Thursday, March 12, 2026

The Kingdom and the King: Part 4B — The Road to Jerusalem

This article is part 4B of the short series titled “The Kingdom and the King. The series traces the story of Jesus from promise to reign, showing how the Kingdom of God unfolds across the Gospels. Part 4A of the series can be found at  The Kingdom and the King: Part 4: The Kingdom Defined
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Ministry Beyond Galilee

As opposition grows, Jesus travels into the regions of Tyre, Sidon, and the Decapolis (Mt 15:21–39; Mk 7:24–8:10). There He heals the daughter of a Syrophoenician woman and ministers among Gentiles.

The boundaries widen and the kingdom is growing. The King of Israel is also Lord beyond Israel.

The Character of the Galilean Ministry

This phase reveals the fullness of the King’s authority:

-         Authority in teaching
-         Authority over nature
-         Authority over demons
-         Authority over sickness
-         Authority over death

Yet it also reveals growing division. Crowds gather, but commitment thins. Some worship. Some doubt. Some plot. The Kingdom is no longer a quiet announcement. It is a public reality.

The Road South: Toward Jerusalem

Later Ministry Toward Jerusalem (c. AD 30–32), Including Major Feasts:

As the Galilean ministry unfolds, a gradual but decisive shift takes place. The focus begins turning southward. The King who has revealed His authority in villages and along the sea now moves steadily toward Jerusalem.

This phase is marked by deeper teaching, clearer revelation of identity, increasing opposition, and repeated visits to Jerusalem during the major feasts. The road ahead leads not only to the holy city, but ultimately to the cross.

The Transfiguration

At Caesarea Philippi, Peter confesses that Jesus is “the Christ, the Son of the living God” (Mt 16:16). Shortly afterward, Jesus takes Peter, James, and John up a high mountain (Mt 17:1–13; Mk 9:2–13; Lk 9:28–36).

There, He is transfigured before them. His face shines like the sun, and His garments become radiant. The transformation is not something added to Him; it is a revealing of what was already true. For a brief moment, the veil is pulled back, and the disciples glimpse His divine glory.

Then Moses and Elijah appear, speaking with Him about what Luke calls His “departure,” which He is about to accomplish in Jerusalem. The word Luke uses for “departure” is exodus. This is not accidental language. Just as Moses once led Israel out of bondage in Egypt, Jesus is about to accomplish a greater exodus—one that leads not merely out of political slavery, but out of sin and death.

The appearance of Moses and Elijah is deeply significant. Moses represents the Law. Elijah represents the Prophets. Together, they symbolize the entire Old Testament witness. Their presence testifies that everything written in the Law and the Prophets finds its fulfillment in Christ. The story that began at Sinai and echoed through the prophetic warnings and promises now converges on Him.

Peter, overwhelmed by the moment, suggests building three shelters—one for Jesus, one for Moses, and one for Elijah. The suggestion reflects reverence, but also misunderstanding. The three are not equals.

As Peter speaks, a bright cloud overshadows them. Throughout Scripture, the cloud signifies the presence of God—the same glory-cloud that filled the tabernacle and later the temple. From the cloud comes the voice of the Father: “This is My beloved Son… listen to Him.”

The command is clear. Moses and Elijah point to Him. The Law and the Prophets bear witness to Him. But now the Father directs attention to the Son alone.

The Transfiguration is therefore both revelation and transition. It affirms His identity as Son and King. It confirms that He stands in continuity with Israel’s Scriptures. And it prepares the disciples for what comes next.

Yet the conversation on the mountain is not about triumph, but about suffering. The glory revealed is immediately followed by renewed predictions of the cross. The path to the crown runs through Jerusalem.

For a moment, the disciples see the Kingdom in unveiled splendor. Then the cloud lifts, and they descend the mountain—back toward a world that does not yet understand.

Teaching on Humility and Kingdom Life

Returning from the mountain, the disciples begin debating who among them is greatest (Mt 18; Mk 9:33–50; Lk 9:46–50). Jesus responds by placing a child in their midst. “Whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.

As expectations of royal power rise, Jesus redefines greatness. The Kingdom is not built on ambition, but on humility. He speaks of forgiveness without limit, of seeking the lost sheep, and of guarding against causing others to stumble.

The King continues shaping the character of His followers even as the journey toward confrontation advances. He is not simply teaching them how to behave better so they might someday be saved—He is preparing them for Kingdom life.
 

The Feast of Tabernacles

John records that Jesus goes up to Jerusalem for the Feast of Tabernacles (Jn 7–10). This feast celebrated God’s provision in the wilderness and included ceremonies involving water and light.

On the final day of the feast, Jesus stands and cries out:

-         “If anyone thirsts, let him come to Me and drink.”
-  Later He declares, “I am the light of the world.”

These statements are not accidental. During a feast remembering water from the rock and the pillar of fire, Jesus presents Himself as the true source of living water and true light. The response is divided. Some believe. Others question. Leaders attempt to arrest Him. The tension intensifies.

At the Feast of Dedication (Jn 10), He declares, “I and the Father are one.” Jesus’ claim is unmistakable. Stones are lifted. The conflict is no longer subtle.

From Israel to the Nations

The Twelve, the Seventy-Two, and the Abrahamic Promise

Earlier in His Galilean ministry, Jesus sent out the Twelve (Mt 10; Mk 6:7–13; Lk 9:1–6). Their mission was clear and intentionally limited. He instructed them:

“Do not go among the Gentiles or enter any town of the Samaritans. Go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.”

They were to proclaim, “The kingdom of heaven has come near,” heal the sick, cast out demons, and announce that the long-awaited reign of God was breaking into history.

