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In the previous section the King was rejected, crucified,
and laid in a tomb. Yet the story of the Kingdom does not end in silence.
AD 33: The cross did not end the story—it revealed only part of it.
Very early on the first day of the week, women come to the tomb where Jesus had been laid (Mt 28:1–10; Mk 16:1–8; Lk 24:1–12; Jn 20:1–10). They expect to anoint a body. Instead, they find the stone rolled away.
An angel announces what history had never witnessed before: “He is not here, for He has risen.”
The tomb is empty.
This is not merely reversal. It is vindication. The One condemned by earthly courts is affirmed by heaven. The King who was crucified now stands beyond death itself. The resurrection is the Father’s public declaration that the sacrifice has been accepted, the covenant promise fulfilled, and the authority of the Son confirmed. Death—the final enemy—has been confronted and overcome.
The Kingdom announced in Galilee has not failed. It has
triumphed through a path no one expected.
Appearances in Jerusalem
The risen Jesus first appears to Mary Magdalene (Jn 20:11–18). Grief turns to recognition when He calls her by name. She becomes the first witness to the resurrection. The Kingdom that had welcomed the overlooked now entrusts its first proclamation to a faithful woman whose testimony would have carried little legal weight in that culture. Grace continues to overturn expectation.
He appears to other women (Mt 28:9–10). Later that day, He walks with two disciples on the road to Emmaus (Lk 24:13–35). Beginning with Moses and the Prophets, He explains how the Scriptures pointed to His suffering and glory. What had seemed like tragic interruption was, in fact, fulfillment. The Law, the Prophets, and the Psalms converge on Him.
That evening, He stands among the gathered disciples (Lk 24:36–49; Jn 20:19–23). Fear gives way to astonishment. He shows them His hands and His side. He eats in their presence. The resurrection is not symbolic. It is bodily. The same Jesus who was crucified now lives—transformed yet tangible.
Thomas, absent at the first appearance, later sees and
believes (Jn 20:24–29). His confession rises to its highest point: “My Lord and my God.” The Gospel that
began with “the Word was God” now reaches its climax in the confession of a
disciple. The identity declared at the Jordan, revealed on the mountain, and
contested in Jerusalem now stands confirmed in resurrection power.
By the Sea of Galilee
John records a later appearance by the Sea of Galilee (Jn 21:1–25). Once again, the disciples fish through the night without success. At dawn, Jesus stands on the shore and directs them where to cast the net. The result is another overwhelming catch. It echoes their original calling. The Kingdom story circles back to where it began.
After breakfast, Jesus restores Peter, who had denied Him three times. Three times He asks, “Do you love Me?” Three times Peter responds. The fallen disciple is recommissioned and told: “Feed My sheep.”
The King does not discard His failing servants. He restores
them. The Kingdom advances not through flawless followers, but through forgiven
ones. The shepherding of God’s people now continues under the authority of the
risen Christ.
The Great Commission
In Galilee, Jesus gathers His disciples and declares:
This statement is monumental. The authority demonstrated throughout His ministry—over sickness, storms, demons, and death—is now declared universal. What Psalm 2 anticipated and what Daniel saw in vision—the Son of Man receiving dominion—now stands fulfilled.
He commands them to make disciples of all nations, baptizing and teaching them. The mission that began with the Twelve, expanded through the Seventy-Two, and hinted at through parables now becomes explicit. The promise to Abraham comes fully into view: blessing will reach all nations.
The Kingdom is no longer confined to Galilee or Jerusalem. It is to be proclaimed to the ends of the earth.
Salvation is not isolated from the Kingdom—it is the doorway
into it. Those who repent and believe are not merely rescued; they are brought
under the reign of the risen King.
The Ascension
Finally, near Bethany, Jesus leads His disciples out and blesses them (Lk 24:50–53; Mk 16:19–20; Acts 1:9–11). As they watch, He is taken up, and a cloud receives Him from their sight.
The cloud is not incidental. Throughout Scripture, the cloud signifies the presence of God. The same glory-cloud that overshadowed Sinai, filled the tabernacle, and rested upon the mount of transfiguration now receives the Son. This is not disappearance. It is exaltation.
The ascension is not departure in defeat.
- It is
enthronement!
Daniel once saw “one like a Son of Man” coming with the clouds of heaven to receive dominion, glory, and an everlasting kingdom (Dan 7:13–14). The ascension is the fulfillment of that vision. The Son of David, rejected by men but vindicated by God, now reigns.
From this point forward, the Kingdom advances not through the visible presence of Jesus in one geographic region, but through His sovereign rule from heaven and the ongoing mission of His people empowered by the Spirit.
The earthly ministry concludes, but the Kingdom continues.
The story
that began with promise has moved through proclamation, confrontation, and
sacrifice. It now stands confirmed in resurrection and reign.
-
The King lives.
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The King reigns.
-
The Kingdom advances.
And the mission
continues.
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Stay tuned for the conclusion of, "Conclusion – The King Revealed and Enthroned" which is to follow.
Part 5 of the series can be found at: The Kingdom and the King: Part 5 – Jerusalem Decides