The prophet Isaiah foretold the first advent of Christ with the words, âFor unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given; and the government will be upon His shoulderâ (Isaiah 9:6).
Government?
Whatâs government got to do with it? I thought Jesus was born of the virgin Mary to save me from my sins, to forgive me for my moral wrongs, to die for me so I donât have to die eternally, to get me out of hell and into heaven?
True enough, but thatâs not the whole truth. Itâs not even the main point but rather a secondary effect of a larger messianic vision for the world beating in the breast of the Almighty. Peter called Godâs big plan the ârestoration of all thingsâ (Acts 3:21). And according to Isaiah, one of the things included in âall thingsâ is âgovernment.â
A Dangerous Baby
It should not be surprising, then, to discover that Jesus was a political revolutionary. This is the part of the âChristmas storyâ that is rarely told. We like the harmless, little Babe wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger, while often overlooking the fact that there was a bounty on the Babeâs head (Matthew 2:3, 16). This apparently harmless Newborn was understood to be dangerous to the prevailing world order. The powers that then wereâboth demonic and humanâwanted Him dead (Revelation 12:4). Rumor had it, according to some ancient Jewish prophecies, that this Baby was a long awaited King, and, as such, He would pose a threat to the existing political establishment (Psalm 2; 89).
This apparently harmless newborn was understood to be dangerous to the prevailing world order.
The prophet Daniel was even more explicit than Isaiah. He foretold the rise and fall of a series of successive empires. All of them are revealed to be inherently unsustainable by virtue of the morally bankrupt principles by which they operate. Babylon would be conquered by Medo-Persia, followed by Greece, then Rome, each kingdom conquering and ruling by the same methods: force, deception, greed, oppression, and violence. All of these empires were the sameâsuperficially different yet the same in substance. But then Daniel saw something truly and radically different: âI was watching in the night visions, and behold, One like the Son of Man,â and to Him was given âan everlasting dominion,â a âkingdomâ that âshall not be destroyedâ (Daniel 7:13-14). Whereas all the other kingdoms would rise and fall, this one would be eternal. But why? Would it just be more powerful than the others? If the previous kingdoms were forceful and violent, would this one simply be more forceful and violent?
It is right here that we discover an extraordinary feature of the biblical story, and it is this: the kingdom of Christ is eternal precisely because He operates by a fundamentally different kind of power than all the others.
Two Warring Principles
The following paragraph by Ellen White is full of explanatory power for making sense of whatâs going on in our world:
âThe student should learn to view the word [the Bible] as a whole, and to see the relation of its parts. He should gain a knowledge of its grand central theme, of Godâs original purpose for the world, of the rise of the great controversy, and of the work of redemption. He should understand the nature of the two principles that are contending for supremacy, and should learn to trace their working through the records of history and prophecy, to the great consummation. He should see how this controversy enters into every phase of human experience; how in every act of life he himself reveals the one or the other of the two antagonistic motivesâ (Ellen White, Education, p. 190, words in brackets supplied).
âŠthe principles by which evil regimes operate are inherently self-destructive.
At first glance, world events appear countless and complex, confusing and convoluted. But when we pause and zoom outâallowing Scripture to sharpen our visionâwe see that there are really only âtwo principles that are contending for supremacyâ arising from only âtwo antagonistic motives.â
On the one hand, there is the principle of love, with the various attitudes and actions that emerge from it: honesty, integrity, generosity, courage, kindness, gentleness, humility, forgiveness, peace, faithfulness, and the like.
On the other hand is the antagonistic principle of sin, or selfishness, with its various attitudes and actions: deceit, division, disrespect, greed, cowardliness, pride, hate, retribution, violence, unfaithfulness, and all else that strives for domination over others.
Babylon, Persia, Greece, and Rome all rose to power by political maneuvers that run contrary to the love of God. Therefore, all of these kingdoms were structurally defective and inevitably self-defeating. Love alone is eternally sustainable whereas the principles by which evil regimes operate are inherently self-destructive.
