What is the
kingdom of God?
The kingdom of
God is the Father being Himself through us.
Christ as us is
our own personal joy, but the kingdom is that which goes out from us to others.
If our knowledge that Christ is living as us in this world were not complete,
then we would imagine that we have to "fix" or "change" ourselves in some way
and for some reason. That idea, then, creates all sorts of false images and
always, immediately, pushes God into the background.
God being
Himself and I being myself go hand in hand. That is not a formula for
selfishness - indeed, we're talking about God - who is real and who is alive in
us. And this God, who is real and alive in us, just being Himself, is
Love.
Now, we have
one example in all the universe of the Father being Himself in a visible
way.
The Father
cannot be Himself in heaven; angels do not make God visible. God presented
Christ to the entire universe, both heaven and earth, as His express
image.
The Lord Jesus
was just being Himself; in full measure, God also, was just being Himself
through Jesus. Thus Jesus said, "The kingdom of God is in your midst - among
you." The things God did through Jesus were simply God being normal - what He
really is at the core of His person.
The kingdom of
God was God being Himself through Jesus; thus the kingdom of God was among them.
If God, then, is in us, that same kingdom is "in the midst" of all those around
us.
When God
directed Adam to subdue the earth, God meant AFTER Adam would eat of the tree of
life. Subduing the earth was to come by the rivers of living water flowing out
of Adam's innermost being.
Since the
kingdom of God is God being Himself through us, then the kingdom of God and the
rivers of living water are two ways of saying the same thing. Also, to subdue
the earth means to bring all things into the knowledge of God being
Himself.
We must
understand that God is invisible and unknowable, period. God is no more known or
seen in all the heavens than He has been in all the earth. Angels long to know
the God who created them, but they must wait for us to reveal Him.
The first
moment in both heaven and earth that God began to be knowable and visible was
the conception of the Lord Jesus Christ in Mary's womb.
We know God by
seeing Jesus.
But of course,
God does not limit Himself to one person and to one personality. God wants many
sons just like Jesus. Thus the kingdom, really, is God just being Himself
through many, all of whom are being themselves through Him.
God gave us
Jesus as an example of who we are. When we see Him as He is, that is, as the one
through whom God was being Himself in a mutual relationship of joy and honor,
then we KNOW that we are just like Him. God is Himself through us in the same
mutual relationship of joy and honor.
This is why
what Paul said is so important. "We do not know Him according to the
flesh."
Jesus was a
person, that is, He had a particular personality, ways of doing things, personal
likes and dislikes. As individual persons, we are different from Jesus. But God
is in us as we are, just as He was in Jesus as Jesus' own personality. Jesus was 100%
comfortable with Himself.
Now, before
continuing, I want to bring in the one verse in the New Testament that seems to
counteract the statement I just made.
Who, in
the days of His flesh, when He (Jesus) had offered up prayers
and supplications, with vehement cries and tears to Him (God)
who was able to save Him from death, and was heard because of His godly
fear, though He was a Son, yet He learned obedience by the things which He
suffered. And having been perfected, He became the author of eternal salvation
to all who obey Him. Hebrews 5:7-9
This verse,
taught by the ministry under which I lived for many years, was the most powerful
theological concept that separated me from God. If Jesus had to line Himself up
with an implacable God through "strong crying and tears," then how much more
must I?
Paul said that
we do not know Him "according to the flesh." That means, we do not know Him out
from a separate-from-God mentality nor do we see Jesus as one who lived and
walked in any way separate from the Father.
I bring in this
that has been the most horrific of verses in my Christian experience because God
says it and it seems to be pressing against my statement that Jesus was
comfortable with Himself. And when I say "horrific," I mean only when it is used
as a "how-to" verse, that is, "how to become like Jesus" through a similar
"strong crying and tears." That use of this verse is an extraordinary miss-use
of God, of Christ, and of salvation.
God was in
Christ, reconciling the world to Himself. All things that Jesus did, He did as
our Head, carrying us inside Himself through what we ourselves cannot do. Those
who seek to "obey" Him in outward form do not know Him, that this very One is
our life. They are trying to follow the path of atonement on their own and not
inside of Him.
If Jesus prayed
with strong crying and tears, then He was just being Himself. And I am
INSIDE of Him.
