When Will the Kingdom of God Come?
More than six centuries before Jesus was born, God revealed to a pagan king one of the greatest secrets in human history. The king was Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon. He was the most powerful man on earth at the time. Nations trembled before him. Armies marched at his command. Cities fell before his power. To human eyes, Babylon looked invincible. Yet one night, God interrupted the king’s sleep with a dream. It was not an ordinary dream. It was a revelation of the future. The dream troubled Nebuchadnezzar because he sensed it carried tremendous significance. He knew it was a message from a higher power, but he could not understand it. Then God raised up Daniel to reveal both the dream and its interpretation. What Daniel told the king was astonishing. God was showing Nebuchadnezzar where history was headed. The dream was not primarily about Babylon. It was not even primarily about the empires that would follow Babylon. It was ultimately about the Kingdom of God. Daniel explained that the great image in the dream represented a succession of world empires. Babylon would be succeeded by other kingdoms. Those kingdoms would rise, flourish, and eventually fall. Human power would pass from one empire to another until history reached its appointed destination. Then Daniel uttered something very remarkable: “The great God has made known to the king what shall come to pass hereafter.” God was revealing to Nebuchadnezzar when His Kingdom would arrive. Not the exact year. Not the exact century. But the exact point in the prophetic sequence. The kingdom would come after the Gentile world powers had run their course. It would come during the final phase of the fourth kingdom, represented by the feet and toes of the image. Nebuchadnezzar could not know how many centuries separated Babylon from that climactic moment. But he knew where history was going. History was moving toward the arrival of God’s everlasting Kingdom. Why Reveal This to Nebuchadnezzar? At first glance, it seems strange that God would reveal such a profound mystery to a pagan king. Why not reveal it to a priest? Why not reveal it to a prophet? Why reveal it to the ruler of Babylon? I think it’s because God wanted the entire world to know something. The Most High rules over the kingdoms of men. Babylon appeared supreme. Nebuchadnezzar seemed untouchable. But God was showing him that even the greatest empire on earth was merely the first chapter in a larger story. Babylon would pass away. So would every empire that followed. The mighty image appeared strong and glorious, but it was destined to collapse. Only the Kingdom of God would endure forever. The dream was a divine announcement that human history is not random. Empires do not determine the future; only God does. Kings do not write the final chapter; only God does. History is moving toward a destination already determined by heaven. Therefore, it is only wise to align yourself with what God is doing. The Kingdom Everyone Was Waiting For As generations passed, those who studied Daniel’s prophecy could see where history was heading. God had revealed that the kingdoms of men would not last forever. Babylon would rise and fall. Other empires would follow. But beyond them all stood a coming kingdom established not by human strength but by God Himself. Daniel’s vision of the stone cut without human hands captured the imagination of believers for centuries. They looked forward to the day when God would intervene decisively in human affairs, shatter the powers of this world, judge the nations, and establish His righteous rule over all the earth. The expectation seemed straightforward. The Kingdom of God would arrive with unmistakable power. The stone would strike the image. The empires of men would collapse. Evil would be judged, God’s enemies defeated, and His reign openly displayed before all nations. For generations, God’s people waited for this dramatic moment when heaven would break into history and bring the long story of human rebellion to its end. They expected a visible triumph, a cataclysmic act of divine intervention that no one could miss. Yet when the promised King finally appeared, almost everything unfolded in a way no one expected. The Kingdom Arrived Ahead of Schedule The stone that was destined to crush the kingdoms of the world did not arrive with armies, political power, or catastrophic judgment. The Kingdom arrived quietly, almost unnoticed, through the ministry of Jesus. While many were looking for the final manifestation of the Kingdom, they failed to recognize that the Kingdom itself had already entered history in its hidden form. The King had arrived ahead of schedule. He was born in a manger and raised in an obscure village. He was followed by fishermen, tax collectors, and ordinary people. Nothing about His arrival looked like the dramatic fulfillment many expected. Yet Jesus began proclaiming an astonishing message: “The kingdom of God has come near” (Mark 1:15). How could this be? Rome still ruled. The nations were not judged. The image still stood. The stone had not visibly shattered the kingdoms of the world. And yet Jesus insisted that the Kingdom had arrived. This is what He called the mystery of the Kingdom. The mystery was how the Kingdom of God would come. It was a truth hidden in ages past but now being revealed. Jesus specifically used parables to explain this mystery to his disciples, as recorded in the Gospels. Through the parable of the mustard seed, Jesus taught that the Kingdom would start small and seemingly insignificant, yet would grow into something great and far-reaching (Matthew 13:31–32). Through the parable of the yeast, He showed that the Kingdom would work quietly and invisibly, transforming lives from the inside out until its influence spread throughout the whole lump of dough (Matthew 13:33). These parables revealed a dimension of God’s Kingdom that many had not anticipated. Jesus stated that this secret is given to his followers but remains hidden from those who
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