“And this gospel of the Kingdom will be preached in all the world as a witness to all the nations and then the end will come” (Mt24:14 New King James Version)
The book’s title is taken from a passage of Paul which we will examine shortly but it was puzzling over the above statement of Jesus within its textual context that was the catalyst to transforming what I had intended to be a small-scale retirement writing project for incorporation into a personal website into something so expansive; so a consideration of the prophecy in which it is embedded is where I have opted to start. The verse which will form the focal point for this opening chapter is taken from what most Bible scholars acknowledge to be a distinctly problematical end-time prophecy referred to as the Olivet Discourse. It was musing upon it that set the ball rolling along a personal voyage of discovery which reshaped my understanding of how biblical prophecy in both the Old Testament and the gospels should be approached. The term “gospel of the Kingdom” occurs only four times in the New Testament and is used exclusively when referring to the preaching of Jesus - twice by Matthew (4:23; 9:35) and once by Mark (1:14). The only other occasion this description of God’s glad tidings is used is by Jesus Himself, the verse quoted in the chapter sub-heading. The verse is assumed to be referring to the preaching of the current gospel age, but why is it somewhat incongruously located in the middle of Jesus’s discourse on the tribulations, referring to the natural disasters and political traumas that would herald His second coming? Or was the Lord referring here to the destruction of the Temple and the events leading up to it? The disciples had asked Him about both in the Matthew account (v3), but the response doesn’t clearly distinguish between these two cataclysmic events, as is also the case in Mark and Luke’s accounts. It is as if they were expected to occur almost simultaneously, in which case it must be said these passages would have made a lot more sense. In Mark’s account, the flight from Jerusalem to the mountains is directly linked to the tribulations which are to affect the whole of humanity (Mk13:18-20) preceding the coming of the Son of Man (vv24-26). It is clearer still in one of two references to these events in Luke’s account (chapter 17), where the escape passage (vv30,31) is indisputably linked to the return of the Son of Man, who “must first be rejected by this generation” (v26). Frankly, neither preterist nor futurist can provide a satisfactory solution to this passage, but once one grasps the implications of the “fellowship pertaining to the administration/dispensation of the secret (plan) that had been hidden in God” (“fellowship of the secret” for short), such terms become largely redundant outside the allusive book of Revelation.
A large part of the 24th chapter of Matthew is indisputably referring to the end of the age and the universal significance of the second coming. The passage concerning the escape to the mountains (vv15-20) as is clearer from the account in Luke (21:20) indicates a siege of Jerusalem; yet heading for the hills would hardly have been advisable in the context of the first Jewish-Roman war (66-73AD) as events transpired unless there was to be some divine deliverance waiting when one arrived there. That historical conflict did indeed result in a siege of the city and the destruction of the Temple by members of the Roman army in AD70, but Jesus’s advice would align better to the prophecy in Zechariah chapter 14 in which a siege of the holy city by Gentile armies coincides with the coming of JHWE as King of the World. The purpose of escaping to the mountains would indeed have been divine deliverance by passing through the supernaturally created mountain valley to safety in “Azal” (Zech14:5), at which point the Lord would sally out and fight the nations who had oppressed His people (v3) in accordance with other Old Testament end-age prophecy. If Jesus had this in mind, it would explain why the passage in Matthew concerning the escape to the mountains directly leads into verses 21 and 22 relating an unprecedented global trauma that if it were not to be shortened would destroy humanity, heralding the return of the Son of Man.
Jesus went on to warn of false messiahs, wars, famines, pestilence, earthquakes, persecution of the faithful, many of whom will betray and hate one another, many being ensnared by false prophets; and because of the increase in lawlessness, the love of many of the faithful will grow cold (vv10-12). Comfort should be drawn from the description of the forecast global trauma as birth-pangs (v8), anticipating what Jesus and Matthew refer to as the renaissance or regeneration (Greek: paliggenesia) that is to follow. And so we arrive at the featured verse in which Jesus declares that “this gospel of the Kingdom” will be proclaimed in every place and nation as a witness before the end of the age comes. For reasons already implied I believe that what was being envisaged here was a global evangelistic mission (cf. Mt10:23b) rather than what we regard as the gospel dispensation, now entering its third millennium. But even if it were referring to the gospel age, for such a universal witness to be accomplished if Christ were to return imminently, three issues would surely need to be addressed: firstly, there should be an agreed understanding of the Good News message to be announced to the world; secondly and inextricably linked to the first, it would be delivered from a unified or at worst affiliated body of churches; and thirdly, the outreach would be driven and given urgency by a common recognition that to use Jesus’s analogy, the fig tree was in bloom (v32), i.e. world events were indicating that the end of the current arrangements on Earth really was nigh. But as some readers will appreciate, for our Lord alludes to it in this prophecy in the context of the Temple as later does Paul in the context of the Church, His return will have been preceded by a cataclysmic ecclesiological event, as a result of which the gospel has a markedly different content depending on which Christian grouping is presenting it, thus making a coherent universal witness quite impossible. If you disagree with that assessment it is probably because you think the other lot, for example Catholic and Orthodox churches if you happen to be an Evangelical, do not know the true gospel anyway; which rather demonstrates my point. Before delving further into that maelstrom some surprising particulars need to be kept in mind with regard to the prophecy under consideration. Starting with one that is explicitly stated in Scripture, the incarnated Son of God was not at that time aware of the precise timetable of events (Mk13:32), for that was known only to His Father. In view of the resurrected Jesus’s unwillingness later to answer His apostles’ inquiry concerning the restoration of the Kingdom to the Jews (Acts1:6-7), they were not given any indication of timescales when writing the epistles, and most would agree that is evident from the tone of their content. For example, although Paul on one occasion refers to himself as being absent from the body and present with the Lord, i.e. going to Heaven when he dies, he always encourages or warns his readers in the churches in terms of being prepared for the “Day of the Lord” (1Cor1:8; 5:5 2Cor1:14, Phil1:6,10;2:16, 1Thes5:2; 2Thes2:2; 2Pet3:10,12); or “patiently to await the Son from Heaven” (1Thes1:10), rather than speaking in terms of an individual’s death and the judgement to follow it. It suggests that he along with the apostles had themselves interpreted the Lord’s teaching as indicating such a day might well arrive within a generation, albeit that St Peter suitably reminded his readers that one day with the Lord can be as a thousand years (2Pet3:8).
Restoration of the Kingdom to Israel
But the more salient issue to consider at this point is what exactly the apostles were asking Jesus in Acts1:6-7 and what He said in response, and what is equally interesting what He did not say. “Lord, will you at this time restore the Kingdom to Israel?” The enquiry pertained to the re-instatement of the Kingdom role to its intended heirs the Jewish nation, and by implication the related prophesies concerning the physical nation itself. The question obviously cannot relate to Jewish people “getting saved by coming into the Church”, for the Church’s membership at that point was almost exclusively Jewish and continued to be so up to Peter’s revelation concerning the admittance of the Gentiles (Acts10). Jesus in response does not dismiss the apostles’ inquiry as irrelevant on a basis that the Kingdom was to be established universally through the Church, but rather He replies that it was not their business “to know the times and seasons which the Father has put under His own authority”. Given the timing (post-Commission) and the persons being denied enlightenment on the subject Jesus did not intend it to be the Church’s immediate business either. The response also implied that such a re-instatement might indeed be anticipated otherwise He surely would have replied along the lines: “You have not understood my teaching; the question is irrelevant”. In terms of Old Testament prophecies relating to what we know as the gospel age, as most readers will recognize, there simply aren’t any that come close to envisaging the form it has taken. Without exception they roll together the coming of the Messiah as heralded by John the Baptist with final judgement and messianic rule, as indeed did the Baptist in his understanding and preaching as I will demonstrate shortly. Jesus’s reference to this gospel of the Kingdom (touto to euaggelion Mt24:14) that He envisaged would be preached before His return must equate to the Good News message about the coming Kingdom and how to prepare for it that Jesus and His disciples had been preaching to the Jewish people, for it was this gospel not another (I said I was pedantic), and a major component of the outreach was physical healing, raising the dead and casting out evil spirits. That was the context of His commission: “Freely you have received, freely give” (Mt10:8). For all twelve including Judas Iscariot had been given the power to heal sickness and disease (v1). Yet what Jesus’s disciples were preaching and performing (albeit exclusively amongst the Jews v5) as a result of their Matthew 10 commission could have contained no reference to Jesus’s death and resurrection and the soteriology focussed around it, for the disciples had no conception of it (Lk9:45, 18:31-34); yet it would be “this gospel of the Kingdom” that the Lord envisaged would be a witness to the rest of the world at the end of the age (Mt24:14).
Already, two seminal points may be gleaned: firstly and more generally, scriptural references to “the gospel”, for example Paul’s introductory statement in his letter to the Romans (1:1-7) are referring to a proclamation concerning the Lordship or Kingship of Jesus; the gospel per se is not a list of instructions about how one gets saved; rather that is the result for those who obey the Good News proclamation. Secondly and more controversially, Jesus’s understanding of the “gospel of the Kingdom” as a final witness to the world re-affirms that at the time of the Olivet discourse He was not anticipating (or if you prefer not disclosing) the gospel age of the Church as it has panned out. That is why the Church has never preached the “gospel of the Kingdom” that Jesus’s disciples were preaching and enacting, in which physical healing and satanic deliverance were central and the soteriology concerning Christ’s Passion quite absent. The gospel the Church has been preaching has rightly been focussed on Christ’s death and resurrection as the means by which the soul can be healed, the elect of God sanctified, and the world enlightened and salted. Of course, Jesus hadn’t died and been resurrected at the time of the Olivet Discourse, but the point that I am typically labouring is that no reference could have been made about His death and its implications for none of the disciples were expecting it let alone would understand it (Lk9:45; 18:31-34).
“Behold the Servant of God who is to eradicate sin from the world”
At least two of John Baptist’s former disciples were amongst the twelve so they could not have been aware of it either in spite of the prophet’s references to the “talya d’alaha”, which John translates in his gospel as “Lamb of God” for that is what the apostle had come to know Christ to be: the Paschal Lamb. But “talya” can equally mean “servant” (or “son”) in the Aramaic language, and one of those is bound to have been the Baptist’s understanding otherwise his disciples that became the Christ’s disciples would surely have been better informed and prepared for what was to occur (i.e. their Lord’s death). It is highly unlikely that Jesus was referred to as the “Lamb of God” by His disciples during His earthly ministry, which is why it is only to be found in the later Johannine account. For the slaying of the lamb was the focal rite of Jewish Passover, and as His most faithful disciple had assured his Master: “No worries, Lord, that is certainly not going to be happening to You!” (cf. Mt16:22).