*****
Jesus
spoke these words, lifted up His eyes to heaven, and said: "Father, the hour has
come. Glorify Your Son, that Your Son also may glorify You, as You have given
Him authority over all flesh, that He should give eternal life (the
life of the age to come) to as many as You have given Him. And this is
the life of the age to come, that they may know You, the only true God, and
Jesus Christ whom You have sent. I have glorified You on the earth. I have
finished the work which You have given Me to do. And now, O Father, glorify Me
together with Yourself, with the glory which I had with You before the world
was (before the age, this period of time, began). John
17:1-5
Jesus' words
confirm something I said earlier, that knowing God and authority over all flesh
are the same thing. God being Himself through us and rivers of living water
subduing the earth are the same thing.
When Jesus
said, "Glorify Your Son, that Your Son also may glorify You,"
He was speaking of us for we are His glory. It is here, in this personal
exchange with the Father, that Jesus begins to include us inside
Himself.
Then Jesus
prays for His disciples around Him at that time. He states: "I pray for
them. I do not pray for the world but for those whom You have given Me, for
they are Yours. And all Mine are Yours, and Yours are Mine, and I am glorified
in them. Now I am no longer in the world, but these are in the world, and I come
to You. Holy Father, keep through Your name those whom You have given Me, that
they may be one as We are. While I was with them in the world, I kept them in
Your name. Those whom You gave Me I have kept . . ."
"I do
not pray for the world," is one of the most extraordinary things Jesus
ever said. We must understand that the atonement is not "for the world." It is
for all men, yes, but in no way for the world. We must have the distinction
clear in order to see the kingdom birthed through us. But Jesus goes on to say
that while He was physically present - on the outside of His disciples - He had
"kept them."
Then Jesus
speaks the atonement: Sanctify them by Your truth. Your word is truth.
As You sent Me into the world, I also have sent them into the world. And for
their sakes I sanctify Myself, that they also may be sanctified by the
truth.
To be
sanctified is to be swallowed up by the being, the essence, the person of
God.
Finally, Jesus
speaks the Kingdom.
"I do
not pray for these alone, but also for those who will believe in Me through
their word; that they all may be one, as You, Father, are in Me, and I in You;
that they also may be one in Us, that the world may believe that You sent Me.
And the glory which You gave Me I have given them, that they may be one just as
We are one: I in them, and You in Me; that they may be made perfect in one, and
that the world may know that You have sent Me, and have loved them as You have
loved Me.
"Father,
I desire that they also whom You gave Me may be with Me where I am, that they
may behold My glory which You have given Me; for You loved Me before the
foundation of the world. O righteous Father! The world has not known You, but I
have known You; and these have known that You sent Me. And I have declared to
them Your name, and will declare it, that the love with which You loved Me may
be in them, and I in them."
First, Jesus
specifically includes you and me inside the creative power of His
words.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/benegizer/808459254/ |
But let's back
up. What is happening here? Jesus is the Word God speaks. When God said,
"Let there be light," that was Jesus, the Word God speaks, issuing
forth from a Father who cannot be known, making Him visible. Making God visible
- light - and creating all things in both heaven and earth are the same thing.
Jesus is the creation of the universe. When God speaks through Christ the ages
are formed and all things spring into existence.
Now, in these
words, Jesus is speaking into existence an alternate universe, another dimension
- the kingdom of God. Heaven, as it is right now, is part of the first creation.
Everyone who is "in heaven" remains inside the first creation. Only those who
are in Christ are found in the second creation, which is not a creation at all,
but rather, a birthing.
But let's focus
on this reality. Just as God speaking Christ: "Let there be light," resulted in
the creation of all things that exist, so these same words here are speaking
into being an entire universe of reality and existence - the kingdom of
God.
Paul says this
in 2 Corinthians 4: For it is the God who commanded light to shine out
of darkness, who has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of
the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. And he says this in
Colossians 1: Giving thanks to the Father who has qualified us to be
partakers of the inheritance of the saints in the light. He has delivered us
from the power of darkness and conveyed us into the kingdom of the Son of His
love . . .
Paul is saying
the same thing; that, just as God created all things that exist by speaking, so
He does the same thing again - here - in these words of Jesus in John
17.
Let's begin
with the absolute blasphemy of Jesus' words.
The Jews did
not name God. Their word for God was not Yahweh, it was YHWH, breath, and
unspeakable. Thus Moses said, "Hear, Oh Israel, the Lord your God is
ONE.
That
they all may be ONE, as (here is that Greek word again - it means "just
as") - as You, Father, are in Me, and I in You; that they also may be
ONE in Us.
Jesus defines
exactly what He means as He speaks this word that births a new creation:
"That they (you and me, we are right inside His words and the
breath coming out of His mouth) ALL may be ONE."
