Re: Naked Bible 131: Conference Interviews Part 4
Let’s talk about terminology. This is no different than anything we’ve said before; it’s just another person expressing the same thing when Heiser interviewed NT Wright.
The Kingdom of God is what you get when the Covenant comes to life in people’s hearts. The Kingdom is all of the people who share in the spiritual inheritance. The focus is on the people, not place or time. It’s not an institution but a family. It really makes no difference if you call it the Kingdom of God, or of Heaven, or of Christ. It’s all the same thing now.
On the Cross, Jesus defeated the flesh. Galatians 2:20 explains that clearly. Prior to the Cross, defeating the flesh and slipping away from the Enemy’s grasp was much more difficult. It still happened, but the demands were much higher. It required you to move geographically, politically, socially and culturally. But the whole point has always been to conform your earthly existence to the revelation of God, the character and priorities of our Creator. It was never a performance issue; it was always a matter of faith.
In case it wasn’t obvious, God was keeping His final solution hidden from His opposition. The business of an earthly kingdom was an exhibit in the Court of Heaven regarding the dispute with the Devil and his allies. This was a set-up. God knew it would fail; the point was to reveal His character to His children through their failures. The failed earthly kingdom was the build-up to the Messiah who would bring into force the real covenant and the final revelation of God to humanity. The Messiah was the final answer to a long history of failure; there is no clearer revelation of God than His Son.
God’s opposition saw the Old Covenant only as an opportunity to seduce humans and finally destroy them. The Devil and the rebel alliance attacked the rather obvious matter of law and performance until the Nation of Israel had so deeply defected from God that they would fail to witness the Covenant and God would have no choice but to destroy them. They were blind-sided by what the Cross actually did, ending the covenant of human national identity and ushering in a covenant of faith identity.
Satan and the rebels were completely unaware of election. The Cross empowered the Elect to discover their eternal spiritual identity and dispense with human identity. They could renounce the whole thing and step into the Covenant of Christ. It was what the Passover symbolized; not a matter of breaking out one nation enslaved to another, but of all humanity enslaved to the Devil and his friends. It was no longer about human DNA, but spiritual birth.
The notion that the ultimate goal was for souls to go to Heaven was from Plato and his disciples (Plutarch, for example). It’s Hellenism. Scripture says the ultimate goal of Israel and the Messiah was to (1) translate the Hebrew Elect into a spiritual covenant, and (2) to open the Covenant to the Gentile Elect. Plato would insist it has to be democratic, something everyone could theoretically achieve. Paul warned us it was only the Elect, and it was not an achievement. Christ on the Cross did not buy us a ticket to Heaven, but to bring us into the Eternal Covenant, and it starts here in this life.
It’s not like an angry God was ready to crush us, and somehow an innocent victim interposed, so we could get on with life. That’s just a caricature or parody of the gospel message. Redemption sets us free to become the loyal priesthood while on this earth. It’s not parading about in clothing and pretense as something important on a human level. Rather, it’s taking upon ourselves an identity that cannot be read by anyone lacking the Holy Spirit. Reconciliation is all about putting us to work in the mission for which God designed us.
Sin is not simply rule-breaking. Sin is devotion to a false deity, an enslavement to deities that hate you. We have a host of false Christs proclaimed, variations on the theme of false deities. We don’t have temples with images (idols) because we are the images of Christ. Resurrection is the defeat of the false gods. In the “already but not yet” of our spiritual birth, we have the resurrection of our dead spirits, to be followed later by the resurrection of our bodies into their eternal form.
Finally, we have links in Romans 1 back to Genesis 3. Adam began to serve the created beings — the Devil and his allies. Adam and Eve exchanged their reverence for God and switched to a lesser being. That idolatry was a forfeiture of all Adam’s descendants to serve them. We do not inherit Adam’s guilt, but we inherit mortality. The flesh is mortality, and this is what the Cross defeated.
