CHAPTER II - THE KINGDOM OF GOD
12.
"It is 'God, who is rich in mercy' whom Jesus Christ has revealed to us as
Father: it is his very Son who, in himself, has manifested him and made him
known to us."21 I wrote this at the beginning of my Encyclical Dives
in Misericordia, to show that Christ is the revelation and incarnation of
the Father's mercy. Salvation consists in believing and accepting the mystery
of the Father and of his love, made manifest and freely given in Jesus through
the Spirit. In this way the kingdom of God comes to be fulfilled: the kingdom
prepared for in the Old Testament, brought about by Christ and in Christ, and
proclaimed to all peoples by the Church, which works and prays for its perfect
and definitive realization.
The Old Testament attests
that God chose and formed a people for himself, in order to reveal and carry
out his loving plan. But at the same time God is the Creator and Father of all
people; he cares and provides for them, extending his blessing to all (cf.
Gn 12:3); he has
established a covenant with all of them (cf. Gn
9:1-17). Israel experiences a personal and saving God (cf. Dt
4:37; 7:6-8; Is
43:1-7) and becomes his witness and interpreter among the nations.
In the course of her history, Israel comes to realize that her election has a
universal meaning (cf. for example Is 2:2-5;
25:6-8; 60:1-6;
Jer 3:17; 16:19).
Christ Makes the
Kingdom Present
13. Jesus
of Nazareth brings God's plan to fulfillment. After receiving the Holy Spirit
at his Baptism, Jesus makes clear his messianic calling: he goes about Galilee
"preaching the Gospel of God and saying: 'The time is fulfilled, and the
kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the Gospel'" (Mk
1:14-15; cf. Mt 4:17; Lk
4:43). The proclamation and establishment of God's kingdom are the
purpose of his mission: "I was sent for this purpose" (Lk 4:43).
But that is not all. Jesus himself is the "Good News," as he declares
at the very beginning of his mission in the synagogue at Nazareth, when he
applies to himself the words of Isaiah about the Anointed One sent by the
Spirit of the Lord (cf. Lk 4; 14-21).
Since the "Good News" is Christ, there is an identity between the
message and the messenger, between saying, doing and being. His power, the
secret of the effectiveness of his actions, lies in his total identification
with the message he announces; he proclaims the "Good News" not just
by what he says or does, but by what he is.
The ministry of Jesus is
described in the context of his journeys within his homeland. Before Easter,
the scope of his mission was focused on Israel. Nevertheless, Jesus offers a
new element of extreme importance. The eschatological reality is not relegated
to a remote "end of the world," but is already close and at work in
our midst. The kingdom of God is at hand (cf. Mk
1:15); its coming is to be prayed for (cf. Mt
6:10); faith can glimpse it already at work in signs such as
miracles (cf. Mt 11:4-5) and exorcisms
(cf. Mt 12:25-28), in the choosing of the
Twelve (cf. Mk 3:13-19), and in the
proclamation of the Good News to the poor (cf. Lk
4:18). Jesus' encounters with Gentiles make it clear that entry into
the kingdom comes through faith and conversion (cf. Mk
1:15), and not
merely by reason of ethnic background.
The kingdom which Jesus
inaugurates is the kingdom
of God. Jesus himself
reveals who this God is, the One whom he addresses by the intimate term
"Abba," Father (cf. Mk
14:36). God, as
revealed above all in the parables (cf. Lk
15:3-32; . Mt
20:1-16), is sensitive to the needs and
sufferings of every human being: he is a Father filled with love and
compassion, who grants forgiveness and freely bestows the favors asked of him.
St. John tells us that "God is love" (1 Jn 4:8, 16).
Every person therefore is invited to "repent" and to
"believe" in God's merciful love. The kingdom will grow insofar as
every person learns to turn to God in the intimacy of prayer as to a Father
(cf. Lk 11:2;
Mt 23:9) and strives to do his will (cf.
Mt 7:21).
Characteristics of
the Kingdom and Its Demands
14. Jesus
gradually reveals the characteristics and demands of the kingdom through his
words, his actions and his own person.
The kingdom of God is meant
for all mankind, and all people are called to become members of it. To
emphasize this fact, Jesus drew especially near to those on the margins of
society, and showed them special favor in announcing the Good News. At the
beginning of his ministry he proclaimed that he was "anointed...to preach
good news to the poor" (Lk
4:18). To all
who are victims of rejection and contempt Jesus declares: "Blessed are you
poor" (Lk 6:20). What is more, he
enables such individuals to experience liberation even now, by being close to
them, going to eat in their homes (cf. Lk 5:30;
15:2), treating them as equals and friends
(cf. Lk 7:34), and making them feel loved
by God, thus revealing his tender care for the needy and for sinners (cf.
Lk 15:1-32).