If we do not
understand the blasphemy of Jesus' words, we will imagine He was just talking
about something of the present creation, something limited by our limitation,
maybe "just getting along." We will imagine that He is giving us an ideal,
something to hope for, though we cannot ever really know what it means, not
until after we "go to heaven," which is, in itself, just a further part of this
same original creation.
Forgive me if I
sound like a broken record, but this misconception so fills the minds of almost
all Christians that I must speak against it continually. Christians imagine that
heaven is the new creation and that earth is the old creation. They do not get
this idea from the Bible; they get it from the gross unbelief that fills
Christianity. Heaven - the place where our loved ones live who have lost their
physical bodies - is as much a part of the old creation as is the earth. God
says, in Hebrews 12, that He will shatter (future tense) heaven as well as
earth. Heaven is passing away.
Before we
continue with the words of Jesus through which God birthed the new creation, let
me say this. I am convinced that the birthing of that kingdom is a three-step
process. I am convinced this is the teaching of the New Testament.
John said in
Revelation 11: "Then I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, "Now
salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of His Christ
have come . . ." This voice speaks right after these words:
Then being with child, she cried out in labor and in pain to give birth
. . . And the dragon stood before the woman who was ready to give birth, to
devour her Child as soon as it was born. She bore a male Child who was to rule
all nations with a rod of iron. And her Child was caught up to God and His
throne.
Jesus said in
Luke 13: "Go, tell that fox, (Herod) 'Behold, I cast
out demons and perform cures today and tomorrow, and the third day I shall be
perfected.'
"Today" meant
Jesus' time on this earth, "tomorrow" meant the age of the church, and "the
third day" means the transition between two ages in which you and I are caught.
Another way to understand "today and tomorrow" is as the 2,000 years of the
church age, specifically, from AD 29 to AD 2029. (I am not setting a "date," we
know that whatever time the Father has set, Jesus altered that time by His
words, "the time will be shortened.")
This kingdom,
spoken into being by Jesus' words in John 17 is in gestation in the womb of the
church. That kingdom has been conceived; it has not yet been born. Revelation
12:5 is the birthing of that kingdom into open and full reality - the new
creation consisting of a newly created physical realm and a newly created
spiritual realm as inter-related together as the old creation heaven and earth,
only more so.
The three steps
of the kingdom are first, the conception, second, the gestation, and third, the
birthing. The time of the birthing is upon us.
I do not
believe that anyone who is right now in heaven is in the full and open
experience of that new creation. It has not yet been brought forth in its
reality; it has not yet been birthed.
The kingdom of
God, in the present hour, is a fetus. Yet, as members of that "fetus," you and I
call forth those things that "be not" as though they are. Thus the kingdom is in
our mouth and in our heart.
What is the
kingdom of God?
The kingdom of
God is the Father being Himself through us. The kingdom of God requires physical
bodies. The physical body is the temple of the living God.
That they all
may be one, as You, Father, are in Me, and I in You; that they also may be one
in Us.
God is One. God
is person inside of person. In the same way that the person of the Father was
inside the Man, Christ Jesus, in that exact way the person of the Father is
inside of you and me AS Christ Jesus. God does not erase us, He fills us. God
does not replace us, He inhabits us. God fills every particle of our being,
spirit, soul, and body. God carries every particle of who and what we are inside
Himself.
The act of
seeing any part of yourself as separate in any possible way from the revelation
of the Father is to place yourself outside of the kingdom - outside of God.
Outside of, separate from, the Father is death. All who imagine that they must
"get themselves" into the Spirit are dead.
Our faith, the
audacity of our faith, really is the dividing line. But even that faith is not
"ours," it is the faith of the One who loves us and gave Himself for us. When I
say "mine," I mean His; when I say "His," I mean mine. It matters not which one
I say, for they are both the same.
I am
one.
I am one with
God, and I am one with you. Yet that oneness is the oneness of God, that is, a
oneness that never violates any individual person's integrity or respect, but at
all times highly honors each individual person in every particle of their
being.
This oneness is
filled with the power of God, that is, with the dynamism of the One who always
takes into Himself all that opposes Him, carrying even His enemies inside
Himself, stumbling and falling inside the limitations of their weakness, He
carries them into death - and into life, and then ascends on high, and we in
Him.
Next, Jesus
says, "That the world may believe that You sent Me." Let me
tell you something, the world, right now, does not believe that God sent
Jesus.