Acts: a guide to sound evangelism
Once one reaches the Acts of the Apostles, the crucified and risen Jesus is central to the Good News message. Indeed, Acts is vital in that it indicates how people were called to gospel salvation in terms of what is required of them and once again just as importantly what is not. Examine every sermon in Acts meticulously, including Paul’s and you will note that “justification” for example is mentioned but once (13:38b/39). In the apostolic evangelistic preaching of Acts, people were not brought to salvation by apprehending “justification by faith alone”, or by “renouncing any effort to be righteous and resting in the Saviour’s merits” or “looking to the finished work of Christ and appropriating it to myself” or “believing that Jesus had died for me as an individual” or “praying the prayer of faith, asking Jesus to come into my heart” but simply by acknowledging and believing that Jesus Christ is Lord, turning from their sinful ways and being baptized for cleansing of past sin: nothing more, nothing less (cf. Acts8:36,37 & 17:30). The teaching on how the Christian goes on to grow in the faith and in holiness and participate fully in the life of the Church is provided by the epistles. Of course, none of the apostles’ writings are specifically evangelistic, being pastoral letters written to the churches, but even allowing for this change of genre (evangelistic preaching to pastoral letter) it cannot be the case that what is essential to saving faith could be excluded from all the evangelistic sermons in the Bible and can only be deduced from the Pauline epistles! Of course, the Lord’s ethical teaching in the gospels along with the pastoral epistles must be drawn upon to fill out the picture of what it means to commit one’s life to Christ; but in terms of what one is required to believe or emotionally experience to become a Christian, and who within the broader Church are to be regarded as such, nothing can supplement the requirements of initiation as preached in Acts. Likewise, if the gospel as one currently perceives it does not match the heralding angel’s description of “Good News of great joy that shall be to all people (Lk2:10), be assured one has not yet fully grasped the implications of the birth, life, death, resurrection, ascension and coming again of the Lord Jesus Christ. Angelic messages of Good News and great universal joy lead to joyous outcomes for humanity, albeit not necessarily for each individual; any eschatological depiction that does not reflect that Good News requires revisiting, however revered its formulator may have been.
Saul of Tarsus - The thirteenth faithful apostle
Jesus had called twelve men to the apostolate for good reason, and a richly symbolic one:
And Jesus said to them, “Truly I say to you who have followed Me, in the Regeneration when the Son of Man will sit down on His glorious throne, you also shall sit upon twelve thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel (Mt19:28 New American Standard Bible)
It symbolized the reconstitution of God’s chosen people: the twelve tribes, only two of which had survived at this point. Judas lost his spot and was replaced by Matthias who it tends to be forgotten was added to the eleven faithful apostles (Acts1:26), surely to complete the symbolism for there was no obvious practical reason for him be recruited at that point. Peter had insisted that one from amongst the larger group of men and women who had been accompanying Jesus throughout His ministry be appointed to make up the twelve who were to witness to Jesus’s life, death and resurrection as apostles (Acts1:21,22). Saul of Tarsus on the other hand was appointed “out of due time” (1Cor15:8), personally commissioned by the risen and ascended Christ as the thirteenth faithful apostle1 now that gospel salvation was to be made available to the Gentile nations. In his own words, Saul of Tarsus was “chosen to know God’s will; to see the Righteous One and hear His voice so as to be a witness to all men” (Acts22:14,15). Yet surely if Jesus had initially envisaged commissioning a universal body to take over the role of Israel in establishing God’s Kingdom on Earth, He would not have ruined the symbolism by appointing a thirteenth apostle at a later stage specifically to target the Gentiles (Rom11:13). That is hardly a strong argument in itself to justify the title of this opening chapter, just one piece of the evidence. For it should become obvious as one carefully reads through Acts that in spite of the Great Commission to baptize and make disciples of all nations, it is not until events recorded in the eleventh chapter that any of the disciples fully grasped that anyone who was not a Jew, Samaritan or proselyte could be granted the same gift of salvation [Greek: ten isen dorian] as that intended for the Jews:
I (Peter) realized then that God was giving them (the Gentiles) the identical gift He gave to us when we believed in the Lord Jesus Christ; and who was I to stand in God’s way? This account satisfied them (circumcised believers in Jerusalem) and they gave glory to God, saying “God has clearly granted to the Gentiles also the repentance that leads to life (Acts11:17,18 New Jerusalem Bible).
One will constantly need to keep in mind that references to “eternal life” or “life” in the New Testament relate to being united to God in Christ now, not “going to Heaven when you die”:
And this is eternal life, that they might know You the only true God and Jesus Christ whom You have sent (Jn17:3).
