by Anthony F. Buzzard
In order to lay before you
my approach to getting at the Truth of the Christian faith I want to begin with
a quotation from Professor A. Lukyn Williams, DD, Cambridge professor and
Hebrew scholar, delivering a series of lectures on the Hebrew Christian Messiah
(1916):
With the Lord Jesus, as with every Jew, the Old Testament was the court to which, in the last instance, all appeal was made. It was the head from which flowed the waters of spiritual life in unadulterated purity and strength. With him again, as with every Jew of Palestine, the limits of the Old Testament did not exceed those of the present Hebrew canon.
Within that
canon Jesus of course must have been familiar with the Book of Daniel and it
was in that book that he found the vision of the Son of Man and his investiture
as sovereign in the Kingdom of God. (The same vision is found also in the
Similitudes of Enoch, but we will not press the evidence of that document since
it may have been written after the time of Jesus. At any rate it simply
reflects the Danielic vision of the kingdom of God.)
Again I want to
emphasize the critical matter of establishing Daniel as a “base of operations”
for the study of Jesus and the faith. Howard Clark Kee points out most usefully
that Mark’s account of Jesus shows a “disproportionate interest in Daniel.” He
notes that in Mark, “Daniel alone among all the OT books is quoted from every
chapter. Moreover, Daniel is of the highest level of significance for the NT as
a whole as a result of its overwhelming importance for Mark. Mark has been
influenced directly by Daniel in his representation of the career and intention
of Jesus” (The Community of the New Age,
1983, p. 45).
The vision of
Daniel 7 gives us a marvelously simple pattern of the development of world
history, a veritable theology of world history out of which the NT works. Its
scheme is not complicated. It speaks of the replacement of bestial governments
by the government of the Son of Man, the ideal of humanity, what man was
intended to be. We know that the book of Daniel was read avidly by the Qumran
community and it is obvious that it leaves a clear imprint on what Jesus has to
say about his own career in Palestine and in the future. The appearance of the
Kingdom of God in Daniel 7 is placed only
after the demise of the fourth beast, of which the last stage is marked by
the appearance of a kind of chaos monster, the little horn who exhausts the
saints for a brief period.
It is on the
ruins of that last, fourth beast with its evil tyrant that the Kingdom of God
arises. The Kingdom of God is clearly as much a government as the preceding
beast powers. Its arena is obviously the earth, since it is to be set up “under
the whole heaven” (Dan. 7:27). The Son of Man, as a corporate figure
representing the saints, is unmistakably the agent of God for the
administration of sound government on the earth. The nature of the Kingdom of
God as Daniel foresaw it may not be subjected to the disastrous
“spiritualizing” tendency typical of much commentary. The sober comments of the
International Critical Commentary
warn us not to sacrifice common-sense and sound mindedness in the interests of
trying to force on Daniel some sort of abstract Kingdom or present social
ideal. Nebuchadnezzar would have been amazed if anyone thought his kingdom was
mainly an abstract idea. The empire which follows the demise of the fourth evil
empire is clearly just as much a visible concrete worldwide rule. It is in fact
God’s revolutionary government, a true theocracy, a regime destined to do away with all present human governments. The
International Critical Commentary says (p. 178):
“The last Kingdom replaces
the first Four in the dream, and is, in the idea of the scene, spatially
bound as are its predecessors; the Mountain fills the whole earth and is
not a ‘spiritual’ Kingdom of Heaven.”
John Goldingay
in his illuminating commentary on Daniel (Word
Biblical Commentary, state of the
art in evangelical commentary) notes:
When God’s time comes, His
Kingdom requires the destruction of earthly Kingdoms rather than his working
through them. They are God’s will for now, but not forever; and when His moment
arrives, His Kingdom comes by catastrophe not by development. Daniel promises a
new future, one which is not merely an extension of the present. It is of
supernatural origin. But it is located on earth, not in heaven....
Daniel envisages no dissolution of the cosmos or creation of a different world.
