P1858:4, 170:1.2
1. A present reality; and as
P1858:5, 170:1.3
2. A future hope -- when the kingdom would be realized in fullness upon the
appearance of the Messiah. This is the kingdom concept which John the Baptist
taught.
P1858:6, 170:1.4
From the very first Jesus and the apostles taught both of these concepts.
There were two other ideas of the kingdom which should be borne in mind:
P1858:7, 170:1.5
3. The later Jewish concept of a world-wide and transcendental kingdom of
supernatural origin and miraculous inauguration.
P1858:8, 170:1.6
4. The Persian teachings portraying the establishment of a divine kingdom
as the achievement of the triumph of good over evil at the end of the world.
P1858:9, 170:1.7
Just before the advent of Jesus on earth, the Jews combined and confused all
of these ideas of the kingdom into their apocalyptic concept of the Messiah's
coming to establish the age of the Jewish triumph, the eternal age of God's
supreme rule on earth, the new world, the era in which all mankind would worship
Yahweh. In choosing to utilize this concept of the kingdom of heaven, Jesus
elected to appropriate the most vital and culminating heritage of both the
Jewish and Persian religions.
P1859:1, 170:1.8
The kingdom of heaven, as it has been understood and misunderstood down through
the centuries of the Christian era, embraced four distinct groups of ideas: