John 15), there is also the biggest discussions on love. It is all built on relationship. Always. The Kingdom is family. So how does obedience fit? Jesus tells us in John 15. "Abide in me by keeping my commandments. This is my commandment: love one another (paraphrased)." Pretty straight forward, if you ask me.
We tend to think in Old Testament, or "religious" terms. That is, "do A, B, and C and you'll get D and E." More on that later, but the point is: our relationship with God is more than a system of actions. We think "OK, keep his commandments. So everything He said I have to make sure that I do." I think that's off-center. I think we mistake His teachings and his commandments. He taught us to live like kingdom royalty, look at the sermon on the mount. He wasn't saying "do this", He was saying "check this out, true life is in this."
What's my point? That we need to view obedience from the perspective of a friend, not a slave. "No love is greater than laying down your life for your friends." If He asks me to do something, I'll do it not because He gives the orders, but I'll do it because it's important to Him, and I value our heart connection above everything else.
Welcome to my blog
I guess the current thing right now that I'm chomping on is the issue of obedience. Obviously, it's important. Duh. But I think we've totally skewed what Jesus was talking about. It's not obedience in the sense of "do what you're told", or "obey your master." Over and over Jesus is teaching us how to live like royalty. In the same gospel where the big discussion is on obedience (John 15), there is also the biggest discussions on love. It is all built on relationship. Always. The Kingdom is family. So how does obedience fit? Jesus tells us in John 15. "Abide in me by keeping my commandments. This is my commandment: love one another (paraphrased)." Pretty straight forward, if you ask me.
We tend to think in Old Testament, or "religious" terms. That is, "do A, B, and C and you'll get D and E." More on that later, but the point is: our relationship with God is more than a system of actions. We think "OK, keep his commandments. So everything He said I have to make sure that I do." I think that's off-center. I think we mistake His teachings and his commandments. He taught us to live like kingdom royalty, look at the sermon on the mount. He wasn't saying "do this", He was saying "check this out, true life is in this."
What's my point? That we need to view obedience from the perspective of a friend, not a slave. "No love is greater than laying down your life for your friends." If He asks me to do something, I'll do it not because He gives the orders, but I'll do it because it's important to Him, and I value our heart connection above everything else.
Welcome to my blog
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)