His understanding of this Kingdom is more like the prophetic idea of the Day of
Yahweh than that of some later apocalypses. The problem of politics and history
can only be resolved by a supernatural intervention that inaugurates a new
Kingdom, but this involves changing the lordship of this world, not abandoning
this world. The new Kingdom fills the earth. History is not
destroyed: other sovereignties are… Daniel has not turned the Kingdom into
something individualistic (His kingship
is to be realized in the individual believer’s life), or otherworldly (it is to
be realized in heaven). He reaffirms the universal, this-worldly, corporate
perspective of Isa 40-55. Daniel is talking about a reign of God on
earth and that continues to be more and more an object of hope than of sight.
We still pray, ‘May Your rule come’ (Luke 11:2) and — in the light of Daniel’s
revelation — have to be referring to a rule which is temporal, worldly, and
social. Precisely at moments when such a vision is difficult to believe,
Daniel’s readers are urged, via his final declaration to the king (v. 45b) to
take it with utmost seriousness (cp. 8:26; 10:21; Rev 19:9; 21:5; 22:6).
(from pp. 59-61, italics are his).
These facts have
enormous importance for the teaching of Jesus about the Kingdom, about the Gospel in fact. We should not forget
that the Gospel as it fell from the lips of Jesus and Paul has a specific
label. It is always “the Gospel about the
Kingdom of God.” Jesus uses his Kingdom message (the reason for which he
was commissioned (Luke 4:43) to recruit the saints whom he gathered around him.
This is core of the subject matter of the Gospels. And the Old Testament text
plot from which this matter is taken is certainly the book of Daniel and
principally the seventh chapter of Daniel (along with the 2nd chapter which
likewise teaches us about the Kingdom which is to supersede present
nation-states, not by development but by catastrophe (Dan. 2:44). The Kingdom,
it is quite clear, will not come by evolution but by revolution. But such revolution
is appropriate only when the Messiah returns. The Kingdom of God was not set up
in Acts when the spirit came, much less in AD 70, as is fantastically suggested
by Preterists.
Of course Daniel 7 is not the only passage of Scripture to speak of the Messiah and His service for the Kingdom of God. We must include in the same picture the righteous sufferer in the psalms and of course the rejected prophets and the suffering servant of Isaiah. The thread which holds together all these “saints” (of whom Jesus is the chief) is their destiny. This involves temporary, if intense suffering, followed by vindication when the Kingdom of God becomes theirs. According to the pattern laid out in Daniel, that vindication comes only at, and not before, the demise of the final evil ruler, who arises out of the fourth and final beast power. The NT echoes this scheme when it summarizes the faith by saying; “Through much tribulation we are destined to enter the Kingdom” (Acts 14:22).
Daniel 7 and
the Christian Gospel
What, then, is
the importance of this for our understanding of the Christian Gospel? When
Jesus came into Galilee and launched his opening salvo: “The Kingdom of God is
at hand: Repent and believe in the Gospel, i.e., about the Kingdom.” It is a
fatal mistake of interpretation to ignore the background to the Kingdom of God
in Daniel 7. To do this is to distort the Gospel. Yet this is what so often
happens in contemporary evangelism. When I recently inquired of the Atlanta
Church of Christ what Jesus meant by the Gospel of the Kingdom (not that this
term Kingdom appeared in their own account of the Gospel) I was handed a print
out of all NT Kingdom texts. I then asked them to define the Kingdom from its
Hebrew, apocalyptic background in Daniel 7. This, I am convinced, is the right
hermeneutical thing to do. Jesus must be understood in his own context, not
ours. The peril is too great that we simply impose on Jesus our own ideological
agendas and construct a Gospel to suit ourselves. History shows that we human
beings are fond of attaching the label Jesus to our own projects and ideals and
thus baptizing them as genuine expressions of the will of God. This method must
be avoided.
We cannot afford to misunderstand Jesus when it comes to the Gospel because “whoever loses his life for my sake and the Gospel’s will save it…Whoever is ashamed of me and my words, in this sinful and adulterous society, of him the Son of Man will also be ashamed of him when he comes in the glory of his Father” (Mark 8:35, 38). Notice how the Gospel is parallel to and defined as the words of Jesus.
