From Prophecy to Fulfillment
The transition from old covenant Judaism to
Christ’s new covenant arrangement was not an abrupt, overnight replacement but
involved the gradual unfolding of God’s plan and revelation of his will, ultimately
completed in the NT canon. Christianity began in a thoroughly Jewish context
(Acts 1–7) before spreading to the ethnically mixed Samaritans (Acts 8) and
eventually the Gentile world (Acts 10–28).
During this transitional period, as the gospel
was impacting lives from Jerusalem to the ends of the earth (Acts 1:8), a major
obstacle across the Mediterranean world was the stubborn resistance of
nationalistic Judaism. Just over a quarter of a century after the Lord’s church
had begun, Paul wrote concerning obstinant Jews, “But their minds were
hardened. For until the present day, the same veil remains upon the reading of
the old covenant, not being lifted, which in Christ is being removed. But until
the present day, when Moses is read, a veil lies over their heart, but if, when
one has turned to the Lord, the veil is removed” (2 Cor. 3:14-16).1
From the heavenly perspective, Jesus’s death on
the cross was the historical juncture when the old covenant system officially
stood in the position of “having been made obsolete ...” (Heb. 8:13a; 9:15-17;
cf. Col. 2:14). At the same time, however, when the book of Hebrews was
written, this pre-Christian and now anti-Christian state of affairs was “becoming
obsolete and growing old, near [ἐγγύς] abrogation” (Heb. 8:13b) because the Jerusalem
temple, Levitical priesthood and rituals, Mosaic law and traditions were still
operating decisively and impactfully, though not for much longer.2
By the end of the AD 66-70 Jewish–Roman war,
four decades after Jesus’s Olivet Discourse, the propaganda and aggression against
the new covenant citizens of God’s kingdom, the judaizing pressure to embrace
or return to old covenant ways, and the violent persecutions instigated and
fueled by corrupt religious leaders and fanatic Zealots,3 were dealt a crushing blow.
Nearness of Cognitive Realization
When the disciples saw the signs Jesus warned
about, including “Jerusalem surrounded by armies” (Luke 21:20), by witnessing the providential progression of the divine plan, they would recognize the nearness of God’s ascendant dominion despite the serious challenges
faced from Jewish hostilities and Roman forces. The kingdom of God, biblically
understood, includes perceptive awareness of God’s purpose, work,
and sovereign rule in the hearts, lives, and circumstances of his people. “To
you it has been given to know the mysteries of the kingdom of God, but to the
rest in parables, so that ‘Seeing, they may not see, and hearing, they may not
understand’” (Luke 8:10). For the defiant Jews within Jerusalem’s walls, these spiritual realities were
hidden from their averted eyes until the city was besieged and razed (Luke
19:41-44).
Countering the blind hypocrisy of the Pharisees,
Jesus had earlier informed his followers, having sent them “to proclaim
the kingdom of God” (Luke 9:2, 60; 10:9), “now
nothing is concealed that will not be revealed, and hidden that will not be
known; instead, whatever you have spoken in the darkness will be heard in the
light, and what you have spoken to the ear in the inner chambers will be
announced on the housetops” (Luke 12:1-3). He also observed that those seeking God’s
kingdom eagerly receive it with heavenly treasure, “For where your treasure is,
there your heart will be also” (vv. 31-34). He continued with the exhortation
to always be ready, along with warnings of fiery trials and divided households
(vv. 35-53; cp. 21:12, 16).
Jesus then turned from addressing his disciples
to the larger crowds (Luke 12:54a), rebuking them for their Pharisaic hypocrisy
(note v. 1). Their ability to discern weather conditions by observing the wind
and rainclouds was inconsistent with their stubborn refusal to discern this
time (vv. 54b-56). Accountability is tied to attitude and intentionality.
As one of the precursors to Jerusalem’s fall,
Jesus said: “And this gospel of the kingdom will be proclaimed in all the earth
for a testimony to all the nations, and then will come the end” (Matt. 24:14).
The universal proclamation of the gospel was foreseen in the OT, conducted by
followers of Jesus facing resistance from “a disobeying and opposing people”
(Rom. 10:15-21). At a time when political tensions were escalating, eventually leading
to the Jewish–Roman war resulting in the obliteration
of the Jewish state, Paul wrote, “you previously heard in the word of the
truth, the gospel, coming to you as also in all the world, producing
fruit and increasing as also among you ...” (Col. 1:5-6, emp. added). Whether
these words were meant literally, hyperbolically, or proleptically, it is hard
to miss the parallel to Jesus’s prophetic words.
Spiritual in nature and redemptive in force (Luke 2:30; 3:6;
21:28),4 the kingdom of God is the sovereign reign of God to be
sought (Luke 12:31), entered (Luke 18:24-25), internalized (Luke 13:18-21), possessed (Luke 12:32), and inhabited (Luke 7:28; 13:24-29; 14:15-25; 18:16-25).
