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Realizing the presence, promise, and power of the Kingdom of God.
ReVision

Sweating the Small Stuff

In the Kingdom economy, everything is a grace transaction.

Kingdom Currency (5)

“But love your enemies, do good, and lend, hoping for nothing in return; and your reward will be great, and you will be sons of the Most High. For He is kind to the unthankful and evil.” Luke 6.35

Heralds of the Kingdom
The Church of Jesus Christ is the herald and harbinger, the sign and outpost, of a new reality – the Kingdom of God. Jesus brought the Kingdom near, and the Spirit of God has brought it into all who believe in Him. The Kingdom of God is within the followers of Jesus Christ, a new reality and power for making all things new and for causing the knowledge of the glory and pleasure of the Lord to cover the earth as the waters cover the sea (Hab. 2.14; 1 Cor. 10.31).

As we might expect, such a powerful new reality brings with it a new way of “doing business” – a new economy. And the currency of that economy, the way Kingdom citizens “do business” in the world, is grace.

In the Kingdom of God, Jesus explained, we relate to one another and the world by the tenets of a new and different economy. Whereas in the unbelieving world people get by in life in an economy of getting and spending, in the Kingdom of God, where the currency and treasury are grace, God’s people thrive by giving, sacrificing, loving, and denying themselves. As we empty ourselves of all worldly and fleshly ambitions, we are filled with the Spirit and grace of God. Thus we know His presence in us, and we are able to show Him to the world by gracious acts and edifying words. And, as we do, we enjoy the double delight of knowing God at work within and through us, confirming that we are indeed something more than merely humans – we are the children of the Most High God, brothers and sisters to the King, and destined for eternal joy and pleasure with the Lord.

Each grace transaction reifies the Kingdom, broadens its beachhead in the world, and sets the stage for its further advance.

The Kingdom in the small stuff
Now when we start talking about Kingdom matters, we tend to think in fairly exalted and extravagant terms. This, however, is just the leftover thinking of our old earthly and fleshly existence. We tend to associate power and glory with grandeur and spectacular achievement. That, after all, is the way things work in the world, no?

We even see this reflected within the community of believers. The big churches, the highly visible works – these are the ones that really matter.

This may be how the world works, but it’s not the way of the Kingdom. In the Kingdom of God, for the grace and pleasure and glory of God, we don’t fritter away our time dreaming up grandiose schemes, expansive projects, and ambitious undertakings to save the world. The Kingdom of God is like a mustard seed. In the Kingdom, as we pay attention to the everyday details of living in the world, that seed takes root, begins to grow, and will ultimately bloom and bear fruit. All the work we’ve been given to do in all the time of our lives matters, for all of it represents an opportunity to spend the grace and receive the grace of God.

In the Kingdom, that is, we “sweat the small stuff” of life, because we understand that in all the small stuff, every moment of time, every word that passes between us and someone else, every opportunity to do good or share or give to another person – all the small stuff and everyday details of our lives – this is where we can spend the currency of the Kingdom and gain the treasury of the Kingdom at one and the same time. For it is in all the everyday, small stuff details of our lives that we live in grace,know the pleasure and glory of God, and make His pleasure and glory known to others.

Attention to details
The apostle Paul instructs us to live for the Kingdom in every mundane, small stuff detail of our lives. Even if we’re just sharing a meal with someone, opportunities for extending grace to others abound (1 Cor. 10.31). The key is to prepare well, to think ahead about the moments and hours of the day so that you might get ready to live in the wisdom of God before the opportunities to do so actually arrive (Ps. 90.12). Then, by paying careful attention to the goings-on around you, you can make the most of each moment and every opportunity to show the grace of God to others (Eph. 5.15-17). By denying ourselves and taking on whatever inconvenience or hardship or sacrifice or suffering may be required, we can empty ourselves of worldly ways and fleshly ambitions so that, filled with the Spirit of Christ, we can know the power and grace of God at work in and through us.

And thus we turn our world rightside-up for Jesus Christ.

Now this is hard work. Paul says we have to work at being agents of grace; it doesn’t just happen because we claim to have some kind of relationship with Jesus (Phil. 2.12). We have been redeemed by grace, and by grace we have been established in a new Kingdom of precious and very great promises. But we must work hard each day, in all the work we’ve been given to do, to make room for the presence of God in and through us, and to deny every selfish inclination, if we would know the true joy and pleasure of God Himself, working in and through all the small stuff of every day of our lives.

For reflection or discussion
1.  What do we mean by saying that the Kingdom of God is “in the small stuff”?

2.  Do you really believe that grace can make a difference in and through the “small stuff” of your life? Why or why not?

3.  Why is growing in grace such “hard work” (Phil. 2.12)? What would you recommend to anyone who wanted to take on this hard work and know more of the grace of the Lord?

Next steps – Conversation: Meditate on 1 Corinthians 10.31. Make a list of all the “small stuff” opportunities you missed yesterday for showing the grace of God to others. Rewrite the list, infusing it with God’s grace. Share your list with a Christian friend, and ask him or her to pray for you, so that you will live more consistently within the framework of the Kingdom economy, the economy of grace.

T. M. Moore

This week’s ReVision study is Part 4 of a 10-part series, “The Kingdom Economy.” You can download “Kingdom Currency” as a free PDF, prepared for personal or group study. Simply click here. Start your day in the Word of God. Study with T. M. in our daily Scriptorium newsletter, as he walks us through the ongoing work of Christ in the book of Acts. You can subscribe to receive Scriptorium each day at 5:00 am Eastern, or go to the website to download each week’s study in a free PDF.

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Except as indicated, Scripture taken from the New King James Version. © Copyright 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

T.M. Moore

T. M. Moore is principal of The Fellowship of Ailbe, a spiritual fellowship in the Celtic Christian tradition. He and his wife, Susie, make their home in the Champlain Valley of Vermont.
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