Tuesday, July 3, 2007

The Essence of a Kingdom

This is going to be a frustrating thing to write about, but here goes:


The kingdom of heaven is here. It is now. But it is not everywhere. There is the possibility for it being everywhere, but it is not…at least not yet. So where is it then? And where is it not? When I try to explain where and what the kingdom of heaven is, it becomes very frustrating, partly, not wholly though, because the kingdom of heaven on earth is a glimpse of the eternity and eternity is too much for the mind to comprehend. Eternity is too much for the human to hold in and thus, parts of the kingdom can not be explained but only experienced and spoken about through stories. I think that the kingdom of heaven is a very tangible and practical thing yet at the same time, it is everything intangible and impractical all in one. This is where the frustration in explaining it comes from. The kingdom exists in mindsets and motives, in paradigms and paradoxes. It is everything that is right and good and pure and unified. It is and exists in a dimension unto itself, a dimension of the soul, where motives, thoughts, being, and relationships are the most real thing around. This dimension can only be experienced. It is ethereal and hard if not impossible to wrap our minds around, but we all fully know it, and we know it well. It is in the emotional ecstasy of hearing music that just fits with our souls that we feel and know the kingdom. It is in the deep seated hope of a person’s last breath that we know the kingdom. It is in the unity of a group of people who all click and understand each other in some way that transcends space and time that we feel the effects of the kingdom of heaven. It is everywhere. This is not contestable. It does not depend upon our acceptance of the fact. It just is. And all, not just Christians, not just “good people”, all have experienced it at some point. It is in the beauty of a dancer’s movement and emotion that wraps around the words and ideas of a song and bring them into these three dimensions causing all to understand something otherwise not understandable in a vivid way. It is in the cry of a newborn and the acknowledgment that they could one day be another Ghandi, Mother Theresa, or Paul. It is in a writer’s pen, flowing over the paper, expelling words that elegantly embody the beauty of the ideas they are trying to convey. It is in the quiet soul-searching of a Buddhist monk and the humility and submission of an aged Muslim. It is in all things true and good. It is in the deliberate choice of a human being to lay down their comfort and rights for justice for another. It is in community, the tearing down of personal walls and the laying out in the open of the painful and terrifying things.

This is why I think the arts are so beautiful and needed in our world. The arts essentially have the ability to take the kingdom of heaven, this ethereal and transcendental world of all that is good and right, and bring them to the brink of our imagination, so that we may only glimpse the beginnings of the beauty within.

And most of the time, I think the church misses this completely. I cannot explain why, but often when I am taking part in a church service or event that is intended to bring this kingdom to earth, I end up feeling nothing. I end up feeling manipulated. And the kingdom never has to be manipulated. It never should be. Why is it that it is so hard sometimes to break through this barrier between this physical world and the world of the soul. Why do we struggle so much, at times, to bring the beauty of the soul into the world of three dimensions? The kingdom prevails when the soul chooses to take part in these experiences and though we cannot see it, it is there, and it is beautiful and it can be brought here, and it is. In so many ways. Ministry is about figuring out how.

Furthermore, if the kingdom of heaven is the embodiment of good and rightness in a world transcending our three dimensional world yet being brought into it in so many ways, then the kingdom of hell is the exact opposite…the embodiment of evil and un-rightness in a world transcending our three dimensional world yet being brought into it all the time. The kingdom of hell is in the satisfaction of true human needs by temporary means, in such a way as to lull us into this never ending cycle of feeling the depth of this need, and then desiring something temporary to cover up the pain of our lack. It exists in our hatred and desire to bring another person down to raise ourselves up. It exists in our desire to be known and recognized in an attempt to “stand out” in the lifeboat…to attain the soothing applause of the circus audience. The list could go on. But what it does is steal, kill, and destroy all the good things that God has in store for a person and for humanity. And what does our God do? He gives us a choice. And surprisingly we often choose the choice that hurts the most, for reasons I really don’t understand. As humans, we have these basic desires and needs that must be met, and both kingdoms offer answers to these. One is eternal, one is temporary. One is true and one is false. One feels good in an eternally good kind of way and one feels good in a fleshly wrong kind of way. And this is what defines our decisions. Are we willing to choose to be a part of the one that is good and true and eternal, yet not easy, or are we always going to take part in the one that is temporary and false yet feels so good now and is simple but empty. It doesn’t even feel good now…it feels good for like a second and then it kills you inside and carves ever deeper the cavern in your heart desiring true love and acceptance.

I don’t know…this is huge. This is everything. And everything could never fit in this blog…so I am leaving it at that.

7 comments:

jenn swift said...