And: "Whoever eats My flesh and drinks My blood has (present tense) eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day" (Jn6:54)
And: "No murderer has eternal life abiding in him" (1Jn3:15)
St John is referring to something to be experienced now; a higher form and quality of life than that which we can naturally know as fallen human beings; likewise, Peter in Acts. Even the sinless Saviour asserted that He “lived by the Father” (Jn6:57) in the same way “those who eat Me shall live by Me (same verse), affirming again that “life” as Jesus, Paul and others speak of it does not refer to “avoiding perdition” or going to Heaven but a present empowering relationship with the divine; “death” being the deprivation of such. This is not to deny that eternal life in the more literal sense is promised for the future; i.e. living in a body that never ages or dies rather than this body which is heading for the grave. Those who have eternal life abiding in them also hope to inherit such everlasting life (e.g. Tit3:7).
Why the Pope is not Jewish
The chief apostle will have been aware he had received a universal commission to make disciples for Jesus of all nations. But Acts11:17 confirms categorically he had not up to that point understood that Gentiles were to receive a gift of salvation of the nature that he and his fellow Jews had received; i.e. that which pertained to “eternal life” as we have just defined it. Peter and the other apostles would therefore not have envisaged that those who were to carry the work of the Kingdom forward after them could be Gentile since they had not grasped that non-Jews were to benefit in the same way as they had from the “Good News” of Jesus. This should appear all the more surprising considering that the disciples had spent further time with Jesus after His resurrection receiving instruction from Scripture concerning Himself (Lk24:45,46); surprising that is until one apprehends the “fellowship of the secret/mystery”. Peter’s realization concerning the Gentiles’ inheritance came through his vision of the sheet of unclean animals that he was told to kill and eat (Acts11:1-18) prior to his involvement in the first recorded conversion of a Gentile named Cornelius. Again, does not this surprise you? This man who had spent three years at the Saviour’s side and been subsequently filled with the Spirit yet did not realize the Gentiles were to be incorporated into the Church – they were barely to be associated with (Acts10:28); unless of course Jesus had not taught otherwise and this would be Paul’s Good News (cf. Rom16:25). In Peter’s case he did not grasp the matter until he had received a prophetic vision; in view of the nature and timing of Paul’s commission he was in no doubt he had been called to evangelize the (uncircumcised) Gentile nations and regarded Peter as leading the evangelisation of the “circumcision” (Gal2:7,8). Some would make the case that particularly in view of his contribution to the Scriptures, Paul was the supreme apostle rather than Peter and I am inclined to agree with them. Yet paradoxically it re-affirms Peter to be the rock (Greek: Petros) upon which Jesus would build His assembly, for as we have just been considering the Lord had originally called twelve apostles, not thirteen. Paul affirmed Peter to be the leader of those apostles evangelising the Jews, yet Jesus had given no indication whatsoever that such would be the arrangement when He commissioned Peter and (at that point) ten other disciples. Paul also had to rebuke fallible Peter for his reluctance to fellowship with Gentile Christians (Gal2:11-14). Not so surprising really since the one apostle had been instructed by the incarnate Word of God as Jewish Reformer (cf. Mt23:1-3), the other by that same divinity as Overseer of His international Church; the one apostle being ignorant of the fellowship of the mystery that had been hidden in the Father (Eph3:9), the other being its discloser having been personally instructed by the Son (cf. Gal1:16, 17). Do not give up on me, all shall be explained within the chapter: my frequent prayerful and not intentionally irreverent refrain throughout my encounter with the Spirit was “You’ve got to be kidding me”.
