This article is part 6 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 5 of the series can be found at: The Kingdom and the King: Part 6 – The King Lives and Reigns
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In reading the four Gospels, we have traced the promise of a
coming King. The covenant with Abraham pointed toward blessing for all nations.
The throne promised to David anticipated an everlasting reign. The prophets
spoke of light breaking into darkness.
We have
followed the arrival of that King.
- He was recognized by the faithful and resisted by the powerful.
- He grew in obscurity until the appointed hour when His ministry became public.
At the Jordan, heaven declared Him the beloved Son. In the wilderness, He succeeded where Adam and Israel had failed. In Galilee, He proclaimed the Kingdom and revealed its power—over sickness, storms, demons, and death itself. The promise was no longer distant. It was embodied.
Yet the Kingdom He revealed was not what many expected. It was not seized by force. It did not advance through political revolution. It demanded humility, repentance, and new birth. It welcomed the outsider and exposed the self-righteous. It confronted corruption in the temple and redefined greatness among His followers.
And because it did not match prevailing expectations, it was resisted. Many longed for a visible, immediate political restoration. Instead, the King announced a Kingdom that began in the heart, advanced through repentance, and would be secured through sacrifice. The rejection of His message was not simply hostility—it was disappointment that He did not fit the mold they had formed.
As the journey turned toward Jerusalem, the conflict sharpened. The raising of Lazarus forced a decision. The Triumphal Entry made His claim public. The temple was cleansed again. The old order was warned.
Then came the cross.
There, at Passover, the covenant promise reached its deepest fulfillment. The Lamb died. The King bore judgment. What began in Genesis with the promise of a bruised heel moved toward its crushing climax. And yet death did not hold Him.
The
resurrection vindicated His identity. The ascension inaugurated His reign. The
One who rode into Jerusalem on a donkey now reigns with all authority in heaven
and on earth.
- The Kingdom has been revealed.
- The old covenant has been brought to fulfillment.
- A new covenant has been instituted.
- The reign has been inaugurated.
From
Bethlehem to the Ascension, the movement is not accidental. It is covenantal.
It is intentional. It is unified.
- The King has conquered.
- The King reigns.
Final Thought
A careful reading of the Gospels invites us to notice how Jesus most often described His mission. In modern Christian settings the message is frequently summarized in terms of “personal salvation,” sometimes framed in direct appeals such as “be saved” or “accept Christ.” In the Gospel accounts themselves however, Jesus rarely uses that specific language. He most often speaks in terms of the Kingdom of God.
This does not mean that personal salvation is absent from His teaching. Jesus calls people to repent, believe, receive forgiveness, enter life, and avoid judgment (Luke 19:10; John 3:16–17; John 5:24; John 10:9). At times He tells individuals, “Your faith has saved you.” Salvation is clearly present.
At the same time however, the dominant theme of His public
proclamation is the Kingdom of God (or Kingdom of Heaven). That
language appears more than one hundred times across the four Gospels. Jesus’
earliest recorded summary message is, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come
near” (Matthew 4:17).
- His parables describe what the Kingdom is like.
- His miracles demonstrate its authority.
- When He sends out the Twelve—and later the Seventy-Two—their message is that the Kingdom has drawn near.
- After the resurrection, He speaks in terms of authority and commission, sending His followers to disciple the nations.
The overall pattern suggests that personal salvation is not isolated from His message but embedded within it. Salvation is the doorway; the Kingdom is the reality into which one enters. Jesus proclaims both—but the framework in which He most often speaks is the arrival of God’s reign through the King.
And here a final question presses itself upon us. If many in the first century struggled to receive Jesus because His Kingdom did not match their expectations, we must be careful not to repeat the same mistake. If we define His mission too narrowly—whether politically, culturally, or even devotionally—we risk reshaping the King according to our preferences rather than receiving Him as He revealed Himself.
The Gospels do not present a King who fits every expectation. They present a King who fulfills the covenant, confronts the heart, reigns through sacrifice, and calls all people into the reality of God’s Kingdom. The question is not only whether we believe in salvation.
It is whether we recognize the King—and the kind of Kingdom He actually proclaimed.