Dan W. Dunn

Offer Them Life


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a direct relationship to kingdom. It is worth asking: What role does kingship serve? What are kings supposed to accomplish?

      Given this divergence of opinion about the positive appreciation of kingship in the Judean world during the time of Jesus, some might suggest that it is difficult to place much stock in the idea of kingship being seen as one of God’s instruments to bring about God-intended fullness of life. However, the prevalence of kingdom language in the Gospels demonstrates that Jesus assumed at least some basic level of common understanding among the people regarding kingship. Furthermore, Jesus assumed this understanding to be positive (or at worst, neutral). If kingship was in such a state of disrepute, as some scholars believe, Jesus would not have used that image, nor would he have assumed that people would respond to it in any positive way (as illustrated in the link he makes between the announcement of the kingdom and the call to repentance). The key distinction is that the Judean population may not have valued human kingship as strongly as in the past, but they maintained a high esteem for God’s kingship. Thus, Jesus’s primary goal in announcing the kingdom and inviting people to respond to it was not so that they could be counted as citizens of the kingdom for the sake of the king or the kingdom, but for their own sake, because it is through submission to the rule of King Jesus that they would receive new life in him.

      I do not intend to devalue the concept of God’s reign. There are times when finite languages simply cannot do justice to thoughts involving the infinite God. The reference to kingdom as the instrument and life as the goal is meant to elevate the concept of life for the theory and practice of evangelism; it is not meant to diminish the concept of kingdom. It may be that the two themes could be considered parallel concepts that offer different conceptual images for us to choose from as we develop theological constructs and ministry practices. Perhaps future scholars will develop improved ways to treat both of these vital topics without diminishing either one. It might even be that we could find ways to link the two.

      On the other hand, I want to be careful that the attempt to avoid devaluing the kingdom concept does not in turn diminish the clear point that full, vibrant, teeming life is portrayed in the creation narratives as God’s original intention for us and God’s creation. If, therefore, we think of Jesus’s purpose to be restoration of God’s original intention, we must view this full, vibrant, teeming life to be what God seeks to give us in Christ.