Introduction
When Jesus stood before Pilate, He made one of the clearest statements about His mission and identity:This single sentence should settle many debates about the nature of Christ’s kingdom. Yet Christians continue to argue, divide, and even become hostile over the idea of a future earthly kingdom. Why does this happen? And what did Jesus actually teach?“My kingdom is not of this world. If My kingdom were of this world, My servants would fight.” — John 18:36
This lesson explores the biblical meaning of the kingdom, why confusion persists, and how Jesus redirects His followers away from earthly expectations and toward spiritual reality.
1. Jesus Declared the Nature of His Kingdom
Jesus did not simply say His kingdom was “not here yet.” He said it was not of this world — not earthly, not political, not national, not territorial.He explained the consequence of this truth:
- If His kingdom were earthly, His followers would fight.
- Because it is not earthly, His followers do not fight for it.
- No political takeover
- No earthly throne
- No military defense
- No national empire
- No visible kingdom you can point to
2. The Kingdom Is Present, Spiritual, and Internal
Jesus taught that the kingdom is already active:Paul reinforces this:“The kingdom of God does not come with observation… the kingdom of God is within you.” — Luke 17:20–21
- The kingdom is righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit (Romans 14:17)
- Believers are already transferred into Christ’s kingdom (Colossians 1:13)
- Flesh and blood cannot inherit it (1 Corinthians 15:50)
- Heavenly in origin
- Spiritual in nature
- Present in the believer
- Growing like leaven in the world
- Unseen by natural eyes
3. Why Christians Still Fight About a Future Earthly Kingdom
If Jesus was clear, why is the church confused? There are several reasons.A. Many Christians inherited a system, not a scripture
Most believers learned their eschatology from:- Denominations
- Pastors
- Movies
- Popular prophecy teachers
Once a system becomes tradition, people defend it emotionally.
B. People confuse “kingdom” with “government”
Jesus never promised:- A Christian nation
- A political takeover
- A throne in earthly Jerusalem
- A visible empire
C. An earthly kingdom feels more concrete
A spiritual kingdom requires:- Faith
- Surrender
- Transformation
- Humility
- Timelines
- Charts
- Predictions
- A sense of control
- “Our side wins”
D. The apostles themselves struggled with this at first
Even after the resurrection, the disciples asked:Jesus did not affirm their expectation. He redirected them:“Will You at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?” — Acts 1:6
He shifted them from political expectation to spiritual mission.“It is not for you to know…” — Acts 1:7 “You will receive power…” — Acts 1:8
E. A spiritual kingdom threatens man‑made systems
If the kingdom is:- Invisible
- Internal
- Heavenly
- Already present
- No denomination owns it
- No prophecy chart controls it
- No pastor can claim exclusive insight
- No political movement can hijack it
4. What Jesus Actually Taught About the Kingdom
Jesus consistently described the kingdom in ways that contradict earthly expectations.A. It is not political
“Not of this world” (John 18:36)B. It is not visible
“Does not come with observation” (Luke 17:20)C. It is internal
“Within you” (Luke 17:21)D. It is present
“If I cast out demons… the kingdom has come upon you” (Matthew 12:28)E. It grows quietly
Like:- Leaven in dough
- A mustard seed
- A hidden treasure
F. It is entered through new birth
“Unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom” (John 3:3)G. It is heavenly
“My kingdom is not from here” (John 18:36)Jesus never once described a future earthly government.
5. The Real Issue: Two Competing Kingdom Models
The debate in Christianity exists because there are two competing visions:A. The Earthly Kingdom Model
- Visible
- Political
- National
- Territorial
- Future
- Based on human expectations
B. The Kingdom Jesus Described
- Spiritual
- Present
- Internal
- Heavenly
- Transformational
- Unseen
The conflict in Christianity is not about Scripture — it is about which model people choose to believe.
6. Why This Matters
If believers misunderstand the kingdom, they will:- Fight over prophecy
- Argue about timelines
- Divide over interpretations
- Miss the kingdom that is already here
- Focus on earthly power instead of spiritual transformation
The kingdom is not about domination. It is about transformation.“The rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them… but it shall not be so among you.” — Matthew 20:25–26
7. A Call Back to Jesus’ Words
The solution to the debate is simple:Return to what Jesus actually said.
He never told His followers to:
- predict political events
- fight for a nation
- build an earthly kingdom
- wait for a visible empire
- preach the gospel
- make disciples
- love their enemies
- live by the Spirit
- seek the kingdom within
Conclusion
Christians fight about a coming kingdom because many are still expecting the very thing Jesus said His kingdom is not. The kingdom Jesus described is not political, not national, not territorial, and not earthly. It is spiritual, present, internal, and heavenly.When believers return to Jesus’ own teaching, the debate loses its power. The kingdom is not something we wait for — it is something we live in, walk in, and reveal through the life of Christ within us.


