The
Kingdom of God and the Old Testament Graeme
Goldsworthy
The theme of the Bible is the
kingdom of God. That is where the biblical account both starts and
finishes. Salvation is the means by which the sovereign God brings
sinful people into that kingdom as its willing and acceptable
subjects. When Jesus began His preaching, He declared that the
kingdom of God was "at hand." The term "kingdom of God" is not an
Old Testament one, but the concept is. Clearly, Jesus' hearers had
some concept of "kingdom" which rested on their Old Testament
upbringing, and they would have recognized Jesus words as a claim
that the hope or expectation of Israel was to find its fulfillment
in Him.
How, then, is the kingdom of God to be seen in the
Old Testament, and how does it provide the foundation for the gospel
which Jesus preached? This is an important question, for there are
many views current about the relationship between the Old and New
Testament. Indeed, the Old Testament has provided a major problem
for Christians from the second century onward, for it was then that
Marcion proposed that the Old Testament should be rejected by
Christians because it revealed a very different God from the God of
the New Testament. Marcion was simply expressing the problem of the
Christian use and interpretation of the Old Testament, and providing
a very negative solution-i.e., abandon the Old Testament.
Loss of Historical Meaning
More orthodox Christians
found they could not abandon the Old Testament, for they saw
everywhere in the New Testament the testimony to Jesus Christ as the
fulfiller of the Old. Yet the problem of how to interpret its
message in a Christian way still remained. Ever since then there
have been various Marcionite moves in the church ranging from
outright, considered rejection of the Old Testament to plain
neglect. One move to salvage the Old Testament actually led to its
wrongful use. The school of Alexandrine scholars developed the
method of allegorical interpretation, which ignored the plain,
historical sense of the Old Testament and read out of it a supposed
hidden, Christian meaning. It was, of course, open to anyone to read
out of the text anything he liked. It was really a method of reading
a Christian meaning into the text. In any case, the result was a
gradual loss of the historical significance of the Old
Testament.
Many medieval exegetes fought against the
allegorizing method, but they never succeeded in providing a
satisfactory alternative. By the time of the Reformation the
so-called four senses of Scripture were widely accepted. It was held
that the text had four meanings: literal, allegorical, moral and
eschatological. But the literal-historical sense was given scant
attention, while the other senses were established more on the
authority of the church than on the basis of sound
exegesis.
We should note one aspect which is no accident. The
loss of the historical sense of the Old Testament went hand in hand
with the medieval concept that the grace of God is primarily
something done in the believer. Conversely, the recovery of the
historical sense of the Old Testament by the Reformers accompanied
the recovery of the understanding of God's grace as an attitude in
God towards the sinner on the basis of the historical facts of the
gospel.
The fact is that a clear concept of salvation history
seen as the objective acts of God for men is the enemy of
inner-oriented mysticism, which not only marked the medieval church,
but which also characterizes much of what passes today for
Protestant evangelicalism.
The Protestant Use of the Old Testament
Most
evangelicals recognize that their view of the inspiration and
authority of the entire Bible has saddled them with the Old
Testament whether they like it or not. As a result, we see a variety
of solutions to the problem of the relationship of the two
Testaments. Two broad errors should be carefully avoided:
1.
Many people simply draw on the great variety of Old Testament
narrative for its wealth of human story. The aim is to illustrate
how God deals with individuals, the godly and the ungodly. The
result is a moralizing application that does little more than point
up examples for us to follow and examples for us to eschew. Because
there is no sense of structure and dynamic development, each
narrative or text is treated in isolation from the wider framework
of God's progressive revelation. Consequently, the relationship of
Old to New involves little more than illustrations of gospel
truth.
2. Another popular error is that of dispensationalism.
Dispensationalism, to its credit, treats the Old Testament very
seriously. However, it views the Old Testament as a totally
different dispensation (in fact, a series of dispensations) from the
New. God acts for man's salvation in the Old Testament in a way
quite different from the way He acts in the gospel of the New
Testament. With regard to Israel's history and prophecy, God is seen
acting exclusively for Israel in a way which is unrelated to the
gospel. For the Christian, then, the Old Testament is of interest
only in so far as it prophesies of the future events relating to
Israel. By applying a rule of interpretation which appears to guard
the integrity of Scripture but which in fact is not itself drawn
from Scripture, dispensationalism confines prophetic fulfillment to
the future of Israel as a nation and severs Israel's history from
any significant relationship to the gospel. In order to make the
historical narrative relevant to Christians, it then constructs an
elaborate and uncontrolled typological interpretation of the
historical significance of the Old Testament and its essential unity
with the New Testament.