This restriction was not an act of exclusion, but of order.

The promises of God had come through Israel. The covenant with Abraham, the law through Moses, and the throne through David had shaped the expectation of a coming King. The Messiah’s arrival, therefore, was first presented to the covenant people. The Kingdom was announced to Israel because the promises belonged to them. Yet even within that structure, a larger purpose had always been present.

When God called Abraham, He declared: “In you all the families of the earth shall be blessed” (Gen 12:3).

Israel was never chosen for isolation, but for mission. The covenant had a global horizon from the beginning.

That wider horizon becomes more visible when Jesus later appoints seventy-two others and sends them ahead of Him into towns He was about to visit (Lk 10:1–24). Luke does not record the earlier restriction that they were to go to Israel alone. The mission expands geographically and symbolically.

Many interpreters note that the number seventy (or seventy-two, depending on manuscript tradition) echoes the Table of Nations in Genesis 10, where the nations of the world are traditionally counted as seventy. Whether Luke intends that symbolism explicitly or not, the narrative movement is unmistakable: the scope of the Kingdom proclamation is widening.

The message remains the same: “The kingdom of God has come near.”

But the audience is expanding. The progression from the Twelve to the Seventy-Two reflects the unfolding design of the covenant:
-         Promise through Abraham
-         Presentation to Israel
-         Expansion toward the nations

The King who arrived as the fulfillment of Israel’s hope now reveals Himself as the bearer of blessing for all peoples. And this widening mission sets the stage for what lies ahead.

As Jesus moves steadily toward Jerusalem, the tension sharpens. The Kingdom has been proclaimed to Israel. Signs have been performed. Leaders have witnessed His authority. The invitation has been extended. Soon, rejection will harden.

The same covenant structure that began with promise and proclamation will move toward confrontation and fulfillment. The King who came first to the lost sheep of Israel will go to Jerusalem—not merely to teach, but to offer Himself. The mission to the nations will ultimately flow from the cross and the empty tomb.

The road from Galilee to Jerusalem is not only geographic. It is covenantal.

Key Parables Along the Way

During this journey phase, Luke preserves several of Jesus’ most memorable parables.

The Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25–37): The parable of the Good Samaritan begins with a question about eternal life and the command to love one’s neighbour. When asked, “And who is my neighbour?” Jesus responds with a story that overturns expectations.

A man is beaten and left for dead. A priest passes by. A Levite passes by. Both are religious insiders—representatives of Israel’s covenant structure. Yet they do not stop. The one who shows mercy is a Samaritan.

To Jewish ears, that detail would have been shocking
Samaritans were viewed as religiously compromised and ethnically mixed. They were outsiders—descendants of intermarriage and shaped by rival worship traditions. Centuries of tension and hostility separated Jews and Samaritans. Yet in the story, the Samaritan becomes the model of covenant faithfulness.

Jesus does not simply redefine “neighbour” as someone nearby. He redefines neighbour as anyone who shows mercy. Kingdom righteousness is measured not by lineage, but by compassion. The true fulfillment of the Law is not found in preserving boundaries but in reflecting the character of God.

In this way, the parable quietly prepares the ground for something larger. If a Samaritan can embody the love of God, then the Kingdom cannot be confined to ethnic or ceremonial lines. The horizon is expanding.

The Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11–32):  This parable deepens the same theme.

A younger son demands his inheritance and leaves home, squandering everything in reckless living. When famine strikes, he finds himself feeding pigs—an image of profound degradation in Jewish culture. In desperation, he returns, expecting only to be treated as a servant.

Instead, the father runs to meet him. He restores him fully—robe, ring, feast. The lost son is received not reluctantly, but joyfully.

Yet the parable does not end there.

The older brother refuses to celebrate. He resents the father’s generosity. He has remained outwardly obedient, yet his heart is hardened.

In its immediate context, Jesus is responding to criticism from religious leaders who objected to His welcoming of tax collectors and sinners. The younger son represents the visibly sinful and morally compromised. The older son reflects the self-righteous who resent grace. But the implications stretch further.

The returning son resembles those who were once far off—estranged, unclean, outside the boundaries of covenant privilege. The father’s open embrace anticipates a Kingdom in which repentance, not pedigree, determines belonging. Meanwhile, the elder brother mirrors those who struggle to accept that God’s mercy extends beyond traditional lines.

The parable does not deny Israel’s covenant history. Instead, it reveals its purpose: restoration, not exclusion. Joy, not resentment.

These parables signal a widening Kingdom—an expansion marked by mercy.
-         The Good Samaritan shows that love transcends inherited divisions.
-         The Prodigal Son reveals a Father whose grace restores the outsider.
-         Both challenge a narrow reading of covenant identity.
-         Both prepare the way for a mission that will ultimately reach the nations.

The expansion of the Kingdom is not abrupt. It unfolds through teaching, through mercy, and through the redefinition of what it means to belong. Compassion replaces boundary markers. Repentance replaces pedigree. The Father’s house is larger than many expected.

And as the journey toward Jerusalem continues, the implications of that widening mercy will become even clearer. These teachings sharpen the contrast between outward religion and inward transformation. They also foreshadow the coming confrontation with religious leadership in Jerusalem.

The Kingdom has now been proclaimed broadly—first to Israel, then outward toward the surrounding regions. The message has been heard. The signs have been witnessed. The invitation has been extended. But proclamation always demands response. As Jesus draws nearer to Jerusalem, the tension that has been building beneath the surface begins to rise openly. The leaders who questioned Him now begin to calculate. The crowds who followed Him now stand at a crossroads. It is at this critical moment—on the outskirts of Jerusalem itself—that Jesus performs His most dramatic public sign. At Bethany, before many witnesses, the King will confront death directly. And what happens there will no longer allow for cautious curiosity. The raising of Lazarus will not simply reveal His authority—it will force a decision, and it will hasten the road to the cross.

