
Monday
The kingdom of God is justice and joy;
For Jesus restores what sin would destroy.
God’s power and glory in Jesus we know;
And here and hereafter the kingdom shall grow.
Justice is about putting things right, restoring what is stolen or broken. The Kingdom of God is like that. Under the reign of God the broken is restored, the lost is found, the sinful are forgiven, and the hopeless get another chance. If we ask how that happens, the hymn is unabashed – it’s because in Jesus God’s power and glory are revealed, demonstrated, and made effective in transformed lives and communities. The Kingdom of God is the blossoming of joy rooted in soil fertilised by God’s justice.
Tuesday
The kingdom of God is mercy and grace;
The captives are freed, the sinners find place,
The outcast are welcomed God’s banquet to share;
And hope is awakened in place of despair.
The hymn is cumulative – the Kingdom of God is many things, including justice and joy, mercy and grace. These four lines turn the God-given Jubilee into the rhythms of poetry and music. Mercy and grace are of the essence of God’s love. Liberation, hospitality, welcome, and the biggest banquet ever, push the boundaries outward even to the despairing – and hope awakens. I often wonder if we as Christians have any real idea of God’s power and glory in the Jesus we know! This is the one who, wherever He walked – He left a trail of blessing – justice and joy, mercy and grace.

Wednesday
The kingdom of God is challenge and choice:
Believe the good news, repent and rejoice!
God’s love for us sinners brought Christ to his cross:
Our crisis of judgement for gain or for loss.
The Kingdom of God challenges everything we ever thought was important and demands that we make a choice – God or money and stuff; my way or God’s way; broad road or narrow path; self-love or self-giving love. This verse distils the values of every human life down to the truth of the cross, the final and ultimate evidence of “God’s love for us sinners”. That’s the crisis of judgement. When we kneel at the cross we are in that strange place of healing where repentance becomes rejoicing, loss becomes gain, and we discover justice, joy, mercy and grace.
Thursday
God’s kingdom is come, the gift and the goal;
In Jesus begun, in heaven made whole.
The heirs of the kingdom shall answer his call;
And all things cry “Glory!” to God all in all.
It’s one of the most important principles to get into our heads. Christian hope oscillates between now and not yet. Yes Jesus is risen! Yes Jesus is coming again! We live in the in-between time – our redemption is real and now, but its fullness awaits us when God will be all in all. The Kingdom of God is gift now, and the goal lies in the future. Or as Tony Campolo was fond of saying. “It’s Friday but Sunday’s coming.” And so is Jesus – until then the Kingdom of God is justice and joy, mercy and grace, challenge and choice, gift and goal – God’s power and glory in Jesus – we know!
Friday
Matthew 13.31-32 “The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed, which a man took and planted in his field. Though it is the smallest of all seeds, yet when it grows, it is the largest of garden plants and becomes a tree, so that the birds come and perch in its branches.”
The Kingdom of God isn’t about the big stuff. The smallest seed planted in the right place is an organic miracle – life, growth, fruit and blessing to others, on a scale unimaginable to those who simply see a two millimetre seed. Jesus came preaching the Kingdom of God, and what he was preaching was a new source of life in God, renewed energy for service, restored hope and a call to venture everything, right now, on the truth of who Jesus is, what God is doing, and the chance to be part of it.
Saturday
Matthew 13.33 “The Kingdom of heaven is like yeast that a woman took and mixed into a large amount of flour until it worked all through and through.”
Again huge results from tiny causes. The transforming power of yeast when mixed with flour and moisture is a culinary miracle. You wouldn’t believe what yeast can do to flour! But believe it we must because the outcome is bread! The Kingdom of heaven is that same organic, transforming, fermentation that turns life into newness, into something nourishing and life-giving to others. Or as the hymn said, “the outcasts are welcomed God’s banquet to share” – “and Jesus took bread, gave thanks, broke it, and gave it to them – this is my body, eat you all of it.”

Sunday
Matthew 13.45-46 “Again the kingdom of heaven is like a merchant looking for fine pearls. When he found one of great value, he went away and sold everything he had and bought it. A pearl merchant is on the look-out for the ultimate beauty, the unaffordable must-have, that one priceless commitment that changes life forever. The Kingdom of God is like that moment of decision when everything else becomes relative and the pearl, this once is a lifetime pearl, takes absolute precedence. Trusting and following Jesus is that life-changing! What is on offer in the Kingdom of God is “A condition of complete simplicity / costing not less than everything.” (T. S. Eliot) This pearl merchant is our reminder of the supreme value and unimaginable beauty of the call of God to leave everything and follow Jesus, living the challenge and choice of faith, every day, in the kingdom of gift and goal, justice and joy, mercy and grace.




































