Danus
Member
When I think of the KOG, I think of it's definition in its simplest form to be a spiritual domain where God is sovereign. This to me is the essence of a belief in God, in Christ, in salvation, the Christian life, and all related to the very embodiment of Christian spirituality, which for the Christian has no boundaries, and in fact does manifest it's reality in the physical world in the lives of those whom God has chosen.
So, I think this subject is more an issue with definition than anything else, with the problem being that some see the KOG as "Temporal" (relating to worldly as opposed to spiritual affairs; secular in essence), I think this is a huge mistake, because it attempts to make the KOG a legalistic collective conformity on mans terms.
God has never, and will never, meet with man on mans terms. If God reigns, then He is King, and if He is, then he is sovereignty so. His Kingdom is obvious both then, now and in the future, regardless of anyone's awareness of it. It encompasses all we see and know, or ever could.
And so, to me, much of the preached messages on the KOG that attempt to bring the temporal world into some sort of Godly conformity in line with the idea of Gods kingdom, have in fact not recognized it to begin with, but are never the less a part of it.
When Christ spoke of hell, money, salvation or repentance, he does not separate these things from the KOG, rather he delineates the KOG. All anyone can do is repeate what Christ said, or point it out. However to the OP point I say "yes". Jesus Christ spoke of the KOG more than anything else.
So, I think this subject is more an issue with definition than anything else, with the problem being that some see the KOG as "Temporal" (relating to worldly as opposed to spiritual affairs; secular in essence), I think this is a huge mistake, because it attempts to make the KOG a legalistic collective conformity on mans terms.
God has never, and will never, meet with man on mans terms. If God reigns, then He is King, and if He is, then he is sovereignty so. His Kingdom is obvious both then, now and in the future, regardless of anyone's awareness of it. It encompasses all we see and know, or ever could.
And so, to me, much of the preached messages on the KOG that attempt to bring the temporal world into some sort of Godly conformity in line with the idea of Gods kingdom, have in fact not recognized it to begin with, but are never the less a part of it.
When Christ spoke of hell, money, salvation or repentance, he does not separate these things from the KOG, rather he delineates the KOG. All anyone can do is repeate what Christ said, or point it out. However to the OP point I say "yes". Jesus Christ spoke of the KOG more than anything else.