When Luther asserted the importance
of a literal reading of the Old Testament, he did not mean (as
dispensationalists mean) that it is read apart from the New
Testament. For Luther, the literal meaning involved both the word of
the old covenant promises and the fulfillment of this as it is found
in Jesus Christ. Calvin taught the unity of the covenants, pointing
out that what was promised in the old covenant had its substance in
Christ (see Calvin's commentary on 2 Corinthians 1:20).
The Unifying Theme of the Kingdom of God
Now let us
examine the theme of the kingdom of God on the basis of the fact
that we can discern its reality everywhere in Scripture. The kingdom
of God involves three essential aspects:
1.The subjects of
that rule, who are the people of God.
2.The sphere of that
rule, which is the place where God is the unchallenged Lord among
His people.
3.The ruling relationship by which God
establishes the nature of His kingdom and its subjects according to
His own eternal and unchanging character.
We may summarize
these elements by saying that we see in the Bible the concept of the
kingdom of God as involving
God's people,
in God's place,
under God's
rule.
The Kingdom in Eden The first
manifestation of the sovereign rule of God is the creation. It is
impossible to overestimate the importance of creation, for it
establishes the foundation for all our understanding of reality. It
establishes once and for all the sovereignty of God and the fact
that things are what they are because God made them so. The climax
of God's creation was the establishment of the kind of kingdom that
we are now considering. In Eden God set His people - Adam and Eve,
made in His image and reflecting His rule - in their own dominion
over the rest of the created order (Gen. 1:26). God's own rule was
epitomized in the probationary word which set the bounds of human
freedom within the kingdom (Gen. 2:15-17). The blessedness of
kingdom existence consisted in both the relationship of man to God
and the relationship of man to the creation. Nature was submissive
to man's dominion and fruitful in providing his needs. Salvation, of
course, had no place in this prototype kingdom since man was made in
the kingdom and needed no saving.
The Kingdom in Israel's History
The fall of man
(Gen. 3) caused a disruption in his kingdom existence. As a rebel
against God, he was no longer a willing subject and had to suffer
ejection from the garden. As man fell, the creation was made to fall
with him. The ground was cursed, nature challenged man's dominion,
and all of man's existence was now outside the garden. But judgment
and grace go hand in hand. God declared His purpose to reverse the
fall by means of the woman's seed (Gen. 3:15). Genesis 4 to 11 shows
two lines of human development-one ungodly line expressing human sin
and inviting God's judgment, and a godly line showing God's purpose
of grace to make a people for Himself. The godly line leads us to
Abraham, to whom the significant covenant promises were made. These
promises have three focal points:
1. God will make of
Abraham's descendants a great nation.
2. They will be given a
land to dwell in.
3. They will be established on a special
relationship to God. Salvation is of grace, and the covenant of
Sinai was given, not so that Israel might be saved, but because she
was saved.
Here we see nothing less than the promise of the
kingdom of God. Abraham's descendants are to be God's people, in
God's place, under God's rule.
The rest of Genesis shows the
tension between the promise and the actual experience of the
patriarchs. Everything seemed to work against the fulfillment of the
promises, so that only God's word of promise was left to be embraced
by faith. The ultimate reversal was seen when the descendants of
Jacob ended up in Egypt, where they suffered a cruel
bondage.
The relationship of the covenant to Abraham and to
the salvation of Israel from Egypt is clearly seen in Exodus 2:23,
24: " . . . their cry under bondage came up to God. And God heard
their groaning, and God remembered his covenant with Abraham, with
Isaac, and with Jacob." RSV. We cannot comment here on every detail
of the great exodus from Egypt, but we should note its main
features, for they form the pattern of salvation in the
Bible.
As to the cause of salvation, we see that it is grace
alone. It is on the basis of God's gracious promise to Abraham and
not on the basis of any merit in Israel that God works salvation.
