Monday, May 18, 2015

Imminent of Delayed Kingdom?

The 7:00 p.m. worship service at Shiloh is a mix of contemporary, alternative and raucous worship styles. It is Shiloh's own creation, but it works quite well for the gathered community.

Over the past several weeks, the community has considered the difference between an imminent understanding of God's kingdom on Earth or a delayed understanding of God's reign. The issues are all tied up in concepts of salvation, fulfillment, mission and ministry, as well as theologies of stewardship, evangelism and pneumatology. (I heard someone yawn out there...just hang with me.)

An imminent understanding of God's kingdom implies that God's reign is established on Earth when those faithful to Christ Jesus embrace and embody the ethic that Christ established, lived and taught. It is fulfilled when we live in the conditions that God may intend for each of us. It is an ethical system that presumes that God's realm is possible, potential and ultimately qualitative.

A delayed understanding of God's kingdom implies that salvation comes only externally to human history, as a result either of heaven-induced apocalyptic, wherein a new world is created, or a post-historical system of reward and punishment, where we spend eternity in either heaven or hell. Either formula works simply. One is either qualified morally or disqualified morally from eternal reward, whether that of participating in the new world order, under God's command, or of earning one's way into heaven as ultimate reward. The corollary is also true. One may live morally enough to escape being on the outside of God's realm or being consigned to eternity in the fires of hell.

At the 7:00 p.m. service, there is an occasion built into the service where the community discusses the message, texts, points or directions. This happens every week. Over the past several weeks, we have asked whether persons hold to an imminent or delayed understanding of God's kingdom. The decision matters because that decision, and ones associated with it, determine how we spend our time, talent, energies, money and concentration.

If we believe that God's kingdom comes imminently, as the result of faithful actions of those who seek to embody the ethic of Christ Jesus, then we believe that we co-establish with God a way of life that reflects God's will, even here on Earth. Ethical action leads to establishment of God's kingdom, and salvation is, therefore, conditionally established. The Church of Jesus Christ spends its time, talent, energy and money in establishing God's kingdom on Earth.

If we believe that God's kingdom is delayed, placed beyond human history, that it comes only when God defeats all evil on the face of the Earth or that Heaven and Hell are established as places outside the human arena, then we believe that we have to live morally, following the dictates and principles of our religions, ensuring that we are rewarded, either after death or post-apocalyptic. We spend our time, talent, energies and money in getting ourselves, and others, morally right. We avoid the punishment of hell and prepare for the paradise of heaven, to defend against being left out (or behind) and being, instead, included in God's realm.

So, we asked Sunday, which is it? What do you believe about salvation and the establishment of God's kingdom? How have you decided to spend your time, talent, energy and money?  

1 comment:

Tami said...

Wow what a powerful blog! It has got me thinking about everything I've been taught and heard. I'm never felt that it was so cut and dry decision by God. I have always felt that we are to be as Jesus taught us in the New Testament. That good works would come out of our love to everyone. I am trying to be faithful by helping my neighbors and volunteering when I am able. I also have done a lot of thinking about stewardship and I have decided to double my family's Covenant. It may not be as much as others but we are giving when we can and have committed ourselves to the Covenant for our Church.