In the past few years I've really struggled with a lot of this idea of praying for God's Kingdom to come, and God to be among us, and inviting Him... when I think He already just is, and this is done and it is happening... our eyes just aren't open to it... we don't see it... and that us getting to know Jesus and seeing the Kingdom is about scales falling and we all of a sudden see what's already been there... we just didn't realize it before. It's where my heart was praying from Sunday night.

-the andyman- said...

totally. so how does that fit in with the facts that there are clearly places where people are oppressed and evil is reigning...is the kingdom there?

jenn swift said...

I think it is... it's behind the curtain, though, waiting to be seen and realized. It's presence is in the reality that though terrible things are happening, the pure and real and perfect love of God is completely present... just not realized. I will think on this more to give a better response. But for now... I'll send this off to "continue the conversation" :)

-the andyman- said...

good thoughts. i think this is why it is so frustrating when the church divides people into camps of saved and unsaved. divides culture into camps of christian and secular. and simplifies all of reality into a formulaic expression of this division. maybe if we started to see this differently, the church wouldn't seperate itself from a society that already doesn't know what to do with it...but rather it would free us to be that expression of the kingdom in a "postmodern" (not to be cliche) age.

Can you imagine what this could look like?

kate debaene said...

in regards to the kingdom being places where people are oppressed and evil is reigning...

i don't think that those places are "godless". that is a word that really rubs me the wrong way. in fact, just the opposite. i think they are filled with god and the kingdom. they are full of god's ache to see justice, and equality, and peace, and all the things that jesus taught us to be there.

i think this is where the redemption of the kingdom comes into play. if to redeem or to restore is to bring something back to its original condition...and bringing the kingdom is bringing the restoration...and god said he is redeeming all creation to himselg....well then, then i would suggest that means that a restoration back to an original plan is there and available and waiting to be mined. it is not that we are bringing an absent god...it is that we are mining the resource that is god that is there already...waiting to be dusted off/realized. [i bet you are thinking that with all of these illustrations i am getting ready to bust out a plan that all starts with the same first letter. i am not.]

i think figuring out this path...seeing the hidden elements and behind the curtain...i think that comes with realizing what has been written on the core of our beings by our creator, and then learning to live in tune to that, and see the rest of creation reflect that song. and if all people are a reflection of the creators divine breath and song...who have god at the core of their being regardless of what their free will has chosen...then the kingdom must be there, right? i mean...ALL CREATION is being redeemed...not just parts. it is more than that. it is a wholistic movement towards the way that we were made in perfection, in harmony and not dischord or disillusionment.

i think the question then becomes, not "is the kingdom there?", but rather, "is the kingdom there being realized to its fullest extent?" and if the kingdom of heaven becomes our treasure and our prize...then this should intrigue us and motivate us, not pacify us, towards uncovering...for all members of the kingdom...what it is like in heaven [all those things that jesus was about] and how it can be like that here on earth due to this return from our exodus.

Unknown said...

ok, so then if the kingdom is at the core of every human being regardless of their acceptance of it or not...and if there is the possibility of it being brought out and for them to be "brought back to their original condition" then there is no point in time when somebody suddenly "becomes a Christian"...maybe that moment is more of an "ah ha" moment where they realize what has been going on all along and then join forces with the kingdom of heaven in causing redemption to happen in themselves and in their world. Is this aha moment the defining moment of somebodies life? does it determine whether or not they "go to heaven"? What does "go to heaven even mean? And what does "go to hell" even mean? I would say nothing...in this context...those phrases are useless..what do you think? and also...what about our sin nature? is that at the core of who we are as human beings on this earth or is our "god nature" at the core of who we are? Are these two constantly competing? How does that work?

I like the idea of realizing the kingdom of God in areas of the earth motivating us to uncover it to its fullest extent. Such could be referred to as storming the gates of hell. Because gates are not meant to be offensive and when Jesus says they will not prevail against us, i would say that means we must be attacking them...and in attacking them, we are more truly bringing redemption to the kingdom of heaven that is already existing on earth.

DBrothers said...

I am a latecomer to this blog - but this post is a good one. I like the way some of the missional church folks describe it. God is and always has been working in all places in the world. The church (a group of people that recognizes the reign of God) is called to embody the kingdom. As they are a witnessing sign of what the kingdom could look like, they also go out and join God in His mission to the world. It is in this sense that God is already working to redeem the world, but many parts of the world haven't recognized His work or His Lordship.

I believe that you have to maintain a theological difference between church and world, but it is unfortunate that we have used terms such as "saved" or "unsaved".
These terms tend to collapse redemption into - are you ready to meet Jesus when you die - hence Kindgom living can get put off until heaven. And also it allows people to think only individually -I am "saved". Instead, maybe we should see it as being placed as part of the church, the body of Christ on earth who recognizes His Lordship and lives to be a witness to what the kingdom looks like.