Next we note the function of Egypt and Pharaoh to demonstrate a real
bondage as that from which salvation is a release. The hardening of
Pharaoh's heart makes it doubly clear that Israel is not able of her
own will to break free from this bondage, but must comply with the
command, "Fear not, stand firm, and see the salvation of the Lord,
which He will work for you today . . ." Ex. 14:13, RSV. When we add
to this the miracles of the plagues and the opening of the sea,
followed by the miracle of Israel's preservation in the desert, we
can see why Israel ever after praised God by recounting His mighty
acts in history by which He saved them (e.g., see Ex. 15; Deut.
6:20-24; 26:5- 10; Josh. 24:5-13; Ps. 78; 105; 106:114; 135; 136;
Neh. 9:9-15).
When God gave His covenant stipulations at
Sinai, He addressed Israel as His people. It is clear that this law
of Moses is not a program of works for salvation. Salvation is of
grace, and the covenant of Sinai was given, not so that Israel might
be saved, but because she was saved. The law is thus a manifesto for
the people of the kingdom.
Again, space is too short to
detail the whole range of Israel's history, but we can easily
observe the emerging pattern:
1. The promise of the kingdom
was given to Abraham.
2. The acts of God in bringing Israel
out of Egypt were the definitive acts of salvation.
3. Sinai
marked the objective constitution of Israel as the people of
God.
4. Salvation as the way into the kingdom also involved
the bringing of Israel into possession of Canaan. The pattern of
conquest under Joshua continued the demonstration of the fact that
it was the power of God at work in salvation.
5. The
political development leading through the period of the judges to
the establishment of the united monarchy was a demonstration (albeit
imperfect) of the principle of a theocracy - a God-ruled
state.
6. The rule of God in Israel was mediated through the
Sinai covenant as it was administered by God's anointed, King David
and his lineage, and as the focal point of this administration was
established in relation-ship to the temple in Jerusalem.
Once
again we see a clear expression of the kingdom of God answering to
the promises to Abraham and exhibiting the basic characteristics of
God's people, in God's place, under God's rule. But history will not
permit us to oversimplify the situation, for the decline and fall of
Israel between 922 B.C. and 586 B.C. raises the very important
question about the nature of the fulfillment that existed under
David and Solomon. In certain ways the physical characteristics of
the promises to Abraham were fulfilled:
Thus the Lord gave to
Israel all the land which He swore to give to their fathers. . . .
Not one of all the good promises which the Lord had made to the
house of Israel had failed; all came to pass - Josh. 21:43,45,
RSV.
And Judah and Israel dwelt in safety, from Dan even to
Beersheba, every man under his vine and under his fig tree, all the
days of Solomon. - 1 Kings 4:25, RSV.
We can see in the
latter reference the same reflection of the Eden paradise model of
the kingdom that also figures in the promise of a land flowing with
milk and honey (cf. Deut. 8:7-10). Eden will continue to be
reflected in the promises of God, but any fulfillment in the present
world order remains part of the fallen world, which is outside Eden.
That is why the ultimate fulfillment of the promises to Abraham and
of all prophecy of the kingdom of God will be apart from the present
state of creation's fallenness.
So, while the kingdom of
David and Solomon was a glorious fulfillment of the promises, it was
nevertheless a kingdom of fallen people in a fallen world. It never
could be permanent in itself, for it was imperfect. But when this
kingdom fell apart, the question of the real fulfillment of the
promises was a problem. The answer was given by the prophets of
Israel, whose principal function was to interpret the decline as
God's judgment on transgression of the covenant and to reaffirm the
faithfulness of God by pointing to a great future day when all would
be restored and made perfect, permanent and glorious.
The Kingdom in Prophecy The
obvious characteristic of futuristic prophecy is that it describes
the future in terms which are drawn from the pattern of past
history. When God moves for the final salvation of His people, it
will be a repetition of the events from the time of bondage to the
setting up of the theocratic state in the promised land. Their exile
is a second bondage, salvation a second exodus. A second way through
the wilderness will lead to a second possession of the land. The
city of Jerusalem will be rebuilt and also the temple, and the
Davidic king will once again rule God's people.
