Servants of the Left-Handed Kingdom or…Why Doesn’t God Do Something?

By Neil Earle

On one level world news is looking more discouraging all the time and violence is becoming a hallmark.

We hardly have time to send aid to victims of Hurricane Harvey when Hurricane Irma comes barreling toward Florida. North Korea’s testing of ICBMs revives memories of the dark days of the Cold War with builders in Japan scrambling to construct fall-out shelters, a trend that startles people my age remembering the grim days of 1961-62.

And ISIS still lurks.

With news pictures of Harvey pummeling the U.S. South Coast the thought came to me about how some people appear to be justified in asking: Where is God? What is he doing? We’ve prayed and prayed but people still lost everything. What is going on here?

It’s time for some much-needed perspective on all this.

Where is the Deliverer?

It’s good at such times to remember that Jesus’ day was also full of atrocities and tensions. In Luke 13 Jesus cites two examples. A tower had fallen on people in Siloam killing many and the Roman governor had executed worshippers in the very temple precincts (Luke 13:1-5).

Remember, the Jewish people of Jesus’ day were expecting a great Deliverer to come from Bethlehem – the Messiah. They were chafing under the oppressive heel of Roman rule. One of Jesus’ disciples was a former Zealot named Simon. The Zealots were sworn terrorists who had vowed to wreak whatever havoc they could upon Roman officials and their puppets, the Herods.

Though few seem to notice, the Gospels are not always written with a benign Sunday School halo around them. Christ’s message of the Kingdom of God was issued against a backdrop of explosive political and social tension. For example, Jesus’ challenging statement in the Sermon on the Mount s about carrying someone’s baggage two miles if they forced you to do it was a comment on a very real situation whereby Roman soldiers often pulled out a sword to forcibly conscript Jewish peasants to carry their gear.

So when Jesus showed up preaching the kingdom of God it must have seemed at first like a cry of relief in the ears of his hearers. His disciples may have passed on the stories about Jesus’ birth, how he had been born in Bethlehem as the prophecies had called for, how a heavenly choir had appeared to shepherds at his birth and how wise men had come from far away bringing gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh saluting a young baby as the King of the Jews.

At Jesus’ birth God moved heaven and earth to influence the mighty Roman emperor to arrange a census so that Jesus would not only be born in Bethlehem but worshipped by Gentile kings at his birth.

Now there was might, there was a display of political power and control of natural phenomenon such as Jesus’ audiences could relate to. Then there were the miracles, the well-attested healings that emanated from his circle. Surely, with all this the Kingdom was already here and more was to come. Right?

Right-Handed Power: The Romans, like most despots across history, were masters of cruel oppression.

Well, only in part. Jesus early showed he had no taste for the violent overthrow of the constituted authorities – he paid taxes, made friends with Roman officers and one of his disciples had been a government tax collector. What happened to the Kingdom Jesus had begun proclaiming and of which he was indisputably King?

We can ask the same question today. What on earth is God doing? If the Messiah has come where is the power to end the senseless evil in this world? A few years ago a book came out titled “The Upside Down Kingdom” about how the Kingdom Jesus Christ brought was so different than what everyone was looking for in the First Century…and ever since.

Martin Luther called it “the left-handed kingdom,” a kingdom so unlike the governments and power structures of this world that even Jesus’ friend John the Baptizer was temporarily confused.

Left-Handed Power?

The very fact that the Christ child was born in a fairly “small potatoes” town such as Bethlehem and not mighty Jerusalem five miles north should have made people think. It should make us think. These small details paint a picture of a Kingdom coming in weakness, coming in great humility, coming in great insignificance to most of the rich and famous of the First Century. Which is why the title “The Upside Down Kingdom” is such a good one.

Anglican minister Robert Capon in his writing on the parables has argued that Jesus consistently represented “left-handed power” as opposed to the right handed power of the despots and rulers of his era. This included King Herod who had all the boy babies killed in Bethlehem to stamp out this rumor of “King of the Jews.” It meant the Romans with their 6000 crosses erected on the road to Rome after one major slave revolt, as we see in the movie “Spartacus.”

Grisly, sickening stuff. The bad news of the world today, mired in atrocity then as now. Where is the Kingdom amidst of all this?

Left-handed power, says Capon, is “a paradoxical power, power that looks for all the world like weakness, non-intervention that seems indistinguishable from calloused apathy.” It’s an intriguing phrase, like “Upside Down Kingdom.” It’s all about the way Jesus worked and taught – a public program hinging on cups of cold water given in his name, drafting boys with loaves and fishes to feed thousands, promoting powerless little children as forerunners of the kingdom. It includes fathers extending unfathomable mercy to a rebellious, heedless son and compassionate half-breeds like the Good Samaritan or impoverished housewives who throw a party because she’s found her lost coin (and thus ending up as poor as ever).

Hidden Kingdom: The Parable of the Pearl shows you have to know where to look to see the Kingdom at work.