The Raising of Lazarus

The final and most dramatic sign before the last Passover occurs in Bethany, near Jerusalem (Jn 11:1–44). Lazarus dies. Jesus delays. When He arrives, Lazarus has been in the tomb four days. Standing before the grave, Jesus declares, “I am the resurrection and the life.” He calls Lazarus out, and the dead man emerges.

This miracle leaves no room for neutrality. Many believe. Others report the event to the authorities. The chief priests and Pharisees convene and determine that Jesus must die.

The raising of Lazarus becomes the immediate catalyst for the final plot.
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Stay tuned for Part 5, "The Kingdom and the King: Part 5 – Jerusalem Decides," which is to follow.

Part 4A of the series can be found at: The Kingdom and the King: Part 4: The Kingdom Defined

 

 

 

Monday, March 9, 2026

The Kingdom and the King: Part 4: The Kingdom Defined

This article is part 4A of the short series titled “The Kingdom and the King. The series traces the story of Jesus from promise to reign, showing how the Kingdom of God unfolds across the Gospels. Part 3C of the series can be found at The Kingdom and the King: Part 3C — Signs and Authority
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Part 4A: The Kingdom Defined in Galilee

The Main Phase of Public Ministry

After the early Judean ministry, Jesus returns to Galilee. This region, often looked down upon by Judean elites, becomes the primary setting for the public proclamation of the Kingdom. Here, crowds gather. Here, miracles multiply. Here, the King openly defines the nature of His reign. This helps explain why the Galilean phase of Jesus’ ministry carries such symbolic weight.

Galilee was often looked down upon by Judean elites. It lay far from Jerusalem and the temple—the center of authority and learning—and it carried a history of foreign influence. Isaiah even speaks of the region as ‘Galilee of the Gentiles’ (Isa 9:1–2). Galileans were known for a distinct accent and were sometimes viewed as less formally trained in the Law. Yet it was here—among fishermen, farmers, and ordinary villagers—that the Kingdom was first proclaimed in power. The light did not begin in the center of prestige, but on the margins. Galilee was certainly Jewish in Jesus’ day, but it was not as culturally insulated as Judea.

This background makes Jesus’ Galilean ministry all the more striking. The King:
-  Grew up in Nazareth.
-  Called fishermen from the Sea of Galilee.
-  Preached to villages far from Jerusalem’s prestige.
-  Revealed Kingdom power among the ordinary and overlooked.

The choice of Galilee fits a consistent biblical pattern. God often begins His work on the margins rather than at the center of established power.

Isaiah had prophesied:
“The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light” (Isaiah 9:1–2).

Matthew explicitly applies that passage to Jesus’ ministry in Galilee (Mt 4:13–16). What was once considered spiritually peripheral becomes the launching point of divine revelation.

Rejection at Nazareth

Jesus first returns to Nazareth, where He had been raised (Lk 4:16–30; Mt 13:53–58; Mk 6:1–6). On the Sabbath, He reads from the prophet Isaiah:
“The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me… He has anointed Me to proclaim good news to the poor…”

He then declares, “Today this Scripture is fulfilled in your hearing.”

At first, the people marvel. But when Jesus reminds them that God’s grace in the days of Elijah and Elisha extended beyond Israel, their admiration turns to anger. They drive Him out of town and attempt to throw Him off a cliff.

The King is not rejected first by strangers, but by those who knew Him growing up. The pattern is becoming clear: revelation is followed by resistance.

Calling of Disciples by the Sea

Leaving Nazareth, Jesus makes Capernaum His base of operations. Along the Sea of Galilee, He calls fishermen—Simon Peter, Andrew, James, and John (Mt 4:18–22; Mk 1:16–20; Lk 5:1–11).

Luke records the miraculous catch of fish. After a night of failure, Jesus instructs Peter to let down the nets once more. The result is overwhelming abundance. Confronted with this display of authority, Peter falls at Jesus’ knees: “Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord.”

But Jesus responds, “Do not be afraid; from now on you will be catching men.” The King calls unlikely subjects. Fishermen become ambassadors of the Kingdom.

Healings in Capernaum

In Capernaum, Jesus teaches in the synagogue with authority (Mk 1:21–28). Unlike the scribes, He speaks as one who commands. He casts out an unclean spirit, and the people are astonished. Soon after, He heals Peter’s mother-in-law and many others brought to Him at sunset (Mt 8:14–17; Mk 1:29–34; Lk 4:31–41). Demons recognize Him as the Son of God, but He silences them.

The Kingdom is not merely announced—it is demonstrated. Authority over sickness and spirits confirms that the King has come to reclaim what was broken.

The Setting of Kingdom Conditions

The Sermon on the Mount/Plain:

As crowds grow, Jesus delivers extended teaching on the nature of the Kingdom (Mt 5–7; Lk 6:17–49; see also Lk 11; 14)

Just as both Matthew and Luke record Jesus’ birth and genealogy, both also preserve extended sections of His teaching that describe the character and conditions of the Kingdom. These teachings are most famously found in what is often called the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5–7) and the Sermon on the Plain (Luke 6:17–49).

After the early months of ministry—following His baptism, wilderness testing, first disciples, early signs, and growing public attention—Jesus begins to teach openly about life in the Kingdom He is proclaiming.

