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Christianity & Culture—What’s the Right Balance?

Two extreme views of Christianity and culture are often bantered back and forth. The first seeks to undermine the importance of culture or politics, casting it aside with the notion that it does not pertain to or runs counter to the kingdom of God. The second view exalts some branch of culture or politics, seeking to use it as a means of ushering in the redemptive kingdom of God into culture as a whole.

“While Christians should desire civil government to promote justice, whatever justice it achieves is the justice of the common kingdom, not that of the redemptive kingdom proclaimed by Christ,” explains VanDrunen in Living in God’s Two Kingdoms. Christians in positions of political or cultural authority are called to work alongside non-believers in determining what is good for society as a whole, considering issues that are of concern to all. This is what Daniel and his three friends did as they participated in pagan Babylonian life. While they lived their lives faithfully for God, they knew how to work alongside their unbelieving neighbors to promote the good of the common kingdom. “Political and cultural activity is a common task, not a uniquely Christian task,” VanDrunen says.

Excerpts modified from chapter 7 of Living in God’s Two Kingdoms. Learn more here.

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October 12, 2010 | Posted in: Books,Kingdom of God,Social Issues | Author: Crossway Staff @ 10:08 am | 0 Comments »

Living in God’s Two Kingdoms – A Vision of Christianity and Culture

kingdoms-of-godChristianity’s role in culture has been debated since the beginning of the faith. As Christians we wrestle with how our faith should impact our lives—whether in the careers we pursue, the entertainment we choose, or the political views we hold.

Recent books and scholars have argued for a framework of cultural redemption, suggesting that it is the job of Christians to redeem cultural activity and institutions to bring about the Kingdom of God. In his new book Living in God’s Two Kingdoms, David VanDrunen suggests an alternative “two kingdoms” model for cultural engagement.

His model affirms that:

  • Sin corrupts all areas of life
  • Christians should be active in all areas of life
  • All lawful vocations are honorable
  • Christians are accountable to God in all areas of life

But according to VanDrunen, the redemptive approach to culture needs to be evaluated carefully. “In short, Scripture requires a high view of creation and of cultural activity, but it also requires a distinction between the holy things of Christ’s heavenly kingdom and the common things of the present world,” VanDrunen explains.

Throughout the book, VanDrunen examines the two-kingdoms doctrine in the context of human culture in the biblical story, including the two separate covenants God made with Noah and Abraham respectively.

  • Covenant with Noah: God enters covenantal relationship with the entire human race, promising to preserve cultural activities such as procreation and justice.
  • Covenant with Abraham: God enters covenantal relationship with a chosen people, bestowing them with salvation and distinguishing them from the rest of humanity.

God’s people are called to live in two kingdoms simultaneously. Under the first, we are called to partaliving-in-gods-two-kingdomske in various cultural activities and pursuits with our non-Christian neighbors. Under the second, we are called to live within the covenant of salvation, recognizing that we are a chosen people and should live distinctly different.

VanDrunen’s book explores how Christians are called to live in this tricky tension and balance our lives accordingly.

Learn more or view an excerpt from Living in God’s Two Kingdoms: A Biblical Vision of Christianity and Culture.

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October 8, 2010 | Posted in: Books,Kingdom of God,Social Issues | Author: James Kinnard @ 8:28 am | 0 Comments »

The Problem of “Kingdom” in Our Marriages

what-did-you-expect1
We’re kicking off a week of practical marriage advice from a handful of our Crossway authors. In What Did You Expect?,  Paul David Tripp asks readers to consider the problem of “kingdom” in our marriages:

We are drawn to order, predictability, comfort, ease, pleasure, appreciation, fun, and personal happiness. We don’t like difficulty of any kind. There are many of us who would rather have an easy life than a God-honoring one. So before we ever battle with one another, we are actually battling the Lord.

