What does it mean for Jesus to bring the Kingdom of God?
Episode 3
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23m
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Nov 15, 2015
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Show Notes
Transcript
Episodes
In this episode, the guys wrap up their discussion on the Kingdom of God. The biblical story ultimately becomes a clash between God’s Kingdom and human kingdoms. God responds to this rebellion throughout the Old Testament, but the good news of Jesus is that he came to bring the Kingdom again. What does this mean for us as followers of Jesus?
In the first part of the episode (02:36-16:40), Tim and Jon talk about Jesus as King. What does it look like for Jesus to invite his followers to live under his reign in the upside-down Kingdom?
In the last part of the episode (16:55-22:48), the guys continue to unpack this idea of the “now and not yet” Kingdom they introduced last time. There is incredible hope in the reality of God’s Kingdom. Death, injustice, and human failure are not the way the story ends! But joining in God’s Kingdom means resisting the kingdoms of the world and allowing Jesus to fully reign.
Video:
This episode is designed to accompany our video called, “Gospel of the Kingdom." You can view it on our youtube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmFPS0f-kzs
Book References:
"How God Became King" by N.T. Wright
"Simply Christian" by N.T. Wright
Show Music:
Defender Instrumental by Rosasharn Music;
Blue Skies by Unwritten Stories;
Flooded Meadows by Unwritten Stories
Scripture References
Matthew 26:63-64
Mark 1:14-15
Psalms 96:10-13
Isaiah 52:9-10
Luke 4:21
John 12:32
Podcast Date: November 15, 2015
(22:49)
Speakers in the audio file:
Jon Collins
Tim Mackie
Jon: We're finishing up our series on the Kingdom of God. If you haven't listened to Part
1 and 2, I'd recommend that you go back and do that. In the last episode, we looked
at how the theme of the kingdom of God begins on Page 1 of the Bible. Genesis
chapter 1, God creates humans in his image, which means we are to represent his
reign on earth.
Tim: That's how the story begins. Full of potential, humans have this amazingly elevated,
royal, sacred task of embodying God's rule.
Jon: We talked about how humans create their own alternative kingdom, which
culminates in the city of Babylon, and then also is typified in Pharaoh's Egypt.
Tim: So then the story of the Bible becomes the story of clashing kingdoms, of God
constantly trying to invade our kingdom and save us from ourselves, and us
constantly wanting to push God out of the equation.
Jon: We talked about God response to this alternate kingdom.
Tim: Well, He's going to choose the family of Abraham and liberate them from the world,
the age of sin and death from the kingdom, which in the story takes the form of the
Exodus, when He liberates his people out of that oppressive evil into a new freedom
and then He invites them to live under his reign.
Jon: We looked at how ancient Israel was unable to live up to the task of being the image
of God to reign on God's behalf over earth, but that Jesus, a new prophet on the
scene talks about the kingdom coming in a fresh way.
Tim: The good news is that the Kingdom of God has arrived in Jesus, which means that he
is the truly human one. So the narrative of the Bible then is God so closely binds
himself to humans in the incarnation of Jesus. That He becomes the human that
we're made to be and then through him, we became come the humans that we are
made to be.
Jon: In this final episode, we're going to be looking closely at Jesus, how he thinks of
himself as bringing the Kingdom of God. Then we're going to wrestle a little bit
about what this would mean for us as Jesus followers.
[00:02:36]
Tim: Isaiah said, "Yahweh himself would return to Zion and rule as king." And so, for Jesus
just to show up and say, "Hey, look at me, the Kingdom of God, the rule and the
reign of God is here." So he presents himself as a king by saying, "The kingdom of
God is here."
The first thing he does is go form a nucleus of 12 disciples - this symbol of renewing
the covenant people of God, renewing Israel, and then he invites them to live under