The Kingdom Is at Hand
Primary Texts: Matthew 4:12–25; Mark 1:14–39; Luke 4:14–44
Main Sayings: “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” “Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.” “I must preach the good news of the kingdom of God… for I was sent for this purpose.”
After the baptism and the wilderness, Jesus begins to speak publicly.
He does not begin with vague inspiration.
He does not begin with religious entertainment.
He begins with an announcement:
“Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”
Mark states it this way:
“The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel.”
This is the first public summary of Jesus’ message in the Synoptic Gospels.
It is short. It is urgent. It is not soft.
The Kingdom Has Come Near
When Jesus says the kingdom is at hand, He is not talking about a private religious feeling.
He is announcing God’s reign breaking into history.
That matters because the world does not look ruled by God.
It looks fractured. Violent. Confused. Unjust. Full of sickness, fear, guilt, death, and spiritual darkness.
Jesus enters that world and says the kingdom of God has come near.
Not because human beings finally fixed themselves.
Not because religion finally became pure.
Not because politics finally became righteous.
The kingdom has come near because Jesus has come near.
Jesus does not merely talk about the kingdom. His presence, words, and works force people to ask whether the kingdom is arriving in Him.
Repent and Believe
Jesus’ first public command is not “admire Me.”
It is not “add spiritual thoughts to your life.”
It is not “become slightly nicer.”
He says, “Repent and believe in the gospel.”
Repentance means turning. It means that something about our direction is wrong.
That is offensive to modern ears.
Most people prefer a Jesus who affirms everything and corrects nothing. But that is not the Jesus who appears in the Gospels.
Jesus announces good news, but He also commands a response.
If the kingdom has come near, neutrality is not wisdom. Delay is not safety. Curiosity is not enough.
The proper response is repentance and trust.
That is why Jesus’ message is both warning and hope.
Follow Me
Jesus then calls disciples.
Walking by the Sea of Galilee, He sees Simon Peter and Andrew casting a net into the sea. He says:
“Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.”
He also calls James and John.
They leave their nets. They leave their boat. They leave their father. They follow Him.
This is not presented as casual interest.
Jesus does not merely invite people to consider His ideas. He calls people to attach themselves to Him.
The first command is repent and believe.
The next command is follow.
Jesus’ kingdom message creates a new allegiance. If He is right, life cannot remain organized around self-rule.
To follow Jesus is not merely to agree that He has good insights. It is to reorder life around His voice.
Authority in Word and Power
As Jesus teaches in Galilee, people notice something different.
He teaches with authority.
Then the authority becomes visible.
Demons are confronted. The sick are healed. The oppressed are released. Crowds gather. People bring Him the suffering, the diseased, the tormented, and the demonized.
The kingdom announcement is not left floating in the air.
Jesus’ works become signs of the kingdom He proclaims.
In a world where evil feels entrenched, Jesus commands unclean spirits.
In a world where bodies break, Jesus heals.
For skeptics, the issue is not whether the story is emotionally inspiring. The issue is what the Gospel writers are claiming.
They are claiming that Jesus’ words and works belong together.
He announces the kingdom, and then He acts like the King has arrived.
“I Was Sent for This Purpose”
After a long stretch of ministry, Jesus withdraws to pray.
The crowds want Him to stay. That makes sense. If someone is healing the sick and casting out demons, people do not want Him to leave.
But Jesus says:
“I must preach the good news of the kingdom of God to the other towns as well; for I was sent for this purpose.”
That sentence reveals His mission.
Jesus is not driven by popularity.
He is not trapped by the demands of the crowd.
He knows why He was sent.
He must preach the kingdom.
The same word “must” appeared in His first recorded words as a child: He must be in His Father’s house.
Now the necessity continues. He must preach the kingdom because He was sent for this purpose.
Why This Matters
Movement 3 shows Jesus stepping fully into public mission.
He announces that the kingdom is near.
He commands repentance and faith.
He calls people to follow Him.
He teaches with authority.
He confronts evil.
He heals the broken.
He refuses to be controlled by crowds.
He knows He has been sent.
This is not the launch of a harmless moral teacher.
This is the arrival of someone who speaks as if God’s reign is breaking into the world through Him.
So the question becomes sharper:
If Jesus announces the kingdom, calls for repentance, commands discipleship, and acts with authority over sickness and evil, who does He understand Himself to be?
Staff Writer, A Disciple of Christ.
The JesusAccordingToJesus.com staff is committed to helping readers examine the person, words, and claims of Jesus with clarity, honesty, and reverence. Our work is shaped by a deep conviction that Jesus must be understood first by what He said about Himself, why He came, and what He calls every person to consider. We write for thoughtful readers, seekers, skeptics, and believers, pointing beyond mere religion to the living Christ, in whom truth, grace, meaning, and eternal hope are found.
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