In many
Christian circles, we've reduced the gospel to a simple pitch about
the afterlife. Saving souls (i.e. trading hell for heaven upon one's
death) is often seen as God's primary objective—the meat of the
gospel, so to speak. Consequently, signing people up for the sweet
hereafter becomes our exclusive agenda (with everything else seen as
either a distraction or an optional add-on). Jesus’ version of the
gospel, however, had a noticeably different focus than our popular
afterlife-insurance spiel. Jesus, for example, was preoccupied with
announcing the coming of God’s subversive counter kingdom (arriving
off the grid and under the noses of the present powers it was
undermining, like yeast spreading through dough or a germinated seed
slowly growing into a mighty tree). He invited his followers to
experience this radical kingdom-life today as we’re reborn
into him and subsequently transformed from enemies into agents of his
sweeping new creation project. He described a new humanity and a new
world that is even now crashing into and supplanting the old by way
of his incarnation, death, resurrection, ascension, and eminent
return. In God’s kingdom, the hungry, forgotten, and
marginalized—the “last”—are given priority and the “first,”
the powerful and privileged, are sent away empty handed. Jesus’
story crescendos with his physical return, the resurrection of the
dead (and the end of death), his final confrontation of evil, a
restored creation, and the total reunification of heaven and earth in
himself, through the power of his Spirit and to the glory of his
Father. Far from an evacuation to heaven, the gospel is more
accurately describing the invasion and “colonization,” as N.T.
Wright would say, of earth by heaven (a proposition that is
either wonderful or terrifying—maybe both at the same
time—depending on one's perception of the King and attachment to
the present system that he means to overthrow). In short, God is now
taking back his rebel world through the person and work of Jesus.
God, as
the Creator, has exclusive rights to his creation. In Genesis we read
how God created humans in his image and assigned them the task of
tending to his creation as his administrators. The original human vocation, then, is to reflect the goodness of God to creation and to
lead creation in worship of the Creator. It should be noted, however,
that despite humanity's extensive, delegated authority over creation,
Scripture is always clear that humans are tenants and not owners.
When his vast and finely-tuned temple is operating correctly it
harmoniously tells a true story about the One who made it. The
resulting music is spectacular for everyone involved. But what
happens when the middle management refuses to play their part? What
damage is done if the conductors won't lead the orchestra to perform
the symphony as the Composer has written?
Jesus
once told a story about some presumptuous tenants who thought they
could deny their landlord access to his own vineyard (the specific
context of this story is relating to 1st Century Jewish leaders, but
there are intended parallels throughout the biblical narrative
between the Israelites/Canaan and humanity/creation). The tenants
behaved as if the vineyard was their own, managed it as they saw fit,
tried to keep the harvest for themselves, and ultimately murdered the
owner's only heir in their attempts to retain power. It didn't go
well for them in the end.
Seeing
ourselves rightly as created beings who are indebted to our Creator
is an important first step in recognizing the severity of our
collective offense. If we wrongly conclude that God has created us
with no particular purpose in mind, we may assume that we're free to
do whatever we want so long as we're generally nice, decent
creatures. Judging whether or not we've been successful at this
ambiguous endeavor is itself an extremely subjective task (leading
many to falsely conclude they are basically “good people”). We'll
undoubtedly have differing ideas, for example, about what is or isn't
nice and decent human behavior. If, however, we rightly understand
that God has made us to be something like a mirror, to reflect his
beauty, his justice, and his mercy, then the question isn't whether
or not I'm being the best me that I can be. All of our
opinions at this point are irrelevant. The real question is whether
or not I'm accurately reflecting a specific person, namely my
Creator, as he intends (It should be noted here that billions of
finite image-bearers could potentially reflect an infinite Creator,
with no two of them being the same, and yet the cumulative sum
wouldn't even come close to fully describing him). He alone is qualified to determine my success at this. If it turns out
I'm not accurately reflecting him (perhaps, like a shattered mirror,
I'm no longer even capable of accurately reflecting him) then I'm
essentially lying about him by way of the distorted image my life is
projecting. Even worse, all of humanity (a tragic collection of
broken mirrors that only produce more broken mirrors) is systemically
and perpetually misrepresenting the Creator to each other, the rest
of creation, and—most importantly—to the Creator himself. Whether
we realize it or not, the exploitative and materialistic ways in
which we typically view and abuse our fellow image-bearers and the
rest of what God has made is nothing short of blasphemy. And the
resulting dissonant music, if we can even call it that, is ravaging
his creation.
