The terms kingdom of God, kingdom of heaven, and kingdom (with reference to the kingdom of God/heaven) appear nearly 150 times in Scripture. None of these references gives a simple, straightforward definition of the kingdom, and many passages appear to be contradictory. Yet the kingdom is the primary focus of Jesus’ teaching. Many of his parables describe the kingdom. The apostles preach the “gospel of the kingdom.” And end-times prophecy points us toward the day when God’s kingdom will come in its fullness.
So, what is the kingdom of heaven? Are the kingdom of heaven and the kingdom of God the same thing? Is the kingdom here already, or are we to wait for it? What does it look like? Who’s in the kingdom and who’s not? And what is required to enter the kingdom? We will explore these and other questions in this book, mostly through the lens of Jesus’ parables in Matthew on the kingdom of heaven. To begin, we need to understand what the Bible says the kingdom of heaven is—and is not.
What the kingdom of heaven is not
There are many incorrect views about the kingdom that have emerged over the years—among them, that the kingdom of heaven is:
- An inward power, a purely subjective realm of God’s power and influence in our lives
- An apocalyptic realm, altogether future and supernatural, that God will install at the end of human history and is by no means present or spiritual
- The church, either the ever-expanding church as the world is Christianized, ushering in the kingdom, or the true church hidden within professing Christianity
- The universe, all of God’s creation over which he is sovereign
- Heaven, in contrast to earth
As we’ll see, none of these views holds up under a careful study of scripture.
So … what is the kingdom of heaven?