We are all familiar with the words from the Lord’s Prayer that says, “your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven”.
These words are some of the most powerful words ever spoken and affect the whole world, and have an effect upon the whole of human history, past, present and future. The Kingdom of God as proclaimed in Matthew’s gospel has often been a mystery.
Some questions
- Does the word “kingdom” mean anything in communities without a king and no concept therefore of a kingdom?
- Is God’s kingdom in heaven, on earth, or both?
- If God’s kingdom is on earth, what about all the evil in the world?
- Does the kingdom of God mean the same as “the church”, does it include the church, or is it much larger?
- Does the kingdom of God apply to now, or just in some future era?
- When we pray, “your kingdom come”, are we asking God to send his kingdom by his action alone? Are we expecting his kingdom to come because we pray those words? Or should we be doing something to help bring about God’s kingdom in this world through our actions as well as words?
I believe that God has already set the mechanics in process for his Kingdom to be here on earth. When God sent his son Jesus to the world he did all that was necessary for God’s kingdom to be here on earth, now, in reality. But there is still much evil in the world. The Kingdom of God is yet not fully complete on this earth. God has done his part: we must do our part.
Words and Actions
Jesus encouraged us to pray those words, “your kingdom come”. But our prayers should be backed up by our actions. How we go about our daily lives and live in this world can either help bring about God’s kingdom or be an obstacle. It is not a matter of “words” or “actions” but “words and actions”.
Your will be done
The next phrase in the Lord’s Prayer is “your will be done on earth as it is in heaven”. This should be no surprise to us that God’s will is done in heaven. We expect heaven to be the place where God rules and everything there is subject to his will. But what does it mean for God’s will to be done on earth?
- Would God force his will to be done on earth?
- What about our “free will”? The ability to choose to do good or to do evil?
- In praying “your will be done” are we expecting God to impose his will on us, or people will generally?
- What does it mean to choose to do what God wants rather than to choose what we would naturally want?
Choices we make and their results
In giving up free will and choosing to do what God wants us to do, we are co-operating with God and helping to bring about God’s kingdom here on earth. We make thousands of decisions every day. Some of these decisions are made consciously, some unconsciously and some random decisions. Any one of those decisions could have life-changing results.
In deciding to cross a road between two cars rather than walk on to a pedestrian crossing we could affect are own life expectancy! In deciding to walk a particular route to the shops we might, apparently randomly, meet somebody and have an effect on their life that could be life-changing to them and perhaps affect many other people.
We have no way of calculating the short-term or long-term effects of our decisions. Chaos theory suggests that a butterfly flapping its wings in South America could cause a typhoon in Japan! We are not just affected by our own decisions, but by the decisions other people make, and even random events in nature.
Some decisions we make may be totally immaterial and irrelevant but other apparently tiny decisions could have large and unpredictable results. Even well meaning actions we choose to make could possibly have devastating results.
“Your will be done”
How then can we live in a world where every little thing may have an unpredictable result? The answer is in praying, “your will be done”.
- We are asking God to guide our everyday choices so that we are in fact doing God’s will.
- We are asking God to help other people make the correct choices so that knowingly or unknowingly they are doing God’s will.
- We are asking God to control apparently random events in nature so that they co-operate with God’s will also.
God will not force his will to be done on earth and override our free will. But nevertheless it is God’s will is being done on earth, which will bring about the kingdom of heaven, or God’s rule here on earth.
It all depends on our idea of God.
How do we picture a world in which God rules and his will is being done on earth. It all depends on our idea of God. For many people God is scary. They think of him as being judgmental. He is to be feared and to people who are afraid of God the idea of God ruling on this world is frightening and terrifying.
But I believe that God is good and he wants what is good for his creation. His love reaches out to the human race as a whole but also to individual people. So there is nothing to be afraid of in wanting God’s will to be done here on earth.
God’s kingdom here on earth
What would it mean if God’s kingdom came here on earth in its completeness and we all chose to make decisions which aligned with his will?
- Wars between nations would stop.
- People would care as much about other people as they care about themselves.
- Property caused by bad economics would be abolished.
- Poverty caused by injustice would be abolished.
- Children would not die at birth or in their early years.
- Diseases would be eliminated.
- Racism would be abolished resulting in everybody respecting the dignity of different ethnic groups, languages and cultures.
- Every person in the world would acknowledge that the situation had only come about because of a God who truly loved them.
Utopia?
This sounds like a sort of Utopia, but Utopia represents an ideal that can never be achieved. But I don’t believe that my dream of a world in which God rules is just being idealistic. It is God’s dream too, and it can be and will be achieved.
Moving towards this dream!
- Extreme poverty (people living on less than $1.25 a day) has halved in the last 30 years, from 52% of the world’s population to 26%!
- Slavery (or at least institutionalised slavery) has been abolished.
- We used to say that 40,000 children die every day through preventable diseases, but the figure is now more like 20,000 a day – which is totally unacceptable but at least an improvement.