At this
point in the story, God has a decision to make (a decision he
mysteriously settled in his own mind before even creating). Will he
wipe the board clean and begin again (it seems creating is a simple
thing for him, after all), or will he undergo the long and painful
process of repairing and reinstating the undeserving rebels and
undoing the damage they've caused to his creation? (It should be
noted that simply ignoring the hell his wayward image-bearers have
birthed was never an option for the Creator, as he is intrinsically
incapable of apathy). His restrained approach to human rebellion,
however, speaks volumes about how he views and wields the infinite
power at his disposal. He hasn't abandoned the creation he dearly
loves to its usurpers; he has subjected it (as an act of his
permissive will) to bondage “in hope” (Romans chapter 8).
The
Creator has a unique knot to untangle if he wants to have his
creation restored to him as the temple it was meant to be. As already
mentioned, an essential component of his interconnected design calls
for humans to be willing participants, submitted to his sheet music
as an act of their own volition, functioning as conduits of his grace
and administrative justice (this willing submission to God by humans
is the essence of his kingdom). This delegation of his power is
certainly not out of necessity. He could easily conduct his
composition himself, play all of the individual instruments, and so
on, but this clearly isn't what he's after. The specific structuring
of his orchestra, including the vital role assigned to its human
conductors, has as much to say about the generous Composer as the
actual symphony it was all meant to perform. Jesus, the servant King,
once contrasted God's shockingly reserved methodology with typical
human rulers' heavy handedness (as seen in our predictable tendency
to lord it over each other). Human rulers have historically used
violence or propaganda to coerce or manipulate their subjects into
submission. But this simply won't produce the sort of kingdom that
the Creator is after. He naturally won't bypass or extinguish human
volition in his efforts to restore it. The kind of submission he's
after can never come as the result of brute force or deception. But
how does one convince one's enemies, pitiful creatures who are now
inherently rebellious, to willingly, without coercion, submit once
again to their rightful King? The complexity of the Creator's dilemma
can hardly be overstated, but fortunately for us his ingenuity is
boundless.
If human
rebellion is the epicenter of creation's trouble, then the remedy can
only come as the result of a humanity back on track, reflecting God's
glory, and tending to his temple as the priests we were created to
be. Here in lies the problem. Every one of us, according to
Scripture, has become disqualified. There's an incredible scene in
Revelation chapter 5, involving an important, symbolic scroll that
sat unopened. An angel shouted out, “'who is worthy to open the
scroll and break its seal?' And no one in heaven or on earth or under
the earth was able to open the scroll or to look into it.” John,
the author of Revelation, at this point broke down and wept
uncontrollably over the hopelessness surrounding this unopened
scroll. It seemed as though the original human vocation would
tragically go unclaimed and unfulfilled.
What
John witnessed next in Revelation 5 parallels the incredible Daniel 7
prophecy, in which a mysterious human character (a “son of man”)
ascends to heaven, walks boldly into the throne room of the “Ancient
of Days,” and is “given dominion (see Genesis 1:28) and glory and
a kingdom, that all peoples, nations, and languages should serve him;
his dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away,
and his kingdom one that shall not be destroyed.” John sees this
same epic “son of man” moment in his vision, when the despair
surrounding the unopened scroll is suddenly shattered with the
arrival of the “Lion” who is also a “slain Lamb.” Pin-drop
silence falls over the crowd as this mysterious figure emerges. This
somehow worthy human walks right up to “him who was seated on the
throne” and claims the scroll on our behalf. The onlookers erupt
into song, “Worthy are you to take the scroll and to open its
seals, for you were slain, and by your blood you ransomed people for
God from every tribe and language and people and nation, and you have
made them a kingdom and priests to our God, and they shall reign on
the earth.”
