Posts tagged #history

The Kingdom Strikes Back

By Ralph D. Winter

Editor's Note: Perhaps one of Ralph Winter's most popular and well-loved essays is entitled, "The Kingdom Strikes Back." It is a centerpiece chapter in the Perspectives on the World Christian Movement course reader. Below, we've excerpted a portion of that essay that to us highlights the rationale for the existence of the Roberta Winter Institute. Enjoy.

…the first eleven chapters of Genesis constitute a scary “introduction” to the entire problem of evil, indeed, to the plot of the entire Bible. Those few pages describe three things: 1) a glorious and “good” original creator; 2) the entrance of a rebellious and destructive evil—superhuman, demonic being—resulting in 3) a humanity caught up in that rebellion and brought under the power of that evil being.

Don’t ever think that the whole remainder of the Bible is simply a bundle of divergent, unrelated stories as taught in Sunday School. Rather, the Bible consists of a single drama: the entrance of the Kingdom, the power and the glory of the living God in this enemy-occupied territory. From Genesis 12 to the end of the Bible, and indeed until the end of time, there unfolds the single, coherent drama of “the Kingdom strikes back.” This would make a good title for the Bible itself were it to be printed in modern dress (with Gen 1-11 as the introduction to the whole Bible). In this unfolding drama we see the gradual but irresistible power of God reconquering and redeeming His fallen creation through the giving of His own Son at the very center of the 4000-year period ending in 2000 BC. This is tersely summed up: “The Son of God appeared for this purpose, that He might destroy the works of the devil” (1 Jn 3:6).

This counterattack against the Evil One clearly does not await the appearance of the good Person in the center of the story. Indeed, there would seem to be five identifiable epochs of advance prior to the appearance of Christ as well as five after that event. The purpose of this chapter is mainly to describe the five epochs after Christ. However, in order for those later epochs to be seen as part of a single ten-epoch 4,000-year unfolding story, we will note a few clues about the first five epochs.

The theme that links all ten epochs is the grace of God intervening in a “world which lies in the power of the Evil One” (1 Jn 5:19), contesting an enemy who temporarily is “the god of this world” (2 Cor 4:4) so that the nations will praise God’s name. His plan for doing this is to reach all peoples by conferring an unusual “blessing” on Abraham and Abraham’s children-by-faith, even as we pray “Thy Kingdom come.” By contrast, the Evil One’s plan is to bring reproach on the Name of God. The Evil One stirs up hate, distorts even DNA sequences, perhaps authors suffering and all destruction of God’s good creation. Satan’s devices may very well include devising virulent germs in order to tear down confidence in God’s loving character.

Therefore this “blessing” is a key concept. The English word blessing is not an ideal translation. We see the word in use where Isaac confers his “blessing” on Jacob and not on Esau. It was not “blessings” but “a blessing,” the conferral of a family name, responsibility, obligation, as well as privilege. It is not something you can receive or get like a box of chocolates you can run off with and eat by yourself in a cave, or a new personal power you can show off like rippling muscles. It is something you become in a permanent relationship and fellowship with your Father in Heaven. It returns “families,” that is, nations to His household, to the Kingdom of God, so that the nations “will declare His glory.” The nations are being prevented from declaring God’s glory by the scarcity of evidence of God’s ability to cope with evil. If the Son of God appeared to destroy the works of the Devil, then what are the Son of God’s followers and “joint heirs” supposed to do to bring honor to His Name?

The “blessing” of God is in effect conditioned upon its being shared with other nations, since those who yield to and receive God’s blessing are, like Abraham, those of faith who subject themselves to God’s will, become part of His Kingdom, and represent the extension of His rule, His power, His authority within all other peoples.

Photo Credit: Dan Pearce/Flickr

Ralph D. Winter (12/8/24 – 5/20/09) was
an American missiologist and missionary
who founded the Roberta Winter Institute.

Posted on December 7, 2016 and filed under Blog, Fourth 30.

Kingdom Mission So Far, in 500 Words

By Daniel Durrance

Here’s a summary of the RWI’s take on history and mission from a Kingdom perspective, in 500 words. It’s a bit of a squeeze, needless to say, so please forgive the dryness and sweeping statements! See our other posts and essays for more nuance and depth. [1]

Our physical and spiritual universe arose ex nihilo an extremely long time ago, created by God for good purposes. God has revealed that human history is but one part of a longer conflict between him and a created but fallen Satan. Humans have been instructed to steward ourselves, our communities, and the corners of creation that we inhabit, pushing back on evil wherever possible, sustained and empowered by God. Satan has been allowed some level of temporary spiritual and physical authority over at least this planet, and our salvific pushback (individual and corporate) is to be likewise both spiritual and physical. Spiritual responses include repentance and prayer; physical responses include biological and environmental care.

Humanity started in what the Bible terms the Garden of Eden, in—from what we can tell—an already war-torn Earth, physically and spiritually manipulated by Satan. Satan soon likewise attacked humanity with the aim of alienating us from God and distorting our biology. God, through general and special revelations, is constantly working to turn humanity back to him. To this end, he chose to create and sustain the people of ancient Israel, instructing them from the outset to be a blessing to all nations, bearers and enactors of the good news of the Kingdom. His people mostly failed in this responsibility, seeing their relationship with God as something to be contained and manipulated rather than graciously and intentionally shared. Jesus Christ lived the perfect human life, proclaiming the Kingdom through his words and deeds, and then giving his life to and for his enemies. After his resurrection, in reiteration of the blessing mandate, he commissioned his followers to likewise proclaim the Kingdom in word and deed ”to the whole creation.”

The Kingdom has expanded immensely in the two millennia since, as evidenced by the 'grafting in' of scores of peoples, the transformations of cultures (e.g., away from violence), and a deeper understanding of God. These developments have come in temporal and geographical waves, with transformed nations and individuals tending to follow in the self-centered footsteps of the early Israelites, often with catastrophic consequences for themselves and others (kingdom building vs Kingdom building). God has been at missional work despite our misguided intentions, working good out of dire situations, miracles out of evils. 

Recent centuries give rise to much hope. The Catholic and Protestant mission movements have been particularly fruitful Kingdom ventures, with the peace and safety they have helped foster (albeit in the context of terrible failures, past and present) laying the soil for rapid advances in all areas of human knowledge, in turn securing the possibility of a safer and more just Earth.

Humanity’s increasing understanding of physical, biological and social science also makes possible the discernment of new missional opportunities – for example in the fields of health and disease: Kingdom advancement at the cellular level.


[1] For what it’s worth, I personally subscribe to theistic evolution and do not believe in a six-day creation. Should the Satan talk sound overboard to you, please give these two pieces a read for some context. Evil is for sure an overused word, and we don’t use it lightly. 

Daniel Durrance was born in the United States and raised in Great Britain where he studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh. He has worked for Christian worldview organizations and is currently raising funds and awareness for pediatric palliative care work in Swaziland.

Posted on February 11, 2015 and filed under Blog, Third 30.