Matthew records that Jesus went up on a mountainside and sat down to teach His disciples, while the crowds listened. Luke describes a similar moment on a level place, surrounded by disciples and a great multitude from Judea, Jerusalem, and the coastal regions. Whether these accounts describe the same event from different perspectives or separate but similar occasions, the message is consistent. Jesus is not merely announcing that the Kingdom is near. He is defining what it looks like.

The teaching begins with what are commonly called the Beatitudes:

“Blessed are the poor in spirit…
Blessed are those who mourn…
Blessed are the meek…”

Luke presents a shorter version, including both blessings and corresponding warnings: “Blessed are you who are poor… but woe to you who are rich.” In both accounts, the values of the Kingdom are clearly different from the values of the world. The Kingdom does not belong to the self-sufficient, the proud, or the violent. It belongs to the humble, the merciful, the peacemakers, and those who hunger for righteousness.

Jesus then moves beyond outward behaviour to the condition of the heart. He speaks of anger as the root of murder, lust as the seed of adultery, truthfulness without oath-swearing, love extended even to enemies, and prayer offered in sincerity rather than public display. The standard He sets is not merely external obedience but internal transformation.

In Matthew’s account, Jesus repeatedly says, “You have heard that it was said… but I say to you.” This is not a rejection of the Law but an authoritative interpretation of it. The King speaks with authority over His Kingdom. He does not abolish what was given before; He fulfills and deepens it.

Luke preserves many of the same themes—love for enemies, generosity, mercy, judging rightly, and the parable of the wise and foolish builders. Similar teachings also appear later in Luke’s Gospel (chapters 11 and 14), showing that Jesus repeated and expanded these Kingdom principles throughout His ministry.

Chronologically, these teachings belong in the early Galilean phase of Jesus’ ministry, after He begins calling disciples and before opposition reaches its peak. At this stage, the crowds are growing, curiosity is high, and expectations are forming. Many may have anticipated a political revolution. Instead, Jesus describes a moral and spiritual transformation.

This is the setting of Kingdom conditions.

The King does not gather followers with promises of power or immediate dominance. He calls them to humility, righteousness, mercy, and obedience from the heart. Entrance into the Kingdom is not marked by ancestry, wealth, or status, but by repentance and trust in the Father.

He concludes with a warning. Those who hear His words and put them into practice are like a wise man building on rock. Those who hear and ignore them are like a foolish man building on sand. The Kingdom demands response.

In this way, the Sermon on the Mount—and its parallel teachings in Luke—functions like a constitution of the Kingdom. The King who was affirmed at the Jordan, tested in the wilderness, and revealed through signs now declares what life under His reign truly requires. The Kingdom is not only announced. It is defined.

And from this point forward, the gap between outward religion and inward obedience becomes increasingly clear—both to His disciples and to His opponents.

Parables and Miracles by the Sea

Teaching from a boat along the shore, Jesus begins speaking in parables (Mt 13; Mk 4; Lk 8). He describes the Kingdom as seed sown in different soils, as mustard seed growing unexpectedly large, as leaven quietly working through dough.

They teach how the Kingdom (spoken of hundreds of years earlier by Daniel) will grow. The Kingdom will not arrive with immediate force. It will grow—sometimes unseen, sometimes resisted—but inevitably expanding and succeeding.

Miracles accompany these teachings. He calms a storm with a word. He casts out a legion of demons. He raises Jairus’ daughter. Each act reinforces the same message: the King’s authority extends over nature, spirits, sickness, and even death.

Feeding of the Five Thousand

Near Bethsaida, Jesus feeds a crowd of five thousand men, not counting women and children (Mt 14:13–21; Mk 6:30–44; Lk 9:10–17; Jn 6:1–15). With five loaves and two fish, He provides more than enough. After all have eaten, the disciples collect twelve baskets of leftovers! Mark 8 records a similar miracle: four thousand are fed from seven loaves and a few small fish (Mk 8:1–10). Again there were leftovers totalling seven baskets.

The people begin to see Him as a potential political deliverer. John notes that they attempt to make Him king by force. But Jesus withdraws. The Kingdom He brings will not be established by popular demand or political uprising.


Walking on Water

That night, after the feeding of the five thousand, as the disciples struggle against wind and waves, Jesus walks toward them on the sea (Mt 14:22–33; Mk 6:45–52; Jn 6:16–21). He declares, “It is I. Do not be afraid.” The One who calmed the storm now treads upon it. Creation itself recognizes its Maker.

The Bread of Life Discourse

The next day, in the synagogue at Capernaum, Jesus explains the meaning of the feeding miracle (Jn 6:22–71). He declares: “I am the bread of life.”

He is not merely a provider of bread; He is the true bread from heaven. The crowd’s enthusiasm fades when they realize His claims are deeper than they expected. Many disciples turn away. Popularity gives way to division. The Kingdom attracts—but it also confronts.
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Stay tuned for Part 4B "The Kingdom and the King: Part 4B — The Road to Jerusalem" which is to follow.

Part 3C of the series can be found at: The Kingdom and the King: Part 3C — Signs and Authority

 

 

Saturday, March 7, 2026

The Kingdom and the King: Part 3C — Signs and Authority

This article is part 3C of the short series titled “The Kingdom and the King. The series traces the story of Jesus from promise to reign, showing how the Kingdom of God unfolds across the Gospels. Part 3B of the series can be found at The Kingdom and the King: Part 3B — The King Revealed and Tested
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Cana to Jerusalem to Galilee 

A King Attends a Wedding (John 2:1–11) 

After the wilderness testing, Jesus returns in the power of the Spirit. John’s Gospel records that He begins gathering His first disciples—Andrew, Peter, Philip, and Nathanael. Shortly after this, He attends a wedding in Cana of Galilee.

