Kingdom Come- Inauguration

Kingdom Come  •  Sermon  •  Submitted   •  Presented
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Jesus comes to start a Kingdom. Let those words rest on you for a minute. when Jesus arrives in the flesh, He has a mission, a purpose, and that is to start a Kingdom and to bring people into that Kingdom who have been outside its walls since the Fall of Man.
This has been God’s plan from the beginning- seen first in Genesis 3 in the proto-Gospel passage and promised over and over again to the Patriarchs and then to the Prophets. This has been the plan. And at the right moment, Galatians 4:4-5 makes this clear, Jesus arrives.
And He has not just an overall plan, but a step by step plan to fulfill all that God has promised and to bring His people home.
So for the next few weeks leading up to Easter, we are going to look at some key moments that reveal God’s purpose and plan, that Jesus undertakes to build the Kingdom.
And today, we start at the initial recognition of Jesus…His inauguration if you will.
Turn with me to Matthew 3.
Before we get to Jesus, we have to get to His cousin John. Not the most easy of guys to get to know lol
He is also the result of a divine promise- although he was conceived and born in a conventional way. And he had a mission as well- he was the forerunner who would announce Jesus as the fulfillment of the promise of God to send His Messiah to the world.
John builds his ministry around 2 things preaching and baptism.
His preaching was one note repeated over and over again:
“Repent for the Kingdom of heaven is at hand.”
What does this mean?
First- repent- to change direction- in this case you were going away from God, now go towards Him
Matthew 1. John the Baptist: The Prophetic Forerunner to Messiah (3:1–12)

Repentance in Greek traditionally implied a change of mind or attitude, but under Old Testament influence it took on the sense of a change of action as well. This combination means that John was asking his hearers “to change their way of life as a result of a complete change of thought and attitude with regard to sin and righteousness

Second- the Kingdom of heaven- a new ruler, someone to replace the current order and ruler- be they Jewish or Roman, God is in control/command
Matthew 1. John the Baptist: The Prophetic Forerunner to Messiah (3:1–12)

The kingdom is not currently a geographical entity, but it manifests itself in space and time in the community of those who accept the message John and Jesus proclaimed and who begin to work out God’s purposes on earth—personally, socially, and institutionally. Thus to declare that the kingdom is at hand “means that the decisive establishment or manifestation of the divine sovereignty has drawn so near to men that they are now confronted with the possibility and the ineluctable necessity of repentance and conversion.” More comprehensively:

Third- at hand- no more waiting- the Kingdom is not coming it has arrived-
Matthew 1. John the Baptist: The Prophetic Forerunner to Messiah (3:1–12)

The messianic era, the millennial kingdom, and eventually the new heavens and the new earth often blend together in characteristic prophetic foreshortening. John is thus heralding the beginning of the full restoration and blessing of God’s people. Just as roads were often repaired in the ancient world in preparation for royalty traveling on them, so John calls his listeners to rebuild highways of holiness (cf. Isa 35:8), i.e., to return to moral living in preparation for God’s coming in Jesus

And God was at work, because even though the message was repetitive and dire, people were coming and they were being baptized.
The significance of baptism: they were leaving an old life behind and starting a new one (NT baptism post Jesus and Gospel presentation)
Matthew 1. John the Baptist: The Prophetic Forerunner to Messiah (3:1–12)

The crowds who come and repent make public their change of heart by acknowledging their failure to meet God’s standards and by resolving to change their ways. They visibly demonstrate the seriousness of their pledge with the rite of water baptism

Matthew 1. John the Baptist: The Prophetic Forerunner to Messiah (3:1–12)

John’s call for a one-time-only baptism for those who had been born as Jews was unprecedented. John thus insisted that one’s ancestry was not adequate to ensure one’s relationship with God. As has often been put somewhat colloquially, “God has no grandchildren.” Our parents’ religious affiliations afford no substitute for our own personal commitment

