The Kingdom is “not of this world,” and neither is its warfare. Jews had
always believed that God confronted spiritual opposition in carrying out his
will on earth. In the Old Testament, these evil forces were usually depicted as
cosmic monsters and hostile waters that threatened the earth. For a variety of
reasons this belief in spiritual warfare intensified significantly in the two
centuries leading up to Christ.
This intensified understanding of evil and this new view of history is
commonly referred to as the “apocalyptic” worldview. The authority ascribed to
Satan in the New Testament, the frequent depictions of illness and deformities
as demonically caused, and the general characterization of this present epoch as
evil and as approaching its end all reflect this worldview.
We find references to Satan, rulers, principalities, powers and authorities,
along with dominions, cosmic powers, thrones, spiritual forces, elemental
spirits of the universe, gods, and a number of other spiritual entities. For
short, I’ll just call them “Powers.”
Understanding this worldview helps us see that Jesus’ radically
countercultural ministry wasn’t first and foremost a form of social and
political protest, though it certainly was that. It was, rather, most
fundamentally a form of spiritual warfare.
This apocalyptic context makes it clear that Jesus’ deliverance ministry
wasn’t the only way Jesus confronted evil. Every aspect of the Kingdom of God
Jesus manifested revolted against a corresponding aspect of the kingdom of the
Powers. In Jesus, and in the movement he came to establish, the long expected
apocalyptic battle between God and the Powers was—and still is—being waged.
When Jesus revolted against the oppressive religion of his day, for example,
he was engaging in warfare against the Powers that use religion to oppress
people. So too, when Jesus refused to live in accordance with his culture’s
assumptions, laws, and social taboos regarding nationalism, race gender, class,
and wealth, he wasn’t just waging a social protest; he was engaging in warfare
against the Powers that oppress people.
Paul reflects this point when he informs us that “our struggle is not against
flesh and blood, but
against rulers, against the authorities, against the powers
of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly
realms.” From a Kingdom perspective, if it’s got “flesh and blood”—if it’s
human—it’s not our enemy. To the contrary, if it’s got “flesh and blood” it’s
someone we’re commanded to love and thus someone we’re to be fighting for—even
if they regard us as their enemy.
The primary way we wage war on behalf of others, including our enemies, is by
imitating Jesus and refusing to buy into any aspect of the Powers’ oppressive
regime—including the universal tendency to make other people our enemies.
Whereas earthly wars are fought with pride, strength, and violence, the Kingdom
war is fought in humility, weakness and love. Any aspect of our own life, our
society, or our global community that is under the Power’s influence and is
inconsistent with the loving reign of God as revealed in Jesus is something that
we are called to revolt against.
—Adapted from Myth of a Christian Religion, pages 30-32
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