At first glance, this event may seem small compared to the dramatic scenes of baptism and temptation. There is no confrontation with Satan. No voice from heaven. No public sermon. Instead, there is a village wedding celebration.

But this is where John records Jesus performing His first sign.

During the celebration, the hosts run out of wine. In that culture, this would have been more than an inconvenience. It would have been a public embarrassment for the family. Mary informs Jesus of the situation. Although His response indicates that His “hour” has not yet come, He nevertheless acts.

Six stone water jars are standing nearby. These jars are used for ceremonial washing according to Jewish purification customs. Jesus instructs the servants to fill them with water. When the master of the banquet tastes what has been drawn out, the water has become wine—of the highest quality.

John concludes with an important statement: “This, the first of His signs, Jesus did at Cana in Galilee, and manifested His glory; and His disciples believed in Him.” This was not merely a miracle. John calls it a “sign.” A sign points beyond itself to something greater. Several themes emerge.

First, the setting matters. The King’s first sign takes place at a wedding feast. Throughout the Old Testament, covenant restoration is often described using marriage imagery. The prophets speak of God rejoicing over His people as a bridegroom rejoices over his bride. By beginning His public signs at a wedding, Jesus quietly introduces the theme of covenant renewal.

Second, the transformation of water used for purification into abundant, excellent wine carries symbolic weight. The old order of ritual washing gives way to something new and better. The quantity is striking—far more than needed. This abundance reflects the overflowing nature of the Kingdom He brings.

Third, this event reveals His glory in a quiet but unmistakable way. Only a small group understands what has happened—the servants and His disciples. Yet the sign confirms that the One who resisted Satan in the wilderness now demonstrates authority over creation itself.

The King does not begin by overthrowing Rome. He begins by restoring joy at a wedding feast. In doing so, He reveals something essential about His Kingdom. It is not merely about power. It is about renewal. It is about transformation. It is about joy replacing shame.

This first sign prepares the reader for what follows. The King who has been affirmed at the Jordan and tested in the wilderness now begins to reveal His glory in signs that point to a greater reality. The Kingdom is not only near. It has begun to show itself.

The Kingdom is Announced and Authority Established

When Jesus begins His public ministry, His message is direct and consistent:

“Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.” (Matthew 4:17)

This is not a new idea appearing out of nowhere. It is the fulfillment of everything that came before. The Kingdom lost in Eden, promised in Genesis, narrowed through Abraham, and clarified through David and the prophets, is now breaking into history through the person of Jesus Christ.

The King is present. The Kingdom is at hand.

And this is where a chronological harmony of the Gospels becomes more than a timeline. It becomes the unfolding of a divine plan—one that began before creation, was promised in Eden, preserved through covenant, and now stands embodied in Christ Himself.

From this point forward, every miracle, every parable, every confrontation, and every journey toward Jerusalem must be understood in light of that central reality:

The King has come to reclaim His Kingdom.

The Early Judean Ministry: The King Revealed in Jerusalem

After His baptism and wilderness testing, Jesus does not immediately settle into Galilee for the majority of His ministry. John’s Gospel records an important early phase that takes place in Judea, centered around Jerusalem and the first Passover mentioned during His public work (Jn 2–4).

This early Judean ministry is significant because it shows how the King is first revealed—not in rural obscurity, but at the heart of Israel’s religious life.

The First Passover and the Cleansing of the Temple

When the Passover feast approaches, Jesus travels to Jerusalem (Jn 2:13–22). Passover commemorates Israel’s deliverance from Egypt. It is a celebration of redemption. The city would have been filled with pilgrims.

Upon entering the temple courts, Jesus finds merchants selling animals and money changers conducting business. These services had developed to support the sacrificial system, but what should have facilitated worship had become commercialized. The outer court—intended as a place of prayer—had turned into a marketplace.

Jesus responds with forceful action. He drives out the animals, overturns the tables, and declares, “Do not make My Father’s house a house of trade.” This is no minor protest. It is a claim of authority.

Earlier, at age twelve, He referred to the temple as “My Father’s house.” Now He acts on that claim. The King has entered His Father’s house and exercises authority over it.

When challenged for a sign, Jesus responds, “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.” John later explains that He was speaking of the temple of His body. Already, He hints that something greater than the physical temple has arrived. The true dwelling place of God among men will be found in Him.

The confrontation signals that His Kingdom will not merely comfort—it will purify.

A Ruler by Night: Nicodemus

While in Jerusalem, Jesus performs signs that cause many to believe in Him (Jn 2:23–25). Yet John notes that Jesus did not entrust Himself fully to them, for He knew what was in man.

One of the religious leaders, Nicodemus—a Pharisee and member of the ruling council—comes to Jesus at night (Jn 3:1–21). He acknowledges that Jesus must be from God, since no one could perform such signs otherwise. Jesus moves immediately to the heart of the matter: “Unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.”

Here, the King defines entry into His Kingdom. It is not based on ancestry, position, or religious achievement. It requires new birth—birth “from above,” brought about by the Spirit of God. This conversation reveals a crucial truth. The Kingdom Jesus announces is not political revolution. It is spiritual transformation. Even a respected teacher of Israel must begin again.

The well-known words of John 3:16 appear in this context. The King has come not to condemn the world, but to save it. Yet light exposes darkness, and not all will welcome it.

Ministry in Judea and Samaria

Following this encounter, Jesus and His disciples continue ministering in the Judean countryside (Jn 3:22–36). At the same time, John the Baptist is still baptizing. Some raise concerns about Jesus’ growing influence, but John responds with humility: “He must increase, but I must decrease.”