His
solution to the human dilemma is elegant and unexpected. Ironically,
God himself, as an authentic human, fulfilled the original human
vocation, and, by doing so, he is reclaiming all that was lost. The
only begotten Son, the eternal Word of God, who spoke the universe
into existence, became the human we were all meant to be, the true
“image of the invisible God.” As the Creator, God's authority
over his creation and subsequent rights to it are uncontested. But in
the incarnation, God reclaims, on our behalf, a uniquely human
authority. Suppose for a minute that the person who invented American
football also established and presided over the National Football
League, built all the stadiums, owned all the teams, and held
lifelong contracts with every player. Despite this person's vast
authority over the sport they created and maintain, they would still
need to take to the field as an athlete if their intention was to
fairly win the league's most valuable player award. And that's
exactly what he did. God took to the field in the form of a 1st
Century, penniless, Galilean from backwoods Nazareth, and he conquered
the world without firing a shot.
The
unique mission of the Christ could only be fulfilled by a human
character (that he was also by necessity God, on account of universal
human failing, is a fantastic twist in the story but not the main
point of this chapter—as we often make it). In other words, Jesus
wasn't just pretending to be human in the incarnation; he was human
(John claims that denying this fact is “antichrist” - 2 John
1:7). And though his divinity is firmly established in Scripture,
proving it wasn't the drum Jesus was beating during his earthly
ministry (You might remember that “son of man” was his favorite
term for himself). He silenced demonic beings who recognized who he
really was, and he frequently made it clear that he didn't speak or
act on his own authority (Philippians chapter 2 describes his
behavior in the incarnation as a humble emptying of himself in order
to faithfully fulfill his mission). He operated with borrowed
authority, given to him by God, authority reserved for an untarnished
human, the promised King, God's chosen representative, on whom his
divine favor rests (The term “Messiah/Christ” sums this up
nicely). The call to accept Jesus as God's chosen human
representative, the exclusive conduit through which his grace would
flow, and the means by which he would reclaim his rebel world is what
we see primarily promoted in Scripture (John 5:37-38, 6:29, Acts
4:10-12). Jesus lived his life as a perfect image-bearer, fully
relying on the Holy Spirit, and in complete submission to his Father
(he “learned obedience” on our behalf - Hebrews 5). Receiving
Jesus as the Christ is equated with submitting to God's plan for
humanity. If we miss this, if we instead see Jesus as something of a
superman, then we miss the point of the incarnation (As an
untarnished human, he was a superman of sorts, but not the way we
often think). Don't misunderstand me; defending the deity of Christ
is an important task from which the Church should never shrink back.
But in doing so, we must also realize that there's much more going on
in the incarnation than simply, “surprise—Jesus is God.” The
man Jesus isn't meant to be seen as a perpetual singularity but the
extraordinary means by which God is producing many more sons and
daughters of a similar kind (Hebrews 2:9-18). We've unfortunately
allowed the heretics to define the parameters of this conversation
(especially the misguided ideological descendants of Arius). As a
result, we're spending so much energy defending Jesus' divinity that
we're left with little time to recognize and accurately describe the
implications of his humanity.
Just as
the first Adam's rebellion infected all of humanity, so the second
Adam's obedience makes him patient zero for a new pandemic, what C.S.
Lewis calls the “good infection.” Jesus is something of a Trojan
horse, in this way, an unassuming Antidote for the human condition.
