What Is the Kingdom of God? 🌍 A Pastor Explains

Pastor Alan explains the gospel of the kingdom—Daniel 2, Jesus’ call to repentance and faith, and practical steps to live God’s reign in your life and community.

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Pastor Alan of Life Springs Christian Church unpacks one of Jesus’ central messages—the gospel of the kingdom—in a sermon delivered on May 4th. With a mix of Scripture, honest humor (yes, Star Wars jokes included), and pastoral urgency, he explains what the Kingdom of God is, why the world is broken, and how the kingdom breaks into our lives and communities. Below is a structured, easy-to-follow summary of his message along with the key Scriptures he used and practical takeaways for living out God’s reign today.

Outline

  • Introduction: Gospel of the Kingdom and the problem of evil
  • What a kingdom is and how God’s government differs
  • Daniel 2 and prophetic vision of the kingdom
  • Jesus’ core message: repentance, faith, and kingdom power
  • Kingdom life: not rules but transformation, relationships, and witness
  • Parables showing how the kingdom grows and spreads
  • Practical implications and a call to action

Introduction: The Gospel of the Kingdom

The center of Jesus’ ministry was the gospel of the kingdom: the good news that God’s sovereign rule is breaking into the world through Christ. Pastor Allan reminds us of Matthew 24:14—this gospel will be proclaimed to all nations—and presses the point that the kingdom is not abstract theology but a present, powerful reality that brings salvation, freedom, restoration, and transformation.

Why the World Is Broken (and Why That Matters)

We live in a fallen world. Fraud, broken marriages, abuse, sickness, and moral decay make it clear that things are not as they should be. Pastor Allan points to Genesis and Isaiah to explain the root: God made creation good, but sin introduced decay and death. The observation that “things should be different” implies there was an original order that has been disturbed—and God’s plan is restoration, not mere explanation.

Important framing

Pastor Allan uses a memorable turn of phrase: rather than saying “we can’t keep the law,” it’s often more accurate to say “we won’t.” That is, we are responsible for willful disobedience. Yet God’s response is grace—He gives the remedy through Christ, not merely human effort.

What Is a Kingdom?

At its core, a kingdom is a system of government with one sovereign king who sets the laws, values, and character of the realm. God’s government is unique: it governs by moral persuasion, reason, and relationship rather than by brute force or mere physical laws. Isaiah 1:18 captures the tone of God’s governance: “Come now, let us reason together.”

Human beings are made in God’s image and given will and responsibility. God’s plan is relational: He desires friendship with His people and invites them into a life that reflects His character—freedom, truth, righteousness, and love.

Daniel 2: The Prophetic Preview of God’s Kingdom

“As you looked, a stone was cut out by no human hand, and it struck the image on its feet of iron and clay… the stone that struck the image became a great mountain and filled the whole earth.” (Daniel 2:34–35)

Pastor Allan walks through Daniel’s interpretation of Nebuchadnezzar’s dream: successive earthly empires rise and fall (Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, Rome), but God’s kingdom—symbolized by a stone cut without human hands—will ultimately break all these and stand forever. Isaiah 9:6–7 reinforces that a child is born and “the government shall be upon his shoulder,” pointing to the messianic reign.

Jesus’ Core Message: The Kingdom Is Here

Jesus proclaimed the kingdom at hand (Mark 1:15). He demonstrated kingdom power through teaching, healing, liberation from demonic oppression, and raising the dead. When John the Baptist’s disciples asked whether Jesus was “the one,” his works—restoring sight, healing the lame, raising the dead—were the answer. Kingdom arrival means restoration to God’s intended order.

Repentance and Faith

Entry into the kingdom requires a response: repentance (turning from sin) and faith (trusting Jesus). Salvation is not self-made; it is a pardon applied by Christ’s sacrifice. As Titus reminds us, “the grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men”—that grace calls people to live differently now.

The Kingdom Isn’t a Checklist

Pastor Allan warns against reductionism—the tendency to reduce the kingdom to a set of rituals, formulas, or a single altar-call moment. While conversion is the beginning, the kingdom’s life is transformation: righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit. It shows up in restored marriages, healed bodies, people making restitution, and communities that love one another.

Jesus summed it up: love for one another marks his disciples. The kingdom is as much horizontal (how we treat others) as vertical (our relationship with God).

Parables: How the Kingdom Grows

Jesus used simple images to explain kingdom growth:

  • Mustard seed: A tiny seed that grows into a large tree—kingdom beginnings are small but expand dramatically.
  • Leaven: A little yeast works through a whole batch of dough—the kingdom infiltrates culture and transformed society from the inside out.
  • Sower and soils: Seeds fall on different soils with varying fruitfulness—our responsibility is to sow; God gives the increase.

Paul echoes this: “I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth.” The kingdom often grows secretly and mysteriously—God supplies the increase.

Practical Kingdom Living: Small Acts, Big Impact

Kingdom growth isn’t flashy; it’s often ordinary acts of faithful love. Pastor Allan gives everyday examples: returning a shopping cart, apologizing to your child, making restitution, showing honesty in the marketplace. These humble actions display the kingdom and prepare hearts for the gospel.

He also stresses community: the church is not a collection of individuals but an organism—an instrument by which God spreads the life of Christ. Personal conversion is the start; engagement in community and witness in every sphere of life—family, work, politics—are the ongoing mission.

Where Do We Go From Here?

The kingdom has come, but its fullness is still to be realized. Jesus will return, the last enemy death will be destroyed, and the completed kingdom will be handed to the Father. Meanwhile, our marching orders remain: go into all the world and preach the gospel of the kingdom, teaching obedience to Jesus’ commands.

Pastor Allan’s closing call is both pastoral and practical: be wise as serpents and harmless as doves; sow the seed; live out repentance and faith; and expect God to bring growth. God is rebuilding human flourishing through the gospel—our job is to participate, faithfully and faithfully.

Closing Prayer and Challenge

In his prayer, Pastor Allan asked God to use the church to restore families and communities, to make believers wise and compassionate, and to empower us to go out and make a visible difference. The invitation stands: participate in the kingdom work this week—reconcile where you can, sow where you’re called, and trust God for the increase.

Key Scriptures Mentioned

  • Matthew 4:23; Matthew 24:14
  • Daniel 2:31–44
  • Isaiah 9:6–7; Isaiah 1:18
  • Mark 1:15
  • Titus 2 (grace that brings salvation)
  • Parables: Mustard seed, Leaven, Sower (Gospel accounts)

Final Thought

The Kingdom of God is not a far-off political takeover or a religious checklist. It is God’s present, moral reign that restores hearts and communities through Jesus Christ. Start small—be faithful in ordinary acts of love—and trust God to build a kingdom that fills the earth.

Want to dive deeper?

Watch the full sermon from Life Springs Christian Church for the full message, Scripture references, and Pastor Allan’s pastoral stories and humor that bring these truths to life.

 

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