The forerunner understands his role. The King has arrived.

Soon afterward, Jesus travels north and passes through Samaria (Jn 4:1–42). There He meets a Samaritan woman at a well in Sychar. This encounter crosses multiple boundaries—ethnic, religious, and social. Jews and Samaritans shared a history of division and mistrust.

Yet Jesus speaks openly with her about “living water.” He reveals knowledge of her past and discloses that He is the promised Messiah. Through her testimony, many Samaritans believe.

This moment quietly expands the Kingdom’s horizon. The King is not only for Jerusalem. Not only for Judea. Not only for Galilee. Even those long viewed as outsiders are invited to receive the life He offers.

A Sign at Cana

Returning to Galilee, Jesus heals the son of a royal official from a distance (Jn 4:43–54). The official believes Jesus’ word before seeing the result. This second sign in Cana emphasizes trust in the authority of the King’s word.

No physical touch is needed. No dramatic gesture. The King speaks, and life is restored.

The Character of the Early Judean Ministry

This early phase of ministry reveals several defining features:

-         The King claims authority over the temple.
-         He declares the necessity of spiritual rebirth.
-         He welcomes outsiders and expands the boundaries of expectation.
-         He demonstrates power through signs that reveal His glory.

At this stage, belief is growing—but so is tension. Curiosity surrounds Him. Questions arise. Leaders take notice. The King has stepped into public view.

And soon, the focus of His ministry will shift northward to Galilee, where crowds will gather, teachings will expand, and opposition will deepen.

“Now the King turns toward Galilee where the Kingdom is defined publicly…”

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Stay tuned for Part 4A "The Kingdom and the King: Part 4A – Kingdom Defined" which is to follow.

The series can be found at: The Kingdom and the King - Part 1: Timeline of the King

Other articles which may be of interest on this and similar topics can be found at: Index of Articles 

 


Friday, March 6, 2026

The Kingdom and the King: Part 3B — The King Revealed and Tested

This article is part 3B of the short series titled “The Kingdom and the King. The series traces the story of Jesus from promise to reign, showing how the Kingdom of God unfolds across the Gospels. Part 3A of the series can be found at The Kingdom and the King: Part 3 – The Revelation of the King
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Jordan and the Wilderness

Baptism of the King (Matthew 3:1–17; Mark 1:4–11; Luke 3:1–22; John 1:19–34)

Before Jesus begins His public ministry, the Gospel writers introduce another key figure: John the Baptizer.

Luke carefully anchors the moment in history. He names the rulers of the day—Tiberius Caesar, Pontius Pilate, Herod, Philip, and Lysanias—along with the high priests Annas and Caiaphas. This is not mythology. It is a real moment in history. Into this political and religious landscape, “the word of God came to John” in the wilderness.

John appears in the region of the Jordan River preaching a simple but urgent message: “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near” (Mt 3:2). He calls the nation to turn from sin and prepare for what God is about to do. The Gospel writers connect John to Isaiah 40:3—“A voice of one calling in the wilderness, ‘Prepare the way for the Lord.’” John is the forerunner. The King is coming, and the people must be ready.

Crowds gather. Many are baptized in the Jordan, confessing their sins. John makes it clear that he is not the Messiah. He tells the people that One greater than he is coming—One whose sandals he is not worthy to untie. John baptizes with water, but the coming One will baptize with the Holy Spirit.

At this point in the timeline, Jesus leaves Galilee and comes to the Jordan to be baptized by John.

John immediately hesitates. Recognizing something unique about Jesus, he says, “I need to be baptized by You, and do You come to me?” But Jesus answers, “Let it be so now; it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness.” With these words, Jesus makes clear that this moment is necessary.

Jesus does not come for baptism because He has sins to confess. The Gospel record confirms that He is sinless. Instead, He enters the waters as a representative. He identifies Himself with the people He has come to redeem. The King steps into the place of His subjects. In doing so, He fulfills what is right in God’s plan.

When Jesus is baptized and comes up out of the water, something extraordinary happens. The heavens are opened. The Spirit of God descends like a dove and rests upon Him. Then a voice from heaven declares, “This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.

All three Synoptic Gospels record this moment. It is a public affirmation. The Father speaks. The Spirit descends. The Son stands in the water. The identity of the King is no longer hidden.

The words from heaven echo Psalm 2, where God declares His chosen King to be His Son. They also recall Isaiah 42, which speaks of the Servant in whom God delights and upon whom He places His Spirit. In this single moment, the roles of King and Servant meet in one person.

John later testifies to what he witnessed. He explains that he saw the Spirit descend and remain on Jesus. He then makes a profound declaration: “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world.” The King who has been revealed is also the sacrifice who will redeem.

Chronologically, the baptism marks the formal beginning of Jesus’ public ministry. The long-promised Seed has now been publicly identified. The Son of David has been affirmed from heaven. The King has been anointed—not with oil, but with the Spirit.

Immediately after this event, the Spirit leads Jesus into the wilderness. Before the King proclaims the Kingdom openly, He will face testing.

But at the Jordan River, the turning point has already come. The hidden years are over. The King has stepped forward. Heaven has spoken. The ministry—and the unfolding of the Kingdom—has begun.

The Testing of the King (Matthew 4:1–11; Mark 1:12–13; Luke 4:1–13)

Immediately after His baptism, the Spirit leads Jesus into the wilderness. This detail is important. The testing that follows is not accidental. It is part of God’s unfolding plan.