The Kingdom
of God Defined by Daniel 7 and a Standard Lexicon
The term
“Kingdom of God” is perhaps the most important word in the Bible. As someone
has said, the whole genius of the Christian faith is concentrated in the words
“Kingdom of God.” Jesus said that the whole point of his mission was to
proclaim the Gospel about the Kingdom of God (Luke 4:43; cp. Acts 8:12).
So what is this
Kingdom of God? What, in fact, is the Gospel which Jesus commands us to believe
(Mark 1:14, 15)? Sometimes Christians would do well to go back to a standard
Bible lexicon to find a proper definition. Let’s look at the famous lexicon by
Thayer for enlightenment. Under the entry “Kingdom of God,” the lexicon gives
the information from Daniel which provides us with this idea of the Kingdom of
God, the subject of the Christian gospel:
Daniel had declared it to be
God’s purpose that after four vast and mighty kingdoms had succeeded one
another and the last of them shown itself hostile to the people of God, at
length its despotism would be broken and the empire of the world would pass
over forever to the people of God (Dan. 2:44; 7:14, 18, 22, 27).
Thayer then
speaks of the foundation of the Kingdom which has already been laid in the
preaching and miracles of Jesus in his ministry on earth. Then he refers to the primary meaning of the Kingdom of God:
But far more frequently [i.e. than any references to the “presence” of
the Kingdom] the kingdom of Heaven/God is spoken of as a future blessing, since its establishment is to be looked for at Christ’s solemn return from the skies,
the dead being called to life again
and the ills and wrongs which burden the present state of things being done
away, the powers being hostile to God being vanquished: Matt. 6:10, “Thy
Kingdom come,” 8:11, Luke 13:26: “When
you see Abraham, Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdom,” “until the day when I drink the wine new with
you in the Kingdom of God,” Luke 22:28:
I shall not drink of the fruit of the vine until the Kingdom shall come,” Mark
9:1: a reference to the second coming (See vv. 2:2-9 and Peter’s interpretation
of the transfiguration as a vision of the Second Coming (II Pet. 1:16-18), Mark
15:43: Joseph was waiting for the
Kingdom of God, just as Jesus is still now waiting
for his enemies to be put under his feet (Heb. 10:13); Luke 9:27 with its
fulfillment in the transfiguration in vv. 28-35; Luke 14:15; II Peter 1:11,:
“everlasting Kingdom”; also in the phrase “enter the Kingdom of God,” (Matt.
5:20; 7:21; 18:3; 19:23, 24; Mark 9:47; 10:23, 24, 25; Luke 18:24, 25; John
3:5; Acts 14:22; James 2:5: “heirs [not yet inheritors] of the Kingdom” (James
2:5): “inherit the Kingdom of God” (Matt. 25:34; I Cor. 6:9; 15:50; Gal. 5:21;
Eph. 5:5).
Thayer speaks of the Kingdom
of God as occasionally a description of persons (Christians) who are being made
fit for admission into the Kingdom of God when it comes (Rev. 1:6). But it
should be noted that the first and
dominant meaning of the Kingdom of God is the one given us by Daniel 7,
from which the whole NT idea of the Kingdom of God is derived.
Note carefully
the time-sequence given us by Daniel. In the vision of chapter 7, there is a
sequence of four beasts and a final tyrant (horn). Following these four beasts
and the horn the Kingdom of God is introduced. It will be governed by the Son
of Man (Dan. 7:13, 14). Note again most carefully the time sequence. Where does
the Kingdom come in relation to the other events? The answer is very simple.
First the Beast power is slain and his body is destroyed by being given to the
flame [the lake of fire] (see Dan. 7:11; “I watched until the Beast was
slain...”). At that same time the dominion of the rest of the beasts was taken
away (Dan. 7:12). Only after this is
the Kingdom given to the Son of Man.
Note now how
the interpretation given to Daniel reinforces a proper understanding of the
Kingdom in the sequence of events. First
there are four Beasts (Dan. 7:17). After
that, the Kingdom is given to the saints (Dan. 7:18). No less than three
more times, this sequence is emphasized. First
the 10 horns of the fourth Beast appear, as does the little horn (vv.