The liberation and
salvation brought by the kingdom
of God come to the human
person both in his physical and spiritual dimensions. Two gestures are characteristic
of Jesus' mission: healing and forgiving. Jesus' many healings clearly show his
great compassion in the face of human distress, but they also signify that in
the kingdom there will no longer be sickness or suffering, and that his
mission, from the very beginning, is meant to free people from these evils. In
Jesus' eyes, healings are also a sign of spiritual salvation, namely liberation
from sin. By performing acts of healing, he invites people to faith, conversion
and the desire for forgiveness (cf. Lk
5:24). Once
there is faith, healing is an encouragement to go further: it leads to
salvation (cf. Lk 18:42-43). The acts of
liberation from demonic possession - the supreme evil and symbol of sin and
rebellion against God - are signs that indeed "the kingdom of God
has come upon you" (Mt
12:28).
15.
The kingdom aims at transforming human relationships; it grows gradually as
people slowly learn to love, forgive and serve one another. Jesus sums up the
whole Law, focusing it on the commandment of love (cf. Mt 22:34-40;
Lk 10:25-28).
Before leaving his disciples, he gives them a "new commandment":
"Love one another; even as I have loved you" (Jn 13:34;
cf. 15:12).
Jesus' love for the world finds its highest expression in the gift of his life
for mankind (cf. Jn 15:13), which manifests
the love which the Father has for the world (cf. Jn 3:16). The kingdom's
nature, therefore, is one of communion among all human beings - with one
another and with God.
The kingdom is the concern
of everyone: individuals, society, and the world. Working for the kingdom means
acknowledging and promoting God's activity, which is present in human history
and transforms it. Building the kingdom means working for liberation from evil
in all its forms. In a word, the kingdom of God is the manifestation and the
realization of God's plan of salvation in all its fullness.
In the Risen Christ
God's Kingdom Is Fulfilled and Proclaimed
16. By
raising Jesus from the dead, God has conquered death, and in Jesus he has
definitely inaugurated his kingdom. During his earthly life, Jesus was the
Prophet of the kingdom; after his passion, resurrection and ascension into
heaven he shares in God's power and in his dominion over the world (cf. Mt 28:18; Acts
2:36; Eph
1:18-21). The
resurrection gives a universal scope to Christ's message, his actions and whole
mission. The disciples recognize that the kingdom is already present in the
person of Jesus and is slowly being established within man and the world
through a mysterious connection with him.
Indeed, after the
resurrection, the disciples preach the kingdom by proclaiming Jesus crucified
and risen from the dead. In Samaria, Philip
"preached good news about the kingdom
of God and the name of
Jesus Christ" (Acts 8:12). In Rome,
we find Paul "preaching the kingdom
of God and teaching about
the Lord Jesus Christ'' (Acts
28:31). The first Christians also proclaim "the kingdom of
Christ and of God" (Eph 5:5; cf. Rev
11:15; 12:10), or "the
kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ" (2
Pt 1:11). The preaching of the early Church was centered on the
proclamation of Jesus Christ, with whom the kingdom was identified. Now, as
then, there is a need to unite the proclamation of the kingdom of God
(the content of Jesus' own "kerygma") and the proclamation of
the Christ-event (the "kerygma" of the apostles). The two
proclamations are complementary; each throws light on the other.
The Kingdom in
Relation to Christ and the Church
17.
Nowadays the kingdom is much spoken of, but not always in a way consonant with
the thinking of the Church. In fact, there are ideas about salvation and
mission which can be called "anthropocentric" in the reductive sense
of the word, inasmuch as they are focused on man's earthly needs. In this view,
the kingdom tends to become something completely human and secularized; what
counts are programs and struggles for a liberation which is socio-economic,
political and even cultural, but within a horizon that is closed to the
transcendent. Without denying that on this level too there are values to be
promoted, such a notion nevertheless remains within the confines of a kingdom
of man, deprived of its authentic and profound dimensions. Such a view easily
translates into one more ideology of purely earthly progress. The kingdom of God, however, "is not of this
world...is not from the world" (Jn
18:36).
There are also conceptions
which deliberately emphasize the kingdom and which describe themselves as
"kingdom-centered." They stress the image of a Church which is not
concerned about herself, but which is totally concerned with bearing witness to
and serving the kingdom. It is a "Church for others" just as Christ
is the "man for others." The Church's task is described as though it
had to proceed in two directions: on the one hand promoting such "values
of the kingdom" as peace, justice, freedom, brotherhood, etc,, while on
the other hand fostering dialogue between peoples, cultures and religions, so
that through a mutual enrichment they might help the world to be renewed and to
journey ever closer toward the kingdom.
Together with positive
aspects, these conceptions often reveal negative aspects as well. First, they
are silent about Christ: the kingdom of which they speak is
"theocentrically" based, since, according to them, Christ cannot be
understood by those who lack Christian faith, whereas different peoples,
cultures and religions are capable of finding common ground in the one divine
reality, by whatever name it is called. For the same reason they put great
stress on the mystery of creation, which is reflected in the diversity of
cultures and beliefs, but they keep silent about the mystery of redemption.