Mark summarizes the event briefly, noting that Jesus was driven into the wilderness for forty days and was tempted by Satan. Matthew and Luke provide more detail. Jesus fasts for forty days and nights. At the end of that time, He is hungry.

The setting itself carries meaning. The wilderness recalls Israel’s forty years of wandering after the Exodus. Just as Israel was tested in the desert, so now Jesus—the true Son—faces testing. But where Israel failed, He will stand firm.


First Temptation: Stones to Bread

The tempter approaches and says, “If You are the Son of God, command these stones to become bread.”

Israel once complained about hunger in the wilderness and doubted God’s provision. Jesus does not. He trusts the Father completely. The King will not rule by self-preservation or self-will.

The first temptation carries echoes of something much older. In the Garden of Eden, the serpent approached Eve with a subtle question: “Has God indeed said…?” The attack was not merely about eating fruit. It was about trust—trust in God’s word and in His goodness. The serpent planted doubt, and Adam and Eve reached for what was not given. Surrounded by abundance, they chose independence over obedience. In doing so, they surrendered the dominion entrusted to them.

Now, in the wilderness, the serpent approaches again. The Father has just declared from heaven, “This is My beloved Son. Satan responds, “If You are the Son of God…” Once more, identity and trust are targeted. And once again, the temptation involves food. But the setting could not be more different. The first Adam was in a garden of provision. The second Adam stands in a barren wilderness after forty days of hunger.

Yet where the first man failed, the true King stands firm.

Jesus refuses to turn stones into bread apart from the Father’s will. He answers, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God.” Instead of grasping, He trusts. Instead of doubting, He obeys.

The pattern continues in the later temptations. In Eden, the serpent offered a shortcut to rule: “You will be like God.” In the wilderness, Satan offers the kingdoms of the world without the path of suffering. In both cases, the temptation is to seize authority apart from obedience. Adam accepted. Jesus refuses.

This is not merely a private moment of personal testing. It is the opening clash in the conflict first announced in Genesis 3:15—the enmity between the serpent and the promised Seed. The serpent once gained ground through deception. Now he confronts the One who has come to reclaim the kingdom.
-         The first Adam surrendered dominion.
-         The last Adam begins to take it back.

And He does so not through force or spectacle, but through unwavering obedience to the word of God.

Second Temptation: Testing God

In Matthew’s account, the next temptation takes place at the pinnacle of the temple in Jerusalem. Satan urges Jesus to throw Himself down, quoting Psalm 91 and suggesting that angels will protect Him.

Again, the issue is trust. Will Jesus force God’s hand? Will He demand a public display that compels belief?

Jesus responds with Deuteronomy 6:16: “You shall not test the Lord your God.”

Israel tested God in the wilderness by demanding signs and questioning His presence. Jesus refuses to repeat that failure. The King will not manipulate the Father for dramatic proof.

Third Temptation: The Kingdoms of the World

Finally, Satan shows Jesus all the kingdoms of the world and their glory. He offers them in exchange for worship.

This temptation strikes at the heart of the Kingdom theme. The Messiah has come to reclaim the nations. Psalm 2 promises that the Son will receive the nations as His inheritance. Yet here Satan offers a shortcut—a crown without a cross, authority without suffering.

Jesus answers with Deuteronomy 6:13: “You shall worship the Lord your God, and Him only shall you serve.”

The King refuses the false path. He will receive the Kingdom from the Father, not from the adversary. He will reign, but not by compromise.

Luke notes that when the devil had finished every temptation, he departed “until an opportune time.” The conflict is not over. It has only begun.

The Meaning of the Testing

This episode reveals several important truths.

First, Jesus succeeds where Israel—as well as Adam and Eve—failed. Each of His responses comes from Deuteronomy—specifically from passages that recall Israel’s wilderness testing. Where the nation grumbled, doubted, and rebelled, Jesus obeys.

Second, Jesus demonstrates the kind of King He will be. He will not rule by spectacle, self-interest, or political compromise. His authority rests in obedience to the Father.

Third, the battle lines are now clearly drawn. The confrontation between the promised Seed and the serpent, first announced in Genesis 3, is underway. The serpent tests the Son, but the Son stands firm.

After the temptations end, angels come and minister to Him. The testing has prepared the King for the next phase of His mission.

With the wilderness behind Him, Jesus returns in the power of the Spirit. Soon He will begin openly proclaiming, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.”

-         The King has been revealed at the Jordan.
-         He has been tested in the wilderness.
-         Now He will announce His Kingdom.

“Having refused the shortcut crown, He now begins to reveal His glory…”

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Stay tuned for Part 3C "Kingdom and the King: Part 3C – "Signs and Authority" which is to follow.

Part 3A of the series can be found at The Kingdom and the King: Part 3A – The Revelation of the King

 

Thursday, March 5, 2026

The Kingdom and the King: Part 3 – The Revelation of the King

This article is part 3A of a short series titled “The Kingdom and the King.” The series traces the story of Jesus from promise to reign, showing how the Kingdom of God unfolds across the Gospels. Part 2 of the series can be found at The Kingdom and the King: Part 2 – Promise of a Coming King
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Part 3A — The Revelation of the King

From Bethlehem to the Jordan

Matthew opens his Gospel with a genealogy of Jesus, but Luke begins differently. In Luke 1, the story starts with the announcement of the one who would prepare the way—the forerunner, John the Baptizer. Before the King appears publicly, the way must be made ready.

Both Matthew and Luke record angelic visitations that frame these births as a divine announcement, not human planning. In Matthew 1, an angel appears to Joseph in a dream, assuring him that the child conceived in Mary is from the Holy Spirit. In Luke 1, the angel Gabriel appears first to Zechariah, announcing the birth of John, and then to Mary, announcing the birth of Jesus. Heaven itself testifies that something extraordinary is unfolding. The birth of the promised King—the Messiah—is being announced.

