Voxology

The Opposite But Not Equal Kingdom

4 snips
Feb 23, 2026
They unpack how political rhetoric can twist biblical language into coercive power. They explore the Lord's Prayer as a counter-narrative to empire. They trace the idea of heavenly councils, powers, and demons behind structural injustice. They define an anti-kingdom of systemic evil and wrestle with the now-and-not-yet of Jesus' victory.
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ANECDOTE

Integrated Spanish Worship At Park Hill

  • Mike Erre recounts worship at Park Hill where songs included Spanish lyrics, switching languages mid-song to include Spanish speakers.
  • He admired the generosity of not running a separate service but integrating Spanish translations under English lyrics.
ANECDOTE

Seth's Best Friends Podcast Idea

  • Tim Stafford shares his son Seth's ideas: Seth wants a 'Best Friends Podcast' and a band called 'Best Friends Band Name', illustrating child's joyful simplicity.
  • The anecdote shows Seth's constant friendliness and how kids imagine creative projects simply.
INSIGHT

Kingdom Language Was Political and Earthly

  • 'Your kingdom come' is political and earthly to first-century ears; Jesus preached a flesh-and-blood community under God's rule.
  • Mike Erre emphasizes that kingdom language originally evoked David, Jerusalem, and political expectations, not just private piety.
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