20:21). And then (and here we have our answer about the timing of the Kingdom
of God) “the time comes that the
saints possess the Kingdom” (Dan. 7:22). Again the same point is made: Verses 23-25
first describe the rule of the Beast
power which culminates in the arrival of a final tyrant (horn) who persecutes
the saints. But this is only for a limited time (v. 25). The dominion of the
little horn is removed and he is consumed and destroyed (v. 26). Following the removal and destruction of
the Beast the Kingdom of God on
earth, “under the whole heaven, ” is
given to the saints and all nations and languages serve and obey them” (Dan.
7:27, GNB; RSV, etc.)
From this
essential background in Daniel, it is a very simple matter to understand that
the Kingdom of God is, as Thayer says, “far
more often spoken of as a future
blessing.”
The Book of
Revelation which of course develops the themes of Jesus’ teaching and
particularly the matter of the Kingdom in Daniel, tells us exactly what we
would expect from our study of Daniel 7. First
the Beast is slain in Revelation 19:20 by being thrown into the lake of fire.
This event happens when the rider on the white horse appears as a warrior king
accompanied by the armies of heaven (Rev. 19:11-15). His arrival in these
verses is, as all agree, his second coming which, of course, has not yet
happened. He comes in fact to “rule [i.e. set up the Kingdom over] the nations
with a rod of iron” (Rev. 19:15). This same event is the one also described in
Rev. 11:15-18, when “the Kingdoms of the world will become the Kingdom of God
and Christ.” This happens at the 7th trumpet, the trumpet announcing the resurrection
of the faithful dead. If this has not yet happened, then obviously the Kingdom
of God has not yet arrived.
This sequence
of events — first four Beasts,
culminating in final anti-Christ, then
the Second Coming of Jesus to establish the Kingdom — is exactly the sequence
laid out by Daniel 7, as we have seen. There are three critically important
“inceptive aorists” telling us about the Kingdom of God in Revelation: In Rev.
11:17: “God has begun to reign,” at
the time when the Kingdoms of this world become the Kingdom of God at a future
crisis. So in Rev. 19:6: “Hallelujah, because God has taken up his reign,” at
the time of the future marriage banquet. And again in Rev. 20:4 the saints
“came to life and began to reign with the Messiah for the 1000 years.” As
Mounce says (Comm. on Revelation, New London Commentaries, 1997, p. 354)
Daniel’s vision of the 4 beasts, their judgment and the passing of the kingdom
to the saints of the Most High is undoubtedly the background for much of John’s
presentation.
Why does all
this matter?
“What about
consumers of the Gospel? Are they getting the pure untainted message? Or are
they getting the gospel loaded with American or post-Constantinian additives?”
The question was asked by Jim Reapsome, director of the Evangelical Missions
Information Service and editor of Evangelical Missions (Christianity Today, Oct. 2nd, 1995). I would like to add: “Are
consumers getting the gospel in a depleted form with essential nutrients
missing? Jim Reapsome continues with words which call forth from me a hearty
“amen.” He says, “As I look back over nearly half a century of work in world
missions, no question worries me more. My greatest worry is not about
money for missions, people for missions or the strategies and management for
missions. It’s about the content in the
package we call the gospel — the cure for people sins — and whether we have
administered the right medicine.” I once attended,” he goes on, “a study
conference where missions scholars and executives wrangled for a weekend,
trying to define the meaning of conversion. But I have never been to one where
the Gospel itself was addressed. We just assume we know. This can be a fatal
assumption.”
Could it be
that the single most valuable pearl has been lost from the string of ideas
presented to potential converts interested in salvation in Jesus?
If I could
leave you with a single point for meditation it would be just this question. Is
it sufficient to quote 3 verses from Paul (typically I Cor. 15:1-3) to the
effect that belief in the death and resurrection of Jesus is all that he taught
as the Gospel? Can we afford to overlook the obvious fact that Jesus and the
Apostles preached “the Gospel of the Kingdom” without at that stage saying a word about the Messiah’s death and resurrection?