Luke 2 records the birth of Jesus. This passage is beloved by many and is often read each year as part of the Christmas story. Yet it is far more than a seasonal tradition. It is the arrival of the King.

The child is born not in a palace, but in a humble setting—a manger. Shepherds, not rulers, are the first to receive the announcement. And yet the scene is anything but ordinary. A multitude of angels appears, praising God and declaring peace. Heaven celebrates what earth scarcely understands.

The King has arrived—but not in the way most expected.

The Circumcision of the King

Eight days after His birth, Jesus was circumcised and formally given the name Jesus (Luke 2:21). This brief detail is easily overlooked, yet it is deeply significant.

Circumcision was the sign of the covenant given to Abraham (Genesis 17). By undergoing this rite, Jesus was publicly identified as a son of Israel—a child of the covenant promises. The One who would fulfill the Law, first submitted to it. From the very beginning, the King stood within the story of His people.

Luke also records that Mary and Joseph brought Him to Jerusalem to present Him at the temple (Luke 2:22–38). There, two faithful servants of God—Simeon and Anna—recognized what others did not. Simeon took the child in his arms and declared that he had seen God’s salvation—“a light for revelation to the Gentiles and the glory of Your people Israel.”

Luke adds that Joseph and Mary were amazed at the things which were being said about Him. And Simeon blessed them and said to Mary His mother, “Behold, this Child is appointed for the fall and rise of many in Israel, and for a sign to be opposed— and a sword will pierce even your own soul—to the end that thoughts from many hearts may be revealed.”


Early Childhood: Recognition and Rejection

Matthew adds details about Jesus’ early childhood that Luke does not include.

Sometime after His birth, wise men from the East—often called Magi—arrived in Jerusalem (Matthew 2:1–12). They had seen a star and understood it as a sign that a king had been born. Their question troubled the city: “Where is He who has been born King of the Jews?”

The irony is striking. Foreign scholars traveled to worship Him, while many in Jerusalem were disturbed by His arrival. The Magi eventually found the child and presented gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh—gifts worthy of royalty.

But not all welcomed the news. King Herod, fearing a rival, ordered the massacre of male children in Bethlehem two years old and under (Matthew 2:16–18). The King’s arrival immediately provoked opposition. The pattern that would define His ministry—revelation followed by resistance—appears from the beginning.

Warned in a dream, Joseph took Mary and the child and fled to Egypt (Matthew 2:13–15). There they remained until Herod’s death. Matthew notes that this fulfilled the words spoken by the prophet: “Out of Egypt I called My Son.” Just as Israel had once come out of Egypt, so the true Son retraces that path.

After Herod died, the family returned, but instead of settling again in Bethlehem, they made their home in Nazareth of Galilee (Matthew 2:19–23; Luke 2:39–40). Nazareth was an unremarkable town in an often-overlooked region. The King grew up far from the centers of power and influence.

Luke summarizes these years simply: “The Child grew and became strong; He was filled with wisdom, and the grace of God was upon Him.” The King’s early life was marked not by spectacle, but by quiet faithfulness.

This progression—from covenant sign, to prophetic recognition, to foreign worship, to violent rejection, to humble obscurity—quietly sets the stage for everything that follows.
-         
The King has arrived.
-         
He is recognized by the faithful.
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He is opposed by the powerful.
-         
He grows in obscurity until the appointed time of public revealing.

The Boy in the Temple: A Glimpse of the King

Luke alone records one event from Jesus’ youth. When He was twelve years old, His family traveled to Jerusalem for the Passover festival, as they did each year (Luke 2:41–52). Passover commemorated Israel’s deliverance from Egypt—a reminder of redemption and covenant identity. It is fitting that this scene takes place in that setting.

After the feast, Mary and Joseph began the journey home, assuming Jesus was traveling with relatives. After a full day’s journey, they realized He was not among them. Returning to Jerusalem, they found Him three days later in the temple courts, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking questions. Those who heard Him were amazed at His understanding and His answers.

When His parents expressed their distress, Jesus responded with words that reveal a growing awareness of His identity: “Did you not know that I must be in My Father’s house?” (Luke 2:49).

This statement is remarkable. At twelve years old, Jesus speaks of the temple as “My Father’s house.” The language anticipates what He will later declare during the cleansing of the temple. The authority He will one day exercise openly is already present, though quietly.

Yet the scene ends not with confrontation but with submission. Luke tells us that Jesus returned with His parents to Nazareth and was obedient to them. The King who would one day command storms and confront religious leaders first lived in humble obedience within an ordinary household. Luke summarizes these years simply: “Jesus increased in wisdom and stature, and in favour with God and man.”

The moment in the temple is a brief unveiling—a glimpse of who He is. The Father’s house already claims His attention. The King already understands His mission. But the time for public revelation has not yet come. For now, He returns to Nazareth.

The years of silence continue. The King grows in obscurity until the day when a voice will cry out in the wilderness, and the Jordan River will become the stage for His unveiling.

“The hidden years end; the Jordan now sets the stage…”

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Stay tuned for Part 3B "Kingdom and the King: Part 3B – The King Revealed and Tested" which is to follow.

Part 2 of the series can be found at The Kingdom and the King: Part 2 – Promise of a Coming King

 

The Kingdom and the King: Part 4B — The Road to Jerusalem

This article is part 4B of the short series titled “The Kingdom and the King. ” The series traces the story of Jesus from promise to rei...