He is the first of many Spirit-filled and fully submitted humans, the
King and the kingdom rolled into one, the person where heaven and
earth intersect, and the divine image-bearer who sacrificially
resolves the human conflict with God in his own broken body. He
alone, through restored conductors, will direct the orchestra to
properly perform the Composer's magnum opus. Jesus is the prototype
for a restored humanity and the catalyst for the new creation. He is
the invasion we never saw coming.
Of
course not everyone is celebrating Jesus' enthronement. There are
plenty of people who don't want God to reclaim his rebel world
(plenty of tenants who think they are owners). God is patient, but he
won't wait forever. His rescue plan will go forward as scheduled
(It's his universe, after all). When Jesus returns, he will
personally confront those who resist his legitimate authority, those
who love their rebellion more than their coming King. Participation
in God's kingdom as citizen sons is voluntary, however, and all those
who foolishly opt out of God's new creation project will eventually
have their decision ratified for all eternity. God values and even
honors human volition, but he won't allow these dissenters to wreak
havoc in his new creation. Sin spreads like cancer. The only perfect
human, he who was obedient to God unto death—even death on a
cross—will stand in judgment of their defiance. He will banish them
from God's restored universe. “There are only two kinds of people
in the end,” says Lewis, “those who say to God, 'Thy will be
done,' and those to whom God says, in the end, 'Thy will be done.'”
Their subsequent existence, forever separated from the Author of
Life, is described in Scripture as a “second death.” Jesus,
himself, compares this eternal quarantine to being locked out of the
city, thrown on a burning heap of decaying filth, or set adrift in a
lake of perpetual fire. He passionately warns whoever will listen
that this tragic fate is to be avoided at all costs.
However,
forgiveness of sins is never an end in itself. The popular afterlife
pitch frequently divorces Jesus' debt-canceling work on the cross
from God's ultimate purpose of restoring the original human vocation.
In a truncated gospel, the “why?” behind the cross is often
answered with, “...so we can go to heaven after we die.” While
it's certainly true that God knows and loves each and every one of us
(and his ambitious new creation project naturally involves our
individual repentance and willing submission to his Christ), it's a
mistake to view our “personal salvation” apart from the good news
of God's kingdom (Even Jesus' well known conversation with Nicodemus,
in which he articulates an individual's desperate need to become
“born again,” takes place within the context of his larger
kingdom message – John 3:3). Ultimately, we're made clean as a
prerequisite for service. Our great offense is mercifully removed on
the cross so that we're finally able to get back to that for
which we were originally created. Scripture frequently ties
forgiveness of sins to reinstatement in God's service (Titus 2:11-14,
Ephesians 2:8-10, Hebrews 9:14). God's reason for releasing Abraham's descendants from the bondage of Egypt, for example, was so they would
be free to “serve” him (Exodus 4:22-23). Keep in mind, it's
exceedingly good to be in his service. He means to make us kings and
queens. Ultimately, a heart of stone has no interest in fulfilling
the original human vocation (which is why the strictly
punishment-avoidance-pitch is very popular), but a restored heart of
flesh leaps with indescribable gratitude at the opportunity to be
reinstated as a priest in God's temple. Many of our notions of
heaven, salvation, and God's endgame need to be rethought in light of
Jesus' kingdom message.
When we
lose sight of the larger narrative, we'll often view sanctification
(i.e. becoming like Jesus) as an add-on to the gospel instead of the
point of it all. Growing into the image of Christ isn't merely a
private endeavor that we undertake for our own personal edification
(i.e. approaching the fruit of the Spirit as a self-help buffet that
promises to unlock our best life now). Our personal transformation is
an integral part of his wide-scale terraforming project. He's making
ready a now-inhospitable environment for his glorious, unveiled
presence. He's bringing all things under the lordship of Jesus, and
incrementally answering the Lord's Prayer for heaven to be reunited
with earth. As we submit to the indwelling Spirit of Christ, we
become kingdom-pockets of heaven on earth. There are still many areas
of his world—many corners of our own hearts—that haven't yet
fully submitted to his reign. There's much work to be done, but
fortunately his kingdom will continually increase (Isaiah 9:7). Jesus
claims he is “making all things new.” If we truly are “new
creations” in Christ, then we should see the obvious continuity
between what he is now doing in us and the final restoration of all
things at the eschaton (described most vividly in Revelation chapters
21 and 22).