Can it possibly be right that the phrase “Gospel of the Kingdom” is not the way
we describe the Gospel, though Luke insists that the Kingdom was the content of the Gospel which Paul
(following Jesus) always took to the people both Jews and Gentiles? (Acts 19:8;
20:25; 28:23, 31. Cp. Acts 8:12).
Surely it must be the part of wisdom to
adopt the “standard of sound words” recommended by Paul as a sort of creed II
Tim. 1:13 by habitually using the very words of Jesus as the basis of our
teaching? These words of Jesus Paul calls “health-giving words” (1 Tim. 6:3).
Without the words and the Gospel of Jesus (Rom. 10:17; 16:25) we are as, Paul
said, ignoramuses. And John could not have warned us more vigorously when, late
in the NT period, he said, “Anyone who ‘progresses’ and does not remain in the
teaching of Christ does not belong to God. He who remains in that teaching has both
the Father and the Son” (2 John 7-9).
Revival and
unity amongst believers will be under way when the Hebrew Bible again takes its
place as the repository of divine truth lying at the basis of what Jesus
believed and taught. When the doctrine of man as a whole person needing to
acquire immortality through resurrection is reinstated believers will be able
to identify with the Apostles for whom the hope of the Kingdom and immortality
in it was the great driving force behind Christian living and evangelism. The
re-orientation toward the future must not be blocked by arguments about the
need for some other gospel in the present — often a plea for the reduction of
Christianity to ethics. But the NT Christianity is not just ethics — its ethics
are set in a very particular and Jewish setting which cannot be
discarded. Calling the Danielic, apocalyptic setting of the NT a useless husk
from which we must extract a valuable kernel of timeless ethics is dishonest
practice, an excuse for unbelief. The teaching of Jesus is to be accepted lock,
stock and barrel. Only then can we do what Jesus calls “doing well”: You call
me teacher and Lord and you do well.
For so I am” (John 13:13). Do we hear enough about accepting Jesus as Lord
(meaning that we are to obey all his commands), and how seldom is there a plea
to accept him as “rabbi/teacher” in all his splendid Jewishness and as the
model preacher of the saving Gospel?
While the cry
goes out that “doctrine divides” and ethics unite, we will not achieve unity.
Let us indeed unite, not however to comfort ourselves with easy optimism that
all is well with the status quo, but to dialogue and admonish one another to
return to the basic teachings of Jesus, under the overarching theme of the
Gospel about the Kingdom of God. Unity in the Bible is unity in the truth as it
is in Jesus. This can be achieved when tradition (however long-standing) yields
after careful inspection to the truth of Scripture. Opportunities for the
necessary Berean exercise are available to all of us in this information-packed
early 21st century.
Let me
summarize. The basic teachings of Jesus are the basis for establishing a
relationship between ourselves and God. Truth, not error, is essential if we
are to serve God “in spirit and truth,” in the holy spirit, in fact, which is
the “spirit of the truth,” and the operational presence of God, his vitalizing
energy (Ps. 51:11), and the mind of Christ. The Gospel is the vehicle of that
energy and must not be tampered with (Rom. 1:16; I Thess. 2:13). The Gospel is
to be defined first by the words of the historical Jesus and not first
from isolated texts in Paul. Jesus’ own example forces us back to the Hebrew
Bible and especially the Book of Daniel in order to get our feet firmly planted
on solid exegetical ground. Contemporary statements about the Gospel are in
danger of promoting a vague gnosticism unless they are rooted in the Hebrew
soil of the Bible. I think the Church is ready for a change of approach to
Bible-study, one that sheds the unwanted accretions of Greek philosophy against
which Paul warned. The Gospel as the technical term par excellence must not
become a kind of wax nose to be bent into various shapes and defined in a
myriad of different ways (Certainly not divided into 8 different gospels as
Bullinger [Companion Bible] proposes!). The Gospel is in the NT, a fixed
quantity understood by reader and writer.
When we ask how
Paul went about creating faith and love in the Church, we find that it was
often by pleading for a clear idea about the content of hope. He speaks about “faith and love which spring from hope”
(Col. 1:4, 5 ). No wonder he prayed for the Ephesians to have their mental eyes
opened to the hope of the future inheritance (Eph. 1:14-18). Paul
recognized that it was because of future joy that Jesus endured the cross (Heb.