Prophetic passages in the Old Testament that appear to be anticipating the Church age need to be examined in context. Probably the one that comes closest is Joel chapter 2, and the section we relate to the Church is:
You shall know that I am in the midst of Israel; I am the Lord your God and there is no other. My people shall never be put to shame. And it shall come to pass that afterwards I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh. Your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men will dream dreams, your young men shall see visions, and also on my menservants and on my maidservants I shall pour out my Spirit in those days. And I will show wonders in the Heavens and in the Earth, blood and fire and pillars of smoke. The sun shall turn sun into darkness and the moon into blood before the coming of the great and awesome day of the Lord and it shall come to pass that whoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved, for in Mt Zion and Jerusalem there shall be deliverance as the Lord has said among the remnant whom the Lord calls (Jl2:27-32 New King James Version – listed as 3:1-5 some versions)
Joel’s prophecy appears to be depicting a period that will immediately follow the restoration of Israel and the vindication of His people in the presence of JHWE, which is the case in all such prophecy. Order or sequence is a quandary for the Old Testament spiritualizing hyper-allegorist; i.e. much of Christendom at present. I am aware that Christians of my former ilk will not be comfortable with that term, but I simply mean it in the dictionary sense of “all Christians everywhere”; likewise with “Jewry”, I am referring to all Jewish people, their culture and beliefs. Whilst there are of course frequent allegorical references to Christ and the gospel throughout the Old Testament, there is also a historical context and narrative to be considered, such as the fact that Torah was both practiced and delighted in by the godly (Ps119). Similarly with prophecy, Joel and those who interpreted him understood the promised restoration of Israel in a more literal sense, ending His nation’s humiliation, the oppressing “Northerners” being sent packing (Jl2:20); God’s people and even the animal Kingdom liberated (Jl2:22) within a restored religious, political and ecological environment (Jl2:23). This would be followed by an outpouring of the Spirit on all flesh in turn followed by the tribulation (Jl2:30,31) and the Day of JHWE. The gospel of the Kingdom would be preached, echoing Jesus’s words: “Repentance for the forgiveness of sins will be preached in His name to all nations, beginning at Jerusalem (Lk24:47)” Those calling on the name of the Lord and fleeing to the Mountains would “escape” whilst the “remnant” would be safe in Jerusalem (Jl2:32). For sure, Peter draws upon the above passage from Joel in the context of the Spirit’s outpouring on the Day celebrating the Feast of the first-fruits (Pentecost) (Acts2:17:21), so the first part of the prophecy had been fulfilled in the context of the apostolic gospel age. Prophets in the apostolic era were relatively commonplace (Acts13:1; 15:32; 21:10), but although Paul confirms their ecclesiological office as secondary only to the apostles (1Cor12:28) they have played no universally accepted office in the Apostolic Church beyond the first century; similarly, miracle workers and healers. Yet Jesus had said “If I cast out devils by the finger of God then the Kingdom of God has come upon you” and implied in Jn14:12 that His followers would likewise be given authority to raise the dead, physically heal and cast out demons, indeed do greater works than He had performed; yet again, that is only really the case during the apostolic era. I have concluded that these miraculous events along with the prophetic office were a continuation of the witness of Jesus and His disciples during His time on Earth and were for the same purpose: as a witness to God’s chosen race that the Kingdom of God had come upon them; and since all the miraculous activity was carried out in Jesus’s name, evidence that the One that their leaders had conspired to crucify was indeed the promised Messiah.
The Jews’ two-stage rejection of Jesus and His Kingdom
Here is one of several points where confusion has arisen with regard to the implications of the rejection of Jesus as Messiah by His people in terms of the apparent subversion of Old Testament prophecy. The first rejection/subversion is recognized by Christendom but not Jewry whilst the second has been understood by neither, being the fellowship of the secret; initial incredulity for Christendom, potential Good News for Jewry and great news for the world. I will endeavour to unpack what I mean by that statement during the remainder of this chapter.
The key reference to the first rejection or failure to recognize Israel’s “day of visitation” together with its implications is outlined by Luke. Jesus approaches the holy city on a donkey and weeps over her:
"If you had known, even you, especially in this your day the things that make for your peace! But now they are hidden from your eyes. For the days will come upon you when your enemies will build an embankment around you, surround you and close you in on every side, and level you and your children with you, to the ground, and they will not leave in you one stone upon another, because you did not know the time of your visitation" (Lk19:42-44 New King James Version)
It must be remembered that many ordinary Jews welcomed Jesus to their city with their palm leaves but their leaders were indignant and already plotting His downfall. This was the first rejection culminating in the crucifixion and as Jesus stated (v42