I know a
brother-in-Christ who ministers in his hometown of Machilipatnam,
India. He's used mightily by God to clothe the naked and feed the
hungry, to sometimes rescue women and children from sex-trafficking
rings run by murderous gangsters. I've heard stories of children sold
into prostitution for a bag of rice, whole families that have laid
down together on train tracks in a time of total desperation. Some of
the children have witnessed their own father savagely murder their
mother before their eyes, while others have been intentionally maimed
by organized crime syndicates that use them as professional beggars
(little ones that have seen evil so cruel they're still unable to
even speak it). To anyone paying attention, the world is still
obviously full of profound brokenness. And yet the darkness is
passing away (1 John 2:8). One of my sister-in-laws works as an
advocate for victims of human trafficking. She could tell you that in
virtually every city across the US there are image-bearers of God
being exploited by other image-bearers in numerous, horrific and
dehumanizing ways (some of whom you and I have almost definitely met
in passing without even knowing). And yet the Light has come. Even
among our own communities and churches, those who are being
transformed into the image of Christ, ministers of the gospel, our
friends and family, may succumb to hidden sexual sin, vile hypocrisy,
corruption, greed, racism, addictions, emotional and physical
abuse... and yet... a new Day is dawning. As I look within, I've felt
at times defeated and ashamed at what my own mouth has said, the lies
my sin-stricken heart has believed, and the evil my hands have done.
But we mustn't lose heart; our King is on the move. “For he has
rescued us from the dominion of darkness and brought us into the
kingdom of the Son he loves” (Colossians 1:13).
It takes
faith to believe that God, even now in the midst of our broken world,
is actively bringing all things under the lordship of King Jesus.
Likewise, it takes faith to trust Jesus when he assures us that “all
authority in heaven and on earth” has been given to him. And
it takes faith to know that when his massive restoration project is
complete—a rebel world returned to its Creator—he'll one day
present the kingdom to his proud Father. The Creator will then dwell
among us on a restored earth. We'll see his face, he'll be our God,
and we'll be his people. This is his incredible endgame. This is the
story the Bible is telling. And it's into this exciting endeavor that
he's inviting “whosoever” to join him.
“For
the creation waits in eager expectation for the children of God to be
revealed. For the creation was subjected to frustration, not by its
own choice, but by the will of the one who subjected it, in hope that
the creation itself will be liberated from its bondage to decay and
brought into the freedom and glory of the children of God. We know
that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of
childbirth right up to the present time. Not only so, but we
ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as
we wait eagerly for our adoption to sonship, the redemption of our
bodies. For in this hope we were saved.” - Romans 8:19-24a
“To him who loves us and has freed us from our sins by his blood, and has made us to be a kingdom and priests to serve his God and Father—to him be glory and power for ever and ever! Amen.” - Revelation 1:5b-6
“Then the end will come, when he hands over the kingdom to God the Father after he has destroyed all dominion, authority and power. For he must reign until he has put all his enemies under his feet. The last enemy to be destroyed is death.” - 1 Corinthians 15:24-26
“To him who loves us and has freed us from our sins by his blood, and has made us to be a kingdom and priests to serve his God and Father—to him be glory and power for ever and ever! Amen.” - Revelation 1:5b-6
“Then the end will come, when he hands over the kingdom to God the Father after he has destroyed all dominion, authority and power. For he must reign until he has put all his enemies under his feet. The last enemy to be destroyed is death.” - 1 Corinthians 15:24-26