12:2).
The Jesuanic
covenant, based on the Abrahamic and Davidic covenants made by God with Jesus,
was the gift of the Kingdom of God (Luke 22:28-30: “Just as my Father covenanted with me... so I covenant with you to give you the
Kingdom”). Ruling the world with Jesus is likely to provide a much better
stimulus to good ethics now than Platonic promises of disembodied life in
heaven! News about the Kingdom is anyway the heart of the Gospel as Jesus
preached it, and the spreading of that news to the far corners of the world is
the task of the Church until the Messiah arrives (Matt. 24:14). “Fear not, it
is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the Kingdom,” he had said earlier
(Luke 12:32).
I
finish now where I began with the fact that Kingdom of God, the heart of the
Gospel as Jesus preached it, concerns a yet future world-order initiated by the
future coming of Jesus. It will be God’s revolutionary government. That message
must grab us in the present and the spread of that message is the church’s
concern and commission. In no text of the NT does anyone say that we are now reigning with Christ, much less that
the dead are. Paul urged the
Corinthians not to believe that they
had already become kings (I Cor. 4:8), while he wished the time had come (which
it had not) when they would indeed become kings together (ibid.) In Rom. 5:17,
as also in 2 Tim. 2:12, the “co-ruling” word (“we shall reign”) is again
deliberately in the future tense” We shall
reign in life” — “life” being a synonym for the Kingdom (see Matt. 19:17, 23).
As Eric Sauer says so well, “The Church is the official administrative staff,
the ruling aristocracy of the coming Kingdom” (From Eternity to Eternity, 1993, p. 93). Moffat caught the spirit
of this astonishing teaching in his translation of 1 Cor. 6:2: “Don’t you know
that the saints are going to manage the world, and if the world is to come
under your jurisdiction…The unrighteous will not inherit the Kingdom” (1 Cor.
6:9). To inherit the Kingdom is parallel to managing the world with Christ. Why
do Christians insist on obscuring the biblical hope with their vague talk about
“going to heaven”? Jesus said that “the meek were going to inherit the earth” (Matt. 5:5), and they will
rule with him on the earth (Rev 5:10).
Is
this not a beautiful, realistic, comforting and inspiring prospect for all
believers — so easy and straightforward and asking only for a child-like
acceptance on our part?
And in I
Cor. 15:50 Paul says that apart from a new body at the resurrection it is
impossible to inherit the Kingdom of God. Such is his fight with Gnostic
attempts to move the future into the present and thus have no future. You can
have June’s weather in April, but you cannot pretend that April is really June.
And finally, please may we do Luke the honor of noticing that early in Acts he sets up his scheme of redemption with precision. The spirit is to come in a few days (Acts 1:5) but the coming of the Kingdom is to be at a time unknown in the future (Acts 1: 6, 7). Therefore the Kingdom of God was not inaugurated at the ascension, though the spirit as a downpayment of that future kingdom was poured out. That fact is likely to have a profound effect on some received traditional understandings.
The following is a useful confirmatory quotation from a leading NT scholar (Edward Schweitzer, Mark, pp. 45-47):
The Kingdom of God. “When Jesus proclaims that the Kingdom of God is near, he is adopting
a concept which was coined in the O.T...... [the Kingdom] is primarily God’s unchallenged sovereignty in the end-time
(Isa. 52:7). Judaism spoke of the reign of God which comes after the annihilation of every foe and the end of all
suffering.... In the NT the Kingdom of God is conceived, first of all, as
something in the future (Mark 9:1,
47, 14:25, Mat. 13:41-43; 20:21; Luke 22:16, 18; 1 Cor. 15:50, et al. which
comes from God (Mark 9:1; Mat. 6:10; Luke 17:20; 19:11. Therefore it is
something that men can only wait for
(Mark 15:43) [Had Joseph missed the boat?!], Matt. 6:33, receive Mark 10:15,
cp. Luke 12:32 and inherit I Cor. 6:9; Gal 5:21; James 2:5, but he is not able
to create it by himself.”
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