Depending on degree of understanding and commitment, the Lord repeatedly noted,
“the kingdom of God has drawn near to you ... the kingdom of God has drawn
near” (Luke 10:9, 11), “the kingdom of God has come upon
you” (Luke 11:20), and “the kingdom of God is in your midst” (Luke 17:20-21).
The irony here is that the unbelieving Jews, idolizing, trusting,
and barricaded within the fortified walls of their cherished city, were headed
for destruction outside the spiritual kingdom of God (cf. Luke 9:62; 13:23-30;
19:41-46). Those entering God’s kingdom (Luke 12:31-32) would escape the doomed
city and be saved from destruction (Luke 21:18, 21; cf. Matt. 24:13), both
physically and spiritually. The temporal city of Jerusalem would have to give way
to the new Jerusalem—God’s universal and everlasting kingdom rule.5
Conclusion
What did Jesus mean when he said to Peter,
Andrew, James, and John, “when you see
these things happening, know that the kingdom of God is near” (Luke 21:31)? Rather than applying to something
already present, or in the far-distant future, or close in spatial proximity, the
nearness of God’s βασιλεία in the
not-so-distant future is contextually linked to the downfall of the theocratic
infrastructure of an anti-Christian regime (Matt. 24:33-34; Mark 13:29-30). The kingdom of God is not a physical
entity but a conceptual reality, illuminating and liberating receptive hearts
that would otherwise be devoted to and constrained by what was once a
serviceable “house of prayer” but having devolved into a
corrupt “den of robbers” (Luke 19:46).
The humble prayer to the heavenly Father,
“your kingdom come” (Luke 11:2), that Jesus taught to his first-century disciples, is still
applicable in its biblical sense. Father, may your sovereign reign infiltrate, impact,
and direct the lives of your
human creation, now and forevermore.
--Kevin L. Moore
Endnotes:
1 Unless
otherwise noted, scripture quotations are the author’s own translation.
2 Prior to
his atoning death and subsequent resurrection, Jesus had promised the Holy
Spirit to the apostles to teach them all they needed to know, remind them of
all Jesus had taught, guide them into all truth, and reveal things to come
(John 14:25-26; 15:26-27; 16:12-15). After his death and resurrection and before
his ascension, he continued speaking to them about “the kingdom of God,” which
they still did not fully comprehend, and prior to ascending into heaven he
reiterated the promise (Acts 1:2-8). A few days later, when the Spirit was
poured out on the twelve, they preached the gospel and the first scripture
quoted was Joel 2:28-32. When Peter said “this” (currently happening) is what
Joel prophesied about, that moment marked the beginning of the prophecy’s
fulfilment regarding the outpouring of God’s Spirit (Acts 2:17a). However, the
rest of the quoted prophecy with respect to “all flesh” (Jews and Gentiles), incl.
men and women (Acts 2:17b-18), unfolded over the next several years (Acts
10:44-48; 11:15-18; 15:6-18). The last section cited (Acts 2:19-21) parallels the
apocalyptic imagery of Jesus’s predictive words in the Olivet Discourse (Matt.
24:29; Mark 13:24-25; Luke 21:25-26), fulfilled in the devastating collapse of
Jerusalem.
3 Note, e.g., Acts 4:3, 29; 5:18, 40; 6:11-14; 8:1; 9:23-25,
29-30; 13:45, 50; 14:2, 5-6; 17:5-10, 13-14; 18:12-13; 21:27-32; 22:22-23, 30;
23:1-15; 24:1-9; 25:2-3, 7; 26:2, 9-11; 28:19; 2 Cor. 11:24; Gal. 1:13; 5:11; 1
Thess. 2:14-16.
4 See also Luke 17:20-21; John 3:3-5; 18:36-37. When Jesus said to his
disciples, “your redemption [ἀπολύτρωσις] is nearing [ἐγγίζω] (Luke 21:28), note the pronominal shift making a
distinction between what “you” disciples see in the near future and what “they”
see when the Son of Man comes in the distant future (cf. “Another Look at Matt 24”).
5
See
K. L. Moore, “The New Jerusalem,” Moore Perspective (30 Jan. 2019),
<Link>.
The rejection of God’s Son unleashed divine judgment against the former
“vinedressers,” cast out of God’s kingdom and destroyed, giving the “vineyard”
to others who are blessed in the kingdom of God (Luke 13:24-35; 20:13-19; cf.
Matt. 21:37-45; 27:25).
Related Posts: Luke's Perspective Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Jesus: Superior High Priest (Part 5), Preterism: What's the Big Deal? (Part 1), The Times of the Gentiles (Lk 21:24)
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Image credit: Arch of
Titus: relief depicting spoils from the Jerusalem temple
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Jewish%E2%80%93Roman_War#/media/File:Arch_of_Titus_Menorah.png