Thy Kingdom Come
The Christian Statesman - Vol. 144, No. 5
http://www.natreformassn.org/statesman/01/kingcome.html
Thy Kingdom Come
by Larry Pratt
Editor's Note: This article was originally delivered as the commencement
address at Christ College in Lynchburg, Virginia on May 10, 2001.
I wish to consider the coming of the kingdom of Christ on earth, and also
how God has ordained that this should come to pass. It is an appropriate
topic for this time of commencement, because you have an important role to
play in the kingdom as you go forth from here.
Jesus told us to pray that His kingdom would come on earth. We weren't told
to pray for something that will not happen.
God has said He will build His kingdom through us - especially through
generations ("children's children" is frequently used to express this idea).
The realization of Christ's kingdom on earth is through battle - a spiritual
battle.
Here is what Paul tells us about spiritual warfare:
For though we walk in the flesh, we do not war according to the flesh. For
the weapons of our warfare are not carnal but mighty in God for pulling down
strongholds, casting down arguments and every high thing that exalts itself
against the knowledge of God, bringing every thought into captivity to the
obedience of Christ, and being ready to punish all disobedience when your
obedience is fulfilled (2 Cor. 10:3-6).
Many who have gone before us have seen the nature of the battle they were in
and the importance of taking a stand, even in the face of great physical
danger - the spiritual battle we are in often has physical implications.
Ambrose
In A.D. 390, a riot occurred in Thessalonica and the Roman governor,
Botheric, was killed. Theodosius, the Roman emperor at the time, invited the
people of the city for games and entertainment in the Hippodrome, and then
had 7,000 of them slain.
Ambrose, the Bishop of Milan, rose to the role of the good shepherd ready to
lay down his life for his sheep. He wrote to Theodosius and told him to
publicly repent for the evil he had done. Roman emperors were not in the
habit of humbling themselves, and Theodosius refused Ambrose's demand. That
set the stage for the high drama that ensued. As Theodosius attempted to
enter the church he attended, Ambrose literally interposed himself between
Theodosius and the entrance (and hence the people, the church).
Ambrose firmly believed that the emperor was under God's law and should
humble himself and serve that law. By the grace of God, Theodosius yielded.
He stripped himself of his imperial insignia, entered the church and
publicly called upon the Lord to forgive his sin in the matter.
And the good news kept coming - Ambrose became an unofficial counselor to
Theodosius, and was thus in a position to have a hand in rewriting Roman law
to provide for what we now call due process. Ambrose believed, and happily
Theodosius concurred, that the law of God is over the king because the King
of kings of every realm is King Jesus, the one to whom the nations of the
earth have been given.
Who was Ambrose in the eyes of the world to stand up to the emperor of Rome?
Yet Ambrose knew that God uses the weak things of the world to manifest His
might. Ambrose did not know ahead of time the outcome of the stand he took,
but he knew that he had to be faithful to God who is in charge of all
circumstances.
Because there are still influences of the common law in the United States,
we are still being blessed by what Ambrose did centuries ago.
John Knox
John Knox was a man who believed in the triumph of Christ's kingdom - on
earth as it is in heaven - no matter what were his personal circumstances.
The following are some of the hardships and challenges endured by Knox and
some of the victories he won:
• He was imprisoned as a galley slave on a French warship.
• He suffered failing health on the ship on which many died, but Knox was
famous during this time for encouraging others to not lose hope or faith.
• He managed to write a confession of faith and smuggle it to Scotland to
encourage believers there.
• Clergy of the state church ordered Knox to appear before a council,
assuming he would not so they could condemn him and ruin his reputation at
the same time. When he said he would come, they cancelled the meeting.
• In the city of St. Andrews, Knox's measures to reform the church were met
by a state-controlled bishop with the threat that troops would fire on him.
When he delivered the sermon, nothing happened.
• Catholics put a price on his head.
• As the fortunes of the reformed church in Scotland ebbed and supportive
nobles slipped away, Knox stayed the course and preached on the sin of
relying on the arm of flesh. However weak the cause, it would eventually
triumph. When the queen's regent died unexpectedly, the darkening political
situation radically changed for the better.
• On the eve of a French invasion, the French king died and the invasion was
called off.
