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).
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