The other thing to take note of here: This is not an invitation to performative religiosity or public displays of piety. John was having none of that. Look at verses 7-10.
Matthew 1. John the Baptist: The Prophetic Forerunner to Messiah (3:1–12)

Verse 8 provides the key to one of Matthew’s crucial themes—righteousness by good deeds. But Matthew does not contradict Paul’s doctrine of justification by faith. Rather, true faith or repentance will produce a life-style and behavior that demonstrate the reality of a changed heart. In v. 9 John again reminds his listeners that they dare not trust in their ancestral credentials or believe that they alone are legitimate candidates for inclusion in the people of God. Matthew’s two-pronged emphasis, introduced in chaps. 1–2, thus continues: the messianic age brings new people into God’s kingdom and excludes others who thought themselves secure

Verse 10a is a big deal…the ax is at the root of the tree…that means the old way is about to come down and these guys who are trying to impress God and each other and others with their own holiness or their ancestral lineage are going to be exposed and fall.
And that is going to happen because of verse 11-12. There is Someone else coming who going to bring God closer than He has ever been before and He is going to lay waste to everything that isn’t holy. A new Kingdom will be inaugurated.
So that is the setting and what is occurring before verse 13. In verse 13, Jesus arrives. And He comes to be baptized by John.
John KNOWS at this moment who Jesus is and he is not just hesitant he actually asks Jesus to baptize him!
Matthew 2. John and Jesus: The Messiah’s Baptism (3:13–17)

John has already disclosed his “inferiority complex” in the presence of the Messiah. He now acknowledges his own sinfulness in comparison with Jesus and how the tables ought rightfully to be turned. Jesus should be baptizing John

But Jesus knows something John does not know, this has to be done. It is the beginning of ALL that John has been preaching.
Matthew 2. John and Jesus: The Messiah’s Baptism (3:13–17)

Jesus has not come to confess any sin but “to fulfill all righteousness.” He has previously fulfilled specific prophecies as well as more general scriptural themes. Now he wishes to obey all the moral demands of God’s will. “To fulfill all righteousness” means to complete everything that forms part of a relationship of obedience to God. In so doing, Jesus identifies with and endorses John’s ministry as divinely ordained and his message as one to be heeded

And when Jesus comes up out of the water, a new Kingdom is inaugurated. We see that in all that happens:
First- the heavens open to Him- Jesus can see where He came from before He came to earth- a reminder of the Kingdom He left
Second- the Spirit “rests on Him”- God shows Himself as He will remain after the resurrection
Matthew 2. John and Jesus: The Messiah’s Baptism (3:13–17)

First, the Holy Spirit descends “like” a dove, which suggests that no actual bird appeared but that some visible manifestation of the Spirit led observers to recognize that God was revealing himself through those attributes regularly associated with a dove—e.g., superintending over creation (cf. Gen 1:2), offering peace (as in Gen 8:10), gentleness in contrast to the judgment of vv. 7–12, or as “the loving character of divine life itself

Third- God speaks- and He identifies Jesus and His pleasure with wha Jesus is doing.
Matthew 2. John and Jesus: The Messiah’s Baptism (3:13–17)

The heavenly voice cites excerpts of Ps 2:7 and Isa 42:1. Both texts were taken as messianic by important segments of pre-Christian Judaism (see 4QFlor 10–14 and Tg. Isa 42:1, respectively). Together they point out Jesus’ role as both divine Son and Suffering Servant, a crucial combination for interpreting Jesus’ self-understanding and mission.

The King is inaugurating His Kingdom- expanding His Kingdom- retaking His territory- thru the Presence of the Son.
So why is this important to us? We need to understand we are heirs to a Kingdom, and that Kingdom is advancing today. We are adopted kids, grafted into the family tree thru Jesus, and His Kingdom is ours.
What He started that day we continue in today.
What are you doing with your Royal mandate? How pleased is the Father with us?
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