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| The Kingdom of Emergent Theology - Part 3 |
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| Written by Gary Gilley |
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(November 2007 - Volume 13, Issue 11) In our last two papers we have examined the emerging church’s distortion of the kingdom and its impact on the gospel. In this paper we will explore what Scripture teaches about the kingdom of God. A Biblical Understanding of the Kingdom Acts 1:3 informs us that during the 40 days in which Jesus was making appearances following the resurrection He spoke to the apostles concerning the kingdom of God. We are uncertain about exactly what He said but we know the kingdom was at the heart of His discussions with them during that time. In verse six Jesus is preparing to depart the earth and they have one question for Him, “Lord, is it at this time You are restoring the kingdom to Israel ?” While we do not know precisely what Jesus had told them about the kingdom we do pick up on a couple of important pieces of information.
What tends to confuse the interpreter of Scripture at this point is that the term“ kingdom of God” does not always refer to the same kingdom.[2] To get a handle on this we first must recognize three essential elements of any kingdom:
With these elements in mind we turn to the Scriptures and there we can identify six unique kingdoms as related to God:
It was the Messianic kingdom about which the apostles were inquiring in the first chapter of Acts. They specifically wanted to know when the Lord would restore the “kingdom to Israel .” If the Lord was not intending to restore the kingdom to Israel , with all of its physical and land promises, would not this have been a great time to say so? If the Lord intended to take the promises of Israel away from it and roll them over into the church, why did He not tell the disciples? Instead He clearly implies that the kingdom will be restored to the people of Israel but the timing is not for them to know. Alva McClain makes a compelling argument in his The Greatness of the Kingdom that the kingdom is actually offered again to the Jews in Acts 3:19-21. But as it was rejected when Jesus was on earth, so it is rejected under the ministry of the apostles and therefore it is postponed until a later date.[3] It is interesting to note that the kingdom is prominent in the Gospels but begins to fade in the Acts and the epistles. The word “kingdom” is found only five more times in Acts (8:12; 19:8; 20:25; 28:23, 31). Each of these passages references the kingdom but none gives us any more details about the kingdom than we already processed from the Old Testament and the Gospels. Of the 18 references to a kingdom in the epistles, most are referring to a future kingdom (either the Messianic or the eternal). However a few passages (only 4 clearly) such as Romans 14:17 and Colossians 1:13 show that God’s kingdom is what McClain calls a mediatorial kingdom. That is, a kingdom already chartered but which will have its manifestation in the Millennium when Messiah comes and literally restores the kingdom to Israel and sits on David’s throne. Conclusion The emergent church has badly misunderstood the biblical teaching on the kingdom of God. Actually, it has chosen to ignore what the Scriptures teach and has chosen to impose its own understanding of the kingdom in order to set forth its own agenda for the church and the world. One is reminded of Jesus’ warning to the Pharisees in Matthew 15:3, 6, “Why do you yourselves transgress the commandment of God for the sake of your tradition?” Then he said, “By this you invalidated the word of God for the sake of your traditions.” Without question the emergent church is doing something very similar today. In fact, the Messianic kingdom of God is not on the earth today but awaits the return of Christ. People’s good deeds toward one another and the planet are welcomed, but they do not form the kingdom, advance the kingdom or hasten the kingdom. The church’s mandate is not to clean up the planet, wipe out illness, eradicate poverty and injustice and call for peace treaties, as worthy as these actions are in their place. Our mandate is to make disciples of all nations (Matthew 28:19-20). We are not to set up Christ’s kingdom on earth; that is His job. We are instead to call sinners to Christ that they might join us in proclaiming “the excellencies of Him who has called you out of darkness into His marvelous light” (1 Peter 2:9). By rejecting the biblical teaching on the kingdom, a teaching dispensationalist have long championed, the emergent thinkers are leading their followers down a path Christ does not choose to take us. In so doing they have wrapped the emergent movement around a superimposed doctrine of the kingdom that agrees neither with Scripture nor reality. [1] John MacArthur, The MacArthur New Testament Commentary, Acts 1-12, (Chicago: Moody Press, 1994), p. 20. [2] This outline is a summary of the excellent presentation found in Paul N. Benware’s book, Understanding End Time Prophecies pp. 185-195. See also John Walvoord, “Biblical Kingdom Compared and Contrasted,” Issues in Dispensationalism, (Chicago: Moody Press, 1994) pp. 75-91. [3] Alva McClain, The Greatness of the Kingdom, (Winona Lake: BMH Books, 1987), pp. 403-406. |