All this is
not mere repetition, for there is a spiritualizing, or
supernaturalizing, of the whole process. The exodus salvation in
prophecy involves forgiveness of sins, and the covenant will be
written on the heart. Human nature will be changed to conform
perfectly with God's law. The land will perfectly reflect Eden by
its fruitfulness, and nature will no longer be at odds with itself
and with man. In fact, the renewal will be a remaking of the very
sky and the earth. Sometimes the prophets deliberately mixed the
restored Israel theme with the restored Eden theme (Ezek. 36:35;
Isa. 51:3). So Ezekiel depicts the river of life flowing from the
new temple and flanked by the tree of life (Ezek. 47:3-12; cf. Rev.
22:1,2).
Now the crucial question is, When is all this
fulfilled? Clearly, the historical restoration from Babylon was not
the anticipated fulfillment. It did provide a very pale reflection
of fulfillment in that all the physical features were there to some
degree. But the restoration that we read of in Ezra and Nehemiah,
far from outshining the glories of David and Solomon's day, did not
even come near to equaling them. In the face of this disappointment,
the post-exilic prophets (Haggai, Zechariah and Malachi) point still
to that future great day of the Lord.
The Kingdom in the New Testament
While the New
Testament provides a more diversified description of the kingdom and
concentrates on its reality in the spiritual plane, the same basic
structure of the kingdom is there as is in the Old Testament.
Because of the spiritual emphasis of the New Testament, some
Christians (notably, dispensationalists) have suggested that the
kingdom of the New Testament is not the one promised in the Old
Testament. We must allow the testimony of Jesus and the apostles to
decide that question for us. It is our firm conviction that the New
Testament gospel kingdom is proclaimed everywhere as the fulfillment
of the Old Testament expectations.
1. God's People. We
have seen that this theme begins with Adam, not Israel.
Theologically, Adam in Eden corresponds with Israel in the promised
land. But to what do these elements correspond in the New Testament?
Adam is the son of God (Luke 3:38). Israel is the people of God: " .
. . I . . . will be your God, and you shall be My people." Lev.
26:12, RSV. This covenant formula is individualized in the king, the
representative of Israel: "I will be his father, and he shall be My
son." 2 Sam. 7:14, RSV. Israelis also spoken of as God's son: ". . .
out of Egypt I called My son." Hosea 11:1, RSV.
The genealogy
of Luke 3 makes it quite clear that Jesus is the true Son of Adam,
and this accords with the use of the title "Son of Adam" in the
Gospels. Jesus is the "beloved Son" with whom God is pleased (Luke
3:22). Indeed, Luke follows this baptismal declaration with his
genealogy showing that through Adam, Jesus is the Son of
God.
Jesus is looked upon as both the ideal Adam and the
ideal Israel -that is, He is the people of God, the Seed of Abraham
to whom all promises were made (see Gal. 3:16). Jesus as the Son of
Adam (Son of man) accomplishes that which Adam failed to do; and
likewise, as the true Israel, He does what Israel failed to do. Thus
the temptation narratives show the reversal of Satan's conquest of
Adam in the garden and of Israel in the wilderness.
If Jesus
is the true people of God, the true Adam and the true Israel, all
the prophecies concerning the restoration of Israel to be the people
of God must have their fulfillment in Him. So Paul, preaching the
gospel of Christ, was addressing himself to the hope of Israel (Acts
26:6, 7; 28:20). The consistent testimony of the apostle is to
Christ as fulfiller (see 2 Cor. 1:20). We may not seek the true
Israel outside of Christ or look for her restoration apart from the
gospel. To become one of the people of God, one must be incorporated
into Christ by faith (John 1:12; 2 Cor. 5:17;
etc.).
2.God's Place. Israel's hope was to return to
Zion, the place of God's dwelling among His people. The New
Testament must tell us where Zion is if we would discover the new
temple and the ruling son of David. Because Jesus is the Son of
David to whom rule is given, Zion is where He is-i.e., in heaven.
The kingdom of God cannot be separated from the presence of Jesus
(Heb. 12:22).
In thinking of God's place, it is important not
to be too conditioned by our earthly concepts of real estate. The
prominence in the Old Testament of the promised land should not be
allowed to establish our concept of God's place. We must remember
that the promised land, Canaan, is an earthly expression of a
reality which we saw set forth in the garden of Eden. But even Eden
could not be Eden without the presence of God. Let Levi teach us a
lesson. The tribe of Levi was chosen to be priestly representatives
of Israel in having access to God (a priest is one who has access to
God). God told Moses that He intended to make a nation of priests
(Ex. 19:6), a truth which has its fulfillment in the priesthood of
all believers. In this sense Levi was privileged to represent God's
people in the ideal relationship of being accepted into God's
presence. All the tribes were aportioned real estate as their
inheritance, except Levi. Levi, the truly representative Israel, was
given a far greater gift: "They shall have no inheritance among
their brethren; the Lord is their inheritance. . . ." Deut. 18:2,
RSV.