- Diseases like smallpox had been eliminated and polio (which has caused so much distress) has almost been eliminated.
- Racism still exists but is largely not tolerated in today’s world.
- The kingdom of God is in fact slowly increasing in this world.
But what can we do, as individuals, to bring about a world such as I have described. In previous ages it was only the Emperor’s or dictators or rulers who could really make major decisions that would affect us all. Some of these rulers would have been benevolent but others like Nero, Gangis Khan, Hitler and Pol Pot were evil.
Influence
But we live at a time when individuals have unprecedented power. It is the age of Facebook and Twitter: the age of the mobile phone and e-mail. No longer can we claim to have no effect as individuals. Politicians will not change the world, but when people’s attitudes change and they indicate that they can no longer tolerate such an unequal and unjust world, politicians have to take notice.
- If we see an injustice, speak out against it. Tell other people about it. Use e-mails, texts, mobile phone calls and Facebook to tell other people.
- No longer tolerate a world in which billions live in extreme poverty. Give your money, your time and resources. But above all make your views known to others. We are all connected and our influence can affect the attitudes of others, more than we think is possible. Extreme poverty will not be eliminated until sufficient people say, “we can no longer tolerate this situation”.
- Beware of racism – it is very subtle. If we were aware the person in our own country who was refused simple medicine by their doctor, there would be an outcry and we would feel hot under the collar about it. But this situation is repeated countless times in other countries. Doctors in Africa often do not have the simple medicine that could save a human life. In becoming angry about a situation in our country but yet tolerating the same situation in another country we are saying in effect that “they” are less important than a fellow countrymen and we are in danger of racism.
- In praying, “your will be done”, let us pray with our words, and also in our actions.
A hardwired dream
The Kingdom of God is not limited just to the church, the Christian religion or to Christians. People of other faiths, or people of no faith at all, can still do “the will of God”. I am absolutely amazed how many people have a real desire in the hearts to see a better world. It is a dream hardwired into us by a Creator who made us “in his image”. Whether they acknowledge God or not, people living in this world can, consciously or unconsciously, do his will and increase his rule in the earth.
But in acknowledging God’s work in our own lives we have a unique possibility of co-operating with Him. So let us pray the words, “your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven” but let us make sure that our actions and the choices we make are in line with that objective.
Hi George, I like your approach and how it leads to action. Thanks for enquiring about my book. In On Earth as in Heaven, the emphasis is more about exploring what heaven is about and how what is in heaven can be manifested on earth. I then look at the Kingdom of heaven, the presence of heaven, the power of heaven and the glory of heaven. Not perhaps as action focussed as your blog, but trying to establish a foundation for how God might be intending to move in the days ahead.
LikeLike
Apologies, I posted an incomplete comment.
I meant to say references to the kingdom of heaven to which Jesus is referring in the Lord’s Prayer are only found in Matthew’s Gospel but appear there over 30 times. It’s particularly mentioned in the Sermon on the Mount.
I see the reference being to the opportunity to come into the blessings of a transformational relationship .with God as king. It means that we become citizens of the kingdom of God with all the rights and priviledges of citizenship, including the unfettered right to come before God the king with our petitions.
Jesus speaks of entering the kingdom of heaven as something about which we should be immensely excited, because it’s never been available before.
It is another way of talking about the new relationship we can have with God through Christ, but it expresses hope, priviledge, welcome and access to the power and the resources of God.
So returning to your theme about the role of Christians in bringing about Godly change, the “kingdom of heaven” speaks (for me anyway) about the amazing power that is available to us through God to bring about change.
The challenge as always is to see where our vision and drive fits in with the will of God the king.
But, lest we lose sight of the excitement, I think there have been a host of modern “heroes of faith” who have overcome seemingly insuperable obstacles because they tapped into the resources of the kingdom of God.
Top of my list of heroes would be William Wilberforce, Lord Shaftesbury and Desmond Tutu amongst many others.
Perhaps the challenge for most of us is not necessarily to become another Wilberforce, but to tap into the power of the kingdom of heaven and to see how God wants us to transform the world.
LikeLike
What you say is ok, but for me there is far more to the kingdom of God than our personal relationship with God, important though that is. I am convinced that whenever compassion is shown, that the motivation for that compassion comes from God regardless of the persons beliefs. The kingdom of God or the rule of God comes to earth a little more as people do His will consciously or unconsciously.
I enjoyed what you said about Wilberforce – he is one of my heroes too.
LikeLike
Not quite so sure about the idea that all compassion is inspired directly by God, but that’s less important. For me, the question is how you inspire that compassion in others
LikeLike
Kingdom of God is here and present. The King Jesus is on the throne. We the subjects of the Kingdom are to carry out His will on earth. !!!
LikeLike
Thanks George
This is more of a theological reply, but the thrust is still relevant to the points you’re making.
The concept of “the kingdom of God – or heaven” is one that I find immensely powerful and exciting.
My own understanding is that it involves recognising the power of God over all things. We come to God the king as supplicants. God
LikeLike