Furthermore, the kingdom, as they understand it, ends up either leaving very
little room for the Church or undervaluing the Church in reaction to a presumed
"ecclesiocentrism" of the past, and because they consider the Church
herself only a sign, for that matter a sign not without ambiguity.
18. This
is not the kingdom of God as we know it from Revelation. The kingdom cannot be
detached either from Christ or from the Church.
As has already been said,
Christ not only proclaimed the kingdom, but in him the kingdom itself became
present and was fulfilled. This happened not only through his words and his
deeds: "Above all,...the kingdom is made manifest in the very person of
Christ, Son of God and Son of Man, who came 'to serve and to give his life as a
ransom for many' (Mk 10:45)."22 The kingdom of God is not a concept, a doctrine, or a
program subject to free interpretation, but it is before all else a person
with the face and name of Jesus of Nazareth, the image of the invisible
God.23 If the kingdom is separated from Jesus, it is no longer the
kingdom of God which he revealed. The result is a distortion of the meaning of
the kingdom, which runs the risk of being transformed into a purely human or
ideological goal, and a distortion of the identity of Christ, who no longer
appears as the Lord to whom everything must one day be subjected (cf. 1
Cor 15:27).
Likewise, one may not
separate the kingdom from the Church. It is true that the Church is not an end
unto herself, since she is ordered toward the kingdom of God of which she is
the seed, sign and instrument. Yet, while remaining distinct from Christ and
the kingdom, the Church is indissolubly united to both. Christ endowed the
Church, his body, with the fullness of the benefits and means of salvation. The
Holy Spirit dwells in her, enlivens her with his gifts and charisms,
sanctifies, guides and constantly renews her.24 The result is a unique
and special relationship which, while not excluding the action of Christ and
the Spirit outside the Church's visible boundaries, confers upon her a specific
and necessary role; hence the Church's special connection with the kingdom of
God and of Christ, which she has "the mission of announcing and
inaugurating among all peoples."25
19. It is
within this overall perspective that the reality of the kingdom is understood.
Certainly, the kingdom demands the promotion of human values, as well as those
which can properly be called "evangelical," since they are intimately
bound up with the "Good News." But this sort of promotion, which is
at the heart of the Church, must not be detached from or opposed to other
fundamental tasks, such as proclaiming Christ and his Gospel, and establishing
and building up communities which make present and active within mankind the
living image of the kingdom. One need not fear falling thereby into a form of
"ecclesiocentrism." Pope Paul VI, who affirmed the existence of
"a profound link between Christ, the Church and
evangelization,"26 also said that the Church "is not an end
unto herself, but rather is fervently concerned to be completely of Christ, in
Christ and for Christ, as well as completely of men, among men and for
men."27
The Church at the
Service of the Kingdom
20. The
Church is effectively and concretely at the service of the kingdom. This is
seen especially in her preaching, which is a call to conversion. Preaching
constitutes the Church's first and fundamental way of serving the coming of the
kingdom in individuals and in human society. Eschatological salvation begins
even now in newness of life in Christ: "To all who believed in him, who
believed in his name, he gave power to become children of God" (Jn 1:12).
The Church, then, serves
the kingdom by establishing communities and founding new particular churches,
and by guiding them to mature faith and charity in openness toward others, in
service to individuals and society, and in understanding and esteem for human
institutions.
The Church serves the
kingdom by spreading throughout the world the "gospel values" which
are an expression of the kingdom and which help people to accept God's plan. It
is true that the inchoate reality of the kingdom can also be found beyond the
confines of the Church among peoples everywhere, to the extent that they live
"gospel values" and are open to the working of the Spirit who
breathes when and where he wills (cf. Jn 3:8).
But it must immediately be added that this temporal dimension of the kingdom
remains incomplete unless it is related to the kingdom of Christ present in the
Church and straining towards eschatological fullness.28
The many dimensions of the
kingdom of God29 do not weaken the foundations and purposes of
missionary activity, but rather strengthen and extend them. The Church is the
sacrament of salvation for all mankind, and her activity is not limited only to
those who accept her message. She is a dynamic force in mankind's journey
toward the eschatological kingdom, and is the sign and promoter of gospel
values.30 The Church contributes to mankind's pilgrimage of conversion
to God's plan through her witness and through such activities as dialogue,
human promotion, commitment to justice and peace, education and the care of the
sick, and aid to the poor and to children. In carrying on these activities,
however, she never loses sight of the priority of the transcendent and
spiritual realities which are premises of eschatological salvation.
Finally, the Church serves
the kingdom by her intercession, since the kingdom by its very nature is God's
gift and work, as we are reminded by the gospel parables and by the prayer
which Jesus taught us. We must ask for the kingdom, welcome it and make it grow
within us; but we must also work together so that it will be welcomed and will
grow among all people, until the time when Christ "delivers the kingdom to
God the Father" and "God will be everything to everyone" (cf.
1 Cor 15:24, 28).
|