Is This the Kingdom?

All this helps answer the question – where is the Kingdom Jesus promised? Why are people still dying in Afghanistan or Iraq or San Bernardino, or on the highways or in hospitals or trying to stay warm under a freeway tunnel? What’s going on? Has Jesus let us down? Where is the King of Mighty David’s Royal Line, the Deliverer the Jewish people were expecting? We could all use a Deliverer right about now after a year like 2017.

Well, take heart. Jesus wasn’t deceiving us. The Kingdom is here only it deploys left-handed power. It is present but in weakness, in smallness, in great invisibility. The Parables Jesus gave make it clear that to understand the Kingdom he ushered in with his ministry we have to be looking in the right direction. What is the kingdom like? Jesus once asked. Well, it’s like…like leaven, which a woman puts in three measures of meal till the whole mass is leavened.

“The Kingdom? Like Fleishmann’s yeast? Jesus – you’ve got to be kidding,” some might say.

The Everyday Kingdom

But wait! There’s something about leaven. It is small and miniscule yet steady, relentless, unstoppable and ultimately quite transformative.

The fact that the kingdom is small means it gives us – ordinary people like you and I – a chance to participate. The fact that it is always working means God is always conscripting people across all eras of human history to do his bidding.

These are great tipoff’s to the way it works in the Kingdom of God.

SEEDING THE KINGDOM: Called the Master Parable, it depicts the seeming weakness and ordinary nature of the Kingdom Jesus brought.

In his provocative Commentary on Matthew’s Gospel, the Anglican evangelist Michael Green raises the questions about the Kingdom that the parables of Matthew 13 answer. As well as the hiddenness and ordinary every-dayness of the Kingdom enshrined in the leaven analogy, Green explores other answers to our questions. The dialogue is quite fascinating. Let’s listen in on Green’s lively rapping with Jesus.

“Why it seems, Lord that hardly anyone is responding.” Right. That’s an understandable reaction. But the Parable of the Sower had already answered this. Of four categories Jesus described who had heard his invitation it seems only group four seems to “get it” (Matthew 13:1-9). Capon, by the way, has a better answer for that in his book, Kingdom, Grace, Judgment. Even seed scattered by the wayside has a habit of growing up against the odds. And the birds take it but sometimes drops much of it far afield.

“But…the kingdom, dear Master, seems so ineffective up against the disastrous news of the world today.” But don’t look in the wrong place. Remember the Parable of the Mustard Seed. This thing starts miniscule and tiny and slowly takes over as church history testifies (Matthew 13:31-32). The abolition of slavery largely traces to a group of English Christians in a small village named Clapham that the world has never heard of (Google “Clapham Sect.). Mighty America was sped along by 51 survivors of 100 from a tiny ship called “Mayflower.” The house churches in China – now numbering in the millions of adherents – took off under the baleful influence of Mao’s China.

You have to know where to look.

Yes, but “well it seems, forgive me, my King, so hard to keep this before us with all that’s happening.” Ah, well don’t forget the parable of the Pearl of Great Price (Matthew 13:44-45). You have to know what to look for. It takes a special kind of person to spot the kingdom at work. If you have responded to Jesus’ invitation you are that person, an ambassador of the Left-Handed Kingdom.

“Why is it so weak, Jesus, and why does evil persist?” – the parable of the weeds growing vigorously among the wheat reminds us that there is a judgment coming. The Good God has allowed evil to co-exist for a time but sometimes his judgments fall even in this life. Witness the spectacular ends of abusers from Adolph Hitler to Saddam Hussein. The final ushering in of the Kingdom will be even more spectacular. The Kingdom is indeed the great equalizer (Matthew 13:24-30). Meanwhile we have work to do.

“Why do we have to wait, forgive me dear Lord, so long for vindication?” Ah, remember the Parable of the Great Dragnet. The Lord’s keeping score (Matthew 13:47-50). He promises to sort out the good from the bad. The Kingdom is also the Great Reversal when the first and last and the last first.

Seeding the Kingdom

By now we begin to see. Our questions have answers. Our job is to pass out cups of cold water, scrounge about for loaves and fishes to feed the hungry, visit the sick, encourage the prisoners, pass out Thanksgiving turkeys, run food banks, staff cold-weather shelters – in other words, the kind of work that Christians have been doing for centuries! It doesn’t seem like its changing the world does it? But it is making a big big difference in the lives of millions and millions of people.

After Haiti’s recent devastating earthquake I couldn’t help but notice how one news reporter and his team stumbled ashore in search of a first-hand report. They interviewed an aid worker from World Vision! Christians were already there. World Vision was formed out of the nightmare so many orphans faced back in the Korean War (1950-1953).

We seem to have come full circle. The kingdom that began at Bethlehem is small, quiet, humble, insidious almost, but very very effective, like leaven. Take another look – the Kingdom is at hand.