Key in, now, to
what Jesus says next. He repeats Himself. (By the mouth of two or three
witnesses, let every word be established.) Jesus speaks the conception of the
kingdom a second time.
And the
glory which You gave Me I have given them, that they may be one just as We are
one: I in them, and You in Me; that they may be made perfect in
one.
We possess the
glory of God; we are His glory. The purpose of glory is that we might be one. In
case we missed it the first time - exactly like God is one.
What does that mean? "I in them, and You in Me." Person inside
of person: man as God revealed. It's not clear yet? Let's make it as clear as we
can. "That they may be made perfect in one."
Do you see what
I mean by blasphemy? Jesus' words are open and unrestrained blasphemy. And until
we know that they are, we cannot know the kingdom being birthed out of those
words.
Jesus was
killed because He blasphemed. "I and the Father are One." We
are just like Him.
Then Jesus
repeats the effect of the kingdom a second time, only He adds another dimension.
"That the world may know that You have sent Me, and have loved them as
You have loved Me."
We must
understand what these words are. These are universe-creating words.
Then come the
words of the atonement. By these words, Jesus took you and me into Himself,
carrying us inside Himself through that dark passage between the cherubs to the
tree of life.
"Father,
I desire that they also whom You gave Me may be with Me where I am, that they
may behold My glory which You have given Me."
"I desire." "Father, this is
what I want."
What do you
want?
The kingdom is
birthed out of desire. There is no compulsion here, no command, "Thou shalt
eat."
Spirit of God,
open up to us the passion, the intense fury, the depths of determination, the
crazed wildness, the dauntless energy, the sheer grit, the ecstatic fervor, the
storm of fire inside these two words: "I desire."
This desire is
infinite, it is HOLY, it is God Himself. God is desire.
What do you
want?
We know exactly
what Jesus wants; He told the Father what He wants. "That they also whom
You gave Me . . ." That's you and me. Any idea that it might not be me
vanished from my being 34 years ago. I have not thought such a nonsensical idea
since, not on the inside of me. I belong to Jesus.
". . .
May be with Me WHERE I AM."
"In
that day you shall know that I AM IN THE FATHER, and YOU in Me and I in
YOU."
Jesus, even
here, sets the birthing of the kingdom as the opposite of the world.
"The
world has not known You, but I have known You; and these have known that You
sent Me."
Then Jesus'
final kingdom-birthing words are, to us, the most precious.
"That
the love with which You loved Me may be in them, and I in
them."
"AND I IN THEM."
It is
impossible for us to spend too much time plummeting the depths of these four
words. At no point do we ever draw a line and say, "Well, it means this much,
but no more." To limit God here is to place upon ourselves the waiting of an
entire age before we also may enter in.
The whole of
Christianity demands an addition to these words.
PARTLY.
The choice is
ours. God never says, "Partly." Nowhere in the New Testament do you find the
word "Partly" added to any element of the revelation of Jesus Christ and
salvation in us or as us or through us. "Partly" is moral relativism.
"And I
in them" is absolute. It is eternal, it is infinite, and it is
complete. It is all in all.
I am complete
inside the Lord Jesus Christ, and He is complete in me.
What does this
mean? It means that God is doing His thing, being who and what He is inside of,
as, and through, every particle of my being all the time.
I am the
kingdom of God. I am God being Himself through me.
Now, I do not
"see" this outwardly, nor feel it outwardly. Thus I am not caught in the
arrogance of one who makes claims for himself. I speak by faith; I speak in the
absolute certainty that in my blindness, in my ignorance, in my present
condition that feels very much like "lostness," the only thing I can know is
what God says.
"And I
in them."
Here I will
hold even unto death.
Yet God is
being Himself through me. That means that everything I am and everything I do
and everything I go through is God reconciling the world to Himself.
"That
the world may know" - not just God, but the sending of God into human
flesh.
Yes, Jesus wept
on His knees in the garden, some 30 minutes after He spoke the kingdom of God
into existence. Jesus was a real man, just like you and me. He felt as limited
by His humanity as you and I do. Yet He knew that He was acting as the Head of
the body, that the entire body of Christ was kneeling before God. As the Head
said, "Father, not My will, but Thine be done," so all the body
spoke inside of Him. Jesus was not weeping for Himself nor for His own
death.
And neither do
we.
We are His
heart, the expression of His passion.
Our lives in
their entirety, in everything we are and in everything we go through, moment by
moment, is for His bride, His precious woman, caught, now in her hour of
trial.
The Love of God
in all of its fullness and expression is in us.
God is just
being Himself through us.
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