• On numerous occasions Knox confronted Queen Mary and challenged the
legitimacy of her authority. Here one such occasion is cited by Barnett
Smith in his biography of John Knox:1
"Do you think that subjects who have power may resist their princes?" she
demanded.
"If the princes exceed their bounds and do against those things in which
they should be obeyed, then they may be resisted, even by force. No greater
honor or obedience should be given to kings and princes than God has
commanded to be given to father and mother. If the father be stricken with a
frenzy in which he would slay his own children, the children may join
together, apprehend the father, take his weapons from him, bind him, and
keep him in prison till his frenzy be past. Do you think, Madam, that the
children do wrong? Or do you think that God will be offended with them for
having kept their father from doing wickedness? It is even so with princes
who would murder the children of God who are their subjects. Their blind
zeal is nothing but a mad frenzy. To take the sword from them and bind their
hands and cast them into prison until they be brought to a more sober mind
is not a disobedience to rulers, but obedience because it is the will of
God."
Knox's admonitions to the Queen enraged her, but as a result she backed off
persecuting the church.
• When a prominent supporter allowed himself to be promoted where he felt
compelled to compromise, Knox broke with him, thus weakening his support
from "the arm of flesh."
• Knox was charged with treason by the Queen because he condemned her
observance of the mass. He was urged by his supporters to repent, or at
least back off. Instead, he went before the Queen when summoned and was
acquitted by a vote of the council of nobles. What had appeared to be the
verge of ruin for the church became a moment of great triumph and
encouragement.
• Protestantism came to Scotland as much as anything because John Knox would
not compromise the gospel nor be silent even at the risk of his freedom or
his life.
Colonial Preachers
Colonial preachers carried on the biblical world view of John Knox. A few
examples here will illustrate what was the general rule.
The Reverend John Witherspoon was a sixth generation grandson of John Knox.
He served as the president of Princeton University and was a teacher of
presidents, senators, representatives, governors, and other elected
officials who served at the time of the War for Independence and afterwards.
Samuel Davies was a Presbyterian evangelist. Davies preached the triumphant
growth of the kingdom of Christ brought about by an army led on earth by
ministers and elders and manned by all the believers. Although Patrick Henry
was a member of the Anglican church, his mother usually took him to hear
Davies. Apart from Sam Adams and John Jay, Henry - greatly influenced by
Davies - was the most devout of the founding fathers. Many believe that
Davies' rhetorical skills also were passed on to Henry who was probably the
greatest orator America has ever had.
Charles Chauncey preached a sermon in the Massachusetts House of
Representatives in 1747 in which he argued - as a great number of colonial p
reachers did - from Romans 13 that all men, including kings, are under the
authority of God. For a king to rule unjustly, he pointed out, is for the
king to become a rebel against God. Of course, rebellion is likened by the
Bible to witchcraft, and is a capital offense. Resistance to tyranny was
seen as obedience to God.
Romans 13:1 says: "Let every person be in subjection to the governing
authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those which
exist are established by God." Those who understand that citizens owe blind
allegiance to kings or presidents and legislatures point to the phrase
"those [authorities] which exist are established by God."
To hang their argument on this, they have to ignore the first sentence and
assume that kings, or presidents and legislators have no souls. If these
individuals have souls, then we must conclude that they are under some sort
of authority. Romans 13:1 calls it a governing authority. What governing
authority would a king or president be under? In the context of the passage,
that authority would be the Bible.
When the apostle Peter said "We must obey God rather than men" (Acts 5:29)
to the leaders who had commanded him not preach Christ, he refuted the
notion of blind obedience to ungodly commands from political leaders.
Romans 13:4 says that: "for it [the ruler] is a minister of God to you for
good. But if you do what is evil, be afraid; for it does not bear the sword
for nothing; for it is a minister of God, an avenger who brings wrath upon
the one who practices evil." Paul made it clear throughout his inspired
writings that "good" can only be understood by consulting the Bible. For
example, he told his disciple Timothy this: "All Scripture is inspired by
God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training
in righteousness; that the man of God may be adequate, equipped for every
good work" (2 Tim. 3:16-17).