One Man Against the Whole World
Jesus was born to our world when Rome was the dominant superpower. Caesar Augustus, the first absolute monarch of Rome, had come to power about 27 years before the birth of Christ. He died in AD 14, when Jesus was a teenager growing up in Nazareth. Caesar Augustus was succeeded by his step-son, Tiberius Caesar Augustus, who reigned during the public ministry and crucifixion of Christ (Luke 3:1-3). Appointed by the authority of Tiberius, Pontius Pilate was the governor of Judea, who presided over the trial and crucifixion of Christ (Matthew 27).
Here was one Man, the covenant Son of God, up against the world epitomized in the Roman empire. Which is to say, here was the embodiment of love up against the paragon of our worldâs political power structures.
âThen Pilate entered the Praetorium again, called Jesus, and said to Him, âAre You the King of the Jews?ââ (John 18:33). Pilate wants to know if Jesus has a political agenda. The answer Jesus gives contains the seeds of thought that will shake the foundations of the whole world:
âMy kingdom is not of this world. If My kingdom were of this world, My servants would fight, so that I should not be delivered to the Jews; but now My kingdom is not from hereâ (John 18:36).
At least three things are evident here:
First, yes, Jesus is a king and He does have a kingdom.
But, secondly, His kingdom is fundamentally different than any governmental system we fallen humans have ever created. His kingdom does not operate by the principles âof this world.â
Jesus left no room for guessing about His political agenda.
And, thirdly, what makes His kingdom different from all other governing systems is that it is fundamentally non-violent. His servants do not âfightâ to establish His kingdom.
âPilate therefore said to Him, âAre You a king then?â Jesus answered, âYou say rightly that I am a king. For this cause I was born, and for this cause I have come into the world, that I should bear witness to the truth. Everyone who is of the truth hears My voiceââ (John 18:37).
Jesus left no room for guessing about His political agenda. He came to our world to overthrow the entire system of earthly power dynamics and to install a radically different kind of relational system based on âthe truth.â And âthe truthâ of which He speaks is none other than the non-coercive love of God, which He had earlier explained would lead Him to the cross (John 12:23-32). He essentially says to Pilate, Do whatever you want to Me, but I will not fight you or Rome or the corrupt Jewish leaders with the same principles by which you all operate, and yet, I will win.
As the ultimate outworking of the principle of sin, Jesus was then crucified by a union of church and state. The politically-motivated power players of the state and the politically-motivated power players of the religious system came together to crucify âthe truthâ of Godâs love on display in Christ. Let that sink deep into your theological brain, because once you understand this single core feature of the biblical story, you are prepared to see current events as they really are and stand on vantage ground in our turbulent political climate.
A Politic of Love
We live in times of extreme political intensity. All of us are under pressure to identify with one political party against the others. Deceptive political agendas and hate-driven ideologies are being urged upon us. Politicians are clamoring for our support as they lie, steal, and cheat with such shocking displays of corruption that we sometimes find it difficult to believe itâs all actually happening.
And yet, there is a superior alternative. In Jesus, we witness a politic of love so beautiful and powerful that it has, in principle, âovercome the worldâ (John 16:33). The Christianity of Christ transcends, bypasses, befuddles, and supersedes all of our liberal and conservative political categories. Jesus defies our efforts to politicize Him because He has His own distinct political category, which He called âthe kingdom of God.â
âŠwe must deliberately resist the temptation to give ourselves over to the politics of division and hate that permeate our times.
As followers of Jesus, we must deliberately resist the temptation to give ourselves over to the politics of division and hate that permeate our times. We must stay on task with the proclamation of âthe gospel of the kingdomâ of Christ, into which all are invited. Ours is a mission that transcends all political ideologies.
We are not with any political party.
We are with Jesus.
Our loyalties are with the Babe born of the virgin Mary. We subscribe to the âgovernmentâ that rests upon âHis shoulderââa government that operates by truth and love, as opposed to deception and violence. Our hearts belong to the one rightful King of the world, the Christ Child, of whom the angels sang, âGlory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, goodwill toward men!â (Luke 2:14).
Merry Christmas!
Ty Gibson
Ty is a speaker/director of Light Bearers. A passionate communicator with a message that opens minds and moves hearts, Ty teaches on a variety of topics, emphasizing Godâs unfailing love as the central theme of the Bible. Ty and his wife Sue have three adult children and two grandsons.