Think of the sturdiness of your allegiance to your own kingdom purposes. Think about how little of your anger over the last month had anything whatsoever to do with the kingdom of God. Your anger seldom comes out of a zeal for the plans, purposes, values, and calling of the kingdom of God.

When you are hurt, angry, or disappointed with your husband or wife, it is not because he or she has broken the laws of God’s kingdom, and it really concerns you. No, you are most often angry because your spouse has broken the laws of your kingdom. Your spouse is in the way of what you want, and it mobilizes you to do or say something that will rein your spouse back into service of your wants, needs, and feelings.

But God’s grace purposes to expose and free you from your bondage to you. So he places you in a comprehensive relationship with another flawed person, and he places that relationship right in the middle of a very broken world. To add to this, he designs circumstances for you that you would have never designed for yourself. All this is meant to bring you to the end of yourself, because that is where true righteousness begins.

So, as you read, I would ask you these questions:

  • Whose kingdom shapes your marriage?
  • Whose kingdom defines your dream?
  • What really makes you happy?
  • What is it that you want so badly for your marriage to be?
  • Could it perhaps be that what you thought was love was not really kingdom-of-God, other-centered, other-service love?
  • Could it be that what you actually wanted was for that other person to love you as much as you do?
  • Could it be that your anger reveals how zealously committed you are to the purposes of your own kingdom?
  • Could it be that the troubles you face in your marriage, both big and small, are not so much hassles as they are opportunities?
  • Could it be that just when you thought God had abandoned you and your marriage that he is really very near, giving you the best gift ever—transforming grace?

This grace rescues you from the one thing that you cannot rescue yourself from—you. Reconciling your marriage begins when you begin to reconcile with God. It begins when you begin to pray this radical prayer: “Your kingdom come, your will be done, right here, right now in this marriage as it is in heaven.” Good things happen as the result of that prayer!

Excerpt modified from What Did You Expect? Learn more about What Did You Expect: Redeeming the Realities of Marriage by Paul David Tripp.

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September 28, 2010 | Posted in: Books,Kingdom of God,Marriage | Author: Crossway Staff @ 1:30 pm | 1 Comment »

The Kingdom of God on Trackback Thursday

9781433513404This week’s trackback Thursday features The Kingdom of God by Martyn Lloyd-Jones (released in trade paperback this month).

A reminder of how Trackback Thursday works: Simply link to the blog post from your blog, leave a comment on Crossway’s Facebook Page, or re-tweet Trackback Thursday on Twitter @Crosswaybooks. Winners are picked on Friday morning.

A Kingdom Which Cannot Be Moved
(Excerpt from The Kingdom of God, pp 219).

And what in the next world? Well it is glory! It is to be with Him, it is to be like Him, it is to reign with Christ as kings and priests. “Know ye not,” says Paul to the Corinthians, “that the saints shall judge the world . . . Know ye not that we shall judge angels?” (1 Cor 6:2-3). Christian people do you realise these things? Nobody else realises them. Men and women are in the world today because they know nothing about the glory that is coming. City life! “What a thrill I get out of it!” the say, “the kicks, the enjoyment!” But they will soon by lying on their deathbed and they will not be able to enjoy it; they will be leaving it, and they will have nothing, it will all be shaken, and they will be shaken. And here is the glory that they have refused. That is why men and women are not Christians; they know nothing about this glory; being with God and being with Christ and reigning with Him, and triumphing with Him and enjoying Him to all eternity. The blessings of the Kingdom!

And then, there is the safety and the security of the kingdom: “We receiving a kingdom which cannot be moved.” Everything else can be removed; there is nothing stable in this world. People used to think the British Empire was stable—how much of it is left? Those everlasting mountains—stable? Of course they are not. They are moving the whole time and an earthquake can wreck them, a bomb can smash them. Nothing is stable. The whole world will be convulsed in a final cataclysm, nothing will remain. But here is a kingdom which cannot be moved.

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January 28, 2010 | Posted in: Books,Kingdom of God | Author: Crossway Staff @ 8:40 am | (4) Comments »