Chauncey and Davies were not aberrant; they were the norm. The lordship of
Christ the King and a belief that His kingdom was inevitably to increase on
earth was a message proclaimed from countless colonial pulpits. No wonder
colonial soldiers went into battle against King George's troops shouting,
"No King but King Jesus."
This kind of preaching is not much heard today, and these truths have been
ignored. There is a growing acceptance of the formerly discredited belief in
the divine right of kings, only now it is more correctly labeled the
infallible right of governments. There has been a disconnect between the
generations; this accounts for the loss of the old truths.
Consider a recent example. Among the many organizations that virulently
opposed President Bush's nomination of former Senator John Ashcroft to head
up the Justice Department in 2001, the group formerly known as Handgun
Control, Inc. (HCI) was as strident as any.
Michael Barnes, a former U.S. Representative from Maryland and former head
of the United World Federalists, accused John Ashcroft of holding to the
"extremist, widely discredited insurrectionist view of the Second Amendment
that Timothy McVeigh" (the Oklahoma City bomber), had articulated.
In one breath, the anti-gun spokesman had tacitly made Timothy McVeigh's
terrorism the moral equivalent of the actions of George Washington and the
colonial army. The Second Amendment right to bear arms is based on the
Knoxian view that resistance to tyranny is obedience to God. But HCI, along
with much of the media and the political elite who took no issue with
Barnes' statement, showed how far we have fallen from the beliefs of the
founders.
In our day, we have seen the view of government shift from that of a shield
to protect individual liberties (including the church) to an engine intended
to do good - a secular, political savior.
Colonial Petitions
The American colonists repeatedly argued that the British government was
violating the constitutional liberties of the Americans. They made this case
in various petitions to the King. They were making arguments derived from
the world view of John Knox regarding the illegitimacy of governmental power
exercised in rebellion to God.
Resolution of the Stamp Act Congress, 1765
The people's representatives in the Stamp Act Congress of 1765 objected to
an unconstitutional tax which had been passed without American
representation. They also objected to the attack on jury trials which were
largely done away with by putting most criminal law under courts of
Admiralty in the name of enforcing the Stamp Act. Something akin to that is
found in our contemporary Administrative Law Courts run by the same agencies
that are prosecuting a citizen.
Declaration and Resolves of the First Continental Congress, 1774
In 1774, the First Continental Congress objected to the illegitimacy of
taxes levied by Britain in America, warrantless searches, quartering of
British troops in colonial homes, dissolution of colonial legislatures,
weakening of jury trials, and establishment of the Roman church in Quebec.
(This was seen as an omen for establishment of the church of England in
colonies south of Canada).
Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Taking up Arms, July 6, 1775
The Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Taking up Arms was issued
July 6, 1775 - nearly four months after the battle of Lexington and Concord,
but a year before the Declaration of Independence. Our War for Independence
was initially seen by many as the Second English Civil War, following by
about 130 years the First Civil War. The Declaration reiterated earlier
grievances and pointed to the commercial strangulation and piracy being
committed against the colonies. The battle of Lexington and Concord was seen
as an illegal and unprovoked attack by the king's troops resulting in the
murder of eight inhabitants.
Objection was also made to the siege of Boston and the earlier seizure of
arms in Boston and environs as well as efforts to silence press and speech.
State Constitutions
The early state constitutions are yet another example of how a biblical
faith can be applied in society. This is made evident in Discipling the
Nations, an important book by Dennis Woods.2 He shows the reader the
Christian basis of the seventeenth century colonies. He then points out that
at the time of the adoption of the U.S. Constitution, two important and
fatal flaws were introduced into the document.
Woods notes that the final version refused to acknowledge Jesus Christ as
Lord of the nation, and failed to require public office holders to confess
their belief in the God of the Bible. Both were common practice in the
states before the U.S. Constitution was ratified.
For example, the Mayflower Compact of 1620 starts out by saying "We, whose
names are underwritten, the loyal subjects of our dread sovereign Lord King
James, by the grace of God, of Great Britain, France and Ireland, King,
Defender of the Faith. Having undertaken for the glory of God and
advancement of the Christian Faith, ..." they pledged to submit to lawful
authority in New England.
Likewise, The Fundamental Orders of Connecticut promulgated in 1639 stated:
"...well knowing where a people are gathered together the word of God
requires that to maintain the peace and union of such a people there should
be an orderly and decent Government established according to God..."
The Massachusetts Constitution of 1780 required office holders to take the
following oath: "I _______, do declare, that I believe the Christian
religion, and have firm persuasion of its truth."
Many state constitutions required their public officials to take oaths
similar to that of Massachusetts'. But the turning from the biblical origins
of a republic under Christ was already occurring at the end of the
eighteenth century.
The U.S. Constitution of 1787 begins with the words, "We, the People,"
without any reference to God. The people replaced God as the source of
legitimacy of our government.
In the name of preventing the establishment of any particular denomination
by the new U.S. government, God was removed from the government altogether.
Moreover any religious test for holding office was prohibited. The states
had such tests, and they were usually an affirmation of belief in the Triune
God. Following ratification of the Constitution the states removed their
religious tests.
We learn from all this, that as we do battle with the powers of this age, we
must be aware that calls to return to the Constitution are only good as far
as they go. Such calls may be a first step, but we must be looking beyond
that to the reestablishment of Jesus Christ on the throne of this country.
This is clearly something that is not going to happen until He is recognized
by Americans individually as their individual Lord and Master. Christians
will have to once again take the Bible seriously before our call on behalf
of Christ to the nation will be taken seriously.
Patrick Henry
Patrick Henry saw the danger of removing God from the constitution.
Politically, he pointed out, it moved the country from a confederation of
states to a consolidated national government of majority rule. He saw that
the northern majority had put one over on the southern minority, and that
government would end up being a weapon of economic warfare against the
South, which is what happened. Indeed, the effort under the Confederation
that almost led to a treaty with Spain would have ruined any chance of a new
Constitution. The northern states wanted to give Spain exclusive navigation
rights to the Mississippi. This would have left New England with a shipping
and commercial monopoly over the South.
Henry saw that treaties under the new government could end up becoming the
law of the land, which they have. And treaties can become law by the
affirmation of the President, and two thirds of the Senators present during
the vote. He correctly saw the danger of a run-away judiciary in the manner
of its design.
His insistence on a Bill of Rights was a major reason why we have one
protecting individual liberties. This was an important, although only
partial, victory.
He predicted the Civil War would occur within 100 years. [I DIDN'T KNOW
THIS. THIS IS VERY INTERESTING IN LIGHT OF THE COMMON REFRAIN YOU HEAR AMONG
CHRISTIANS ATTRIBUTING THE CIVIL WAR TO GOD'S JUDGEMENT AGAINST SLAVERY, IN
EFFECT PLACING THE BLAME FOR IT AT THE FEET OF THE SOUTH, WHEREAS THIS
REVELATION WOULD PLACE IT MORE AT THE FEET OF THE NORTH. - TB] He was
tragically correct. Yet his political defeat at the hands of the
pro-constitution forces, with its tragic consequences for his country, did
not make Henry's life a failure. On the contrary, what we see of his family
and their generations tells us that Patrick Henry was a great success. And
thanks largely to him we do enjoy a Bill of Rights which has provided much
needed protection of individual liberties.
Through all of the tumult in his life, Henry was a devoted family man and
father of 17 children. He put the interests of his daughters' need to live
near eligible men over his personal desire to live on some of his isolated
rural property. Henry did not put serving and trying to save his country
above the more important commitment to his family.
One of his great grandsons was the Rev. Edward Fontaine - the one to whom we
owe the recording of Henry's dreadful prediction of the Civil War. Other
descendants included other pastors who served into middle of the last
century.
Modern Day Pilgrims
Paul Jehle is the pastor of the New Testament Church in Plymouth,
Massachusetts. He is also headmaster of the school that operates at the
church. Jehle has had a covenantal vision for the youth of the church and
school. That vision includes the belief that God's Kingdom advances through
godly generations.
One of the ways Jehle prepares his young people for this covenantal role is
to take advantage of Plymouth's uniqueness. As the landing place of the
Pilgrims, Plymouth is a very popular tourist spot. While the official guides
offer a politically correct account of the Pilgrims, Jehle has trained his
young people to be unofficial guides prepared to offer tourists the
Christian history of Plymouth.
On one occasion, Jehle had a group of young people along with him as he was
serving as a tour guide. At the point where he was quoting Pilgrim Governor
William Bradford, Jehle got hauled into the police station for speaking
about God on public property.