The making of the true kingdom of priests comes through
the preaching of the gospel. The ultimate inheritance is related to
priesthood rather than land rights. And it is this priesthood that
the New Testament applies to Christians, for they have access to the
presence of God through Jesus Christ. Because the hope of Israel
leads thus to the blessings of the gospel, the writer to the Hebrews
describes Abraham's faith in terms of its ultimate conclusion. It is
not to the land of Canaan that Abraham's faith leads, but to the
heavenly homeland (Heb. 11:13-16).
3. God's Rule. The concept of a
theocracy established in the choice of a people as God's
people and in the covenant regulation of this people, found
its developed expression in the monarchy. The ruling of God's
anointed king joined with the temple to provide an expression
in Israel of these basic kingdom ideas. When God "walked" in
the garden of Eden, there was no need of a symbol of His;
presence. But in the fallen world where sin separates man from
God, a tangible symbol was provided. The tabernacle was given
to symbolize at the one time both the presence of God among
the people and the separation between a holy God and a sinful
people.
|
| Solomon's temple
became a fixed symbol of God's dwelling and rule until it was
destroyed in 586 B.C. Prophecy established the hope in the restored
temple as the center of God's rule in Zion.
As far as the New
Testament is concerned, Old Testament prophecy about the rule of God
and the temple is fulfilled in the gospel. The resurrection of Jesus
is not only the restoration of the temple (John 2:19-22), but also
the re-enthronement of the Davidic king (Acts 2:30, 31). The true
temple is in heaven, where Jesus reigns now (Acts 2:33, 36; Heb.
8:1, 2). While believers are separated from their Lord (they are on
earth, He is in heaven), there is another temple created by the Holy
Spirit, who unites believers with the ascended Lord (2 Cor. 6:16;
Eph. 2:11-22; 1 Peter 2:4-8).
The New Testament develops
Stephen's assertion that God's temple is not made with hands (Acts
7:47-50). It is, in fact, the heavenly dwelling to which temple
prophecy ultimately points, and there the Eden typology is answered
in the face-to-face relationship which requires no symbolic temple,
for God is the temple (Rev. 21:22).
Some Conclusions
All the biblical promises find
their fulfillment in Jesus Christ. Every element of the Old
Testament's unfolding revelation of the kingdom leads to the Person
of Jesus Christ come in the flesh. The kingdom of God has its
objective reality in Him. He is God's true people. His presence
marks the presence of God in the place we designate His kingdom. His
word comes as God's ruling word with all authority.
The New
Testament, in declaring the kingdom "at hand" with the coming of
Jesus, points us to the fact that there is yet a consummation. But
this consummation, such as is described in Revelation 21 and 22, is
the outcome of the definitive work of Christ in the flesh, His
living and dying. The great victory over the dragon of the
Revelation is essentially the victory won two thousand years ago for
us in the Person of Jesus Christ. To understand the gospel-Christ's
life and death and resurrection for us - is to understand
eschatology. The gospel, and it alone, is the key to those events
which the Revelation describes as part of the process of bringing
about the consummation of the kingdom. In the book of Revelation no
new principle, no new aspect of the kingdom of God, is dealt with
which is not already established on the basis of the gospel. The
second coming of Christ and the whole of biblical eschatology
involves the consummation of the gospel. The first coming of Christ
determines the nature of events at His second coming.
In
looking at the theme of the kingdom of God in the Old and New
Testament, we have done little morn than establish a framework
necessary to understand the Old Testament basis of the gospel. Most
importantly, this framework establishes the objective, historical
nature of the gospel and rescues us from subjective caricatures of
the gospel. Since all the promises and hopes of the Old Testament
are fulfilled in the Person of Jesus Christ, we recognize that the
righteousness of God is fulfilled in Him. The reading of the entire
Bible as a coherent and unified revelation forces us to acknowledge
that the righteousness we need for acceptance with God is outside of
us in the Person of God's
Christ.
|