While the kids were praying outside in the van, Jehle was inside the station
getting nowhere pointing out that all the talk about God was simply a quote
from the former governor. But when Jehle mentioned that the young people
also serve as tour guides, the police chief was so taken that two
generations would work together in such a way and that young people would
commit themselves to serve as guides for free, that he was won over. The
chief told Jehle to go back to what he was doing, and that if he ever had
any trouble like this in the future to let the chief know so that he could
send a cruiser out to help Jehle.
The role of our children and their children in the building of the kingdom
of Christ is seen in the lives of Knox, Witherspoon, Henry, Davies and
Jehle. Psalm 127 tells us how the Lord intends to use our children in this
great conquest.
Psalm 127
Unless the LORD builds the house, they labor in vain who build it; unless
the LORD guards the city, the watchman stays awake in vain. It is vain for
you to rise up early, to sit up late, to eat the bread of sorrows; for so He
gives His beloved sleep. Behold, children are a heritage from the LORD, the
fruit of the womb is a reward. Like arrows in the hand of a warrior, so are
the children of one's youth. Happy is the man who has his quiver full of
them; they shall not be ashamed, but shall speak with their enemies in the
gate.
Jehle's young people were like arrows that were shot over the wall that
Jehle was unable to penetrate by himself.
God regards us in terms of our generations, not just as individuals, or even
just our immediate family. Arrows, to be used effectively by a warrior, have
to be crafted for use in his particular bow. The father's bow by itself is
useless, and so are arrows without crafting and subsequent use in a bow.
In other words, the generations must work in contact with each other to
carry out the purposes of God. The fathers must pour themselves into their
children and the children must be willing to receive what their fathers give
them.
To reach our children so that we can pour ourselves into them requires more
than lecturing and laying down our rules. We need to reach their hearts,
even as God through His Holy Spirit reaches our hearts when He saves us. We
need to spend the time to educate our children in such a way that their goal
in life is to do all that they do to bring glory to God. And all such
efforts are likely to fail if they do not see us striving to bring glory to
God in all that we do.
Consider what God told Abraham when establishing His covenant with him in
Genesis 17:7:
And I will establish My covenant between Me and you and your descendants
after you in their generations, for an everlasting covenant, to be God to
you and your descendants after you.
In the New Testament, Moses' impact was seen in terms of many generations
(Acts 15:21): "For Moses has had throughout many generations those who
preach him in every city, being read in the synagogues every Sabbath."
The Bible tells us that the coming of Christ's kingdom requires a long term
commitment and requires a long term vision.
For good or evil, God often blesses and judges in spans of three generations
as we can see in the following passages:
But the mercy of the LORD is from everlasting to everlasting on those who
fear Him, and His righteousness to children's children... (Ps. 103:17).
Therefore I will yet bring charges against you, says the LORD, and against
your children's children I will bring charges (Jer. 2:9).
I urge you to go forth with the long term vision and commitment to the
growth of the Kingdom of Christ. This is the vision for which He died, and
we are His generations.
This same commitment to fearing God and keeping His covenant in terms of
ourselves and our children's children was seen in the lives of the saints I
have sketched here.
When we have been set free by Christ and can trust in Him alone for our
salvation, we can be confident that His grace will continue to sustain us
and our generations after us. We can then be confident that no matter what
the circumstances may be, no matter how bleak the moment may appear, our
children will be arrows in our hands and they will confront God's enemies in
the gates.
The kingdom that is not of this world, and which begins within each and
every one of God's people becomes the stone which in the book of Daniel
overruns the kingdom's of this world.3
Please go forth with confidence even though so much of the future is unknown
at the moment. We can be confident because of the celebration that was
revealed to the apostle John in Revelation 11:15: "Then the seventh angel
sounded: And there were loud voices in heaven, saying, 'The kingdoms of this
world have become the kingdoms of our Lord and of His Christ, and He shall
reign forever and ever!'"
May God's blessing be on you and on your children's children.
Larry Pratt is a member of the National Reform Association board of
directors and the Executive Director of Gun Owners of America in
Springfield, Virginia. You can contact GOA at 703-321-8585 or at their web
page: www.gunowners.org.