1 Corinthians 4:20
“For the Kingdom of God does not consist in talk but in power.”
Talk is cheap, but we sure love to do it. From the talking heads on the TV to Christians speaking the lingo. From politicians trying to get elected to promises made by a teenager. We like to talk. We will try to convince people, we will try to persuade people, we will try to move people’s hearts and minds. There can be great benefit from talk, and we can implant and expound on ideas that can change how people think. But the danger is always there that talk is where we will stay and where we will live.
Isn’t that the reason for anger at politicians? That too often they do not back their talk up with action? Isn’t that why some people’s promises and deals and “I’ll scratch your back if…” can’t be trusted? They fail to back them up with action. And isn’t that why the ivory tower speculation can make us disinterested or annoyed? Because all their talk is just talk, nothing amounts from it. Talk is cheap. We can say we will do something, and we can even get the masses behind us. But until we do it… it is just talk. I could go on, but the reality of the matter is that we all know the difference between people who just talk and those who pair their talk with action.
And that is the beautiful thing about this verse. Paul is address some false teachers and he compares the Christian faith with what they are teaching. And what does he say the main difference is? They talk, and that is all that it is. Talk made up by the human mind. But, Paul says, the Kingdom of God is not talk, it is power. That is the difference. These false teachers were preaching something with zero power. Paul preached the kingdom of God, which is power. It is not just idle speculation that really had no effect on your life, it was power that changed you from the inside out and flip your whole world back right side up. These false teachers were teaching meaningless dribble. Paul says that the Kingdom of God is that true power, the power of the life that comes from Christ, the power that comes in the new birth and the power that comes from the life of faith. The Kingdom of God is not just like any other school of thought that is just empty talk, it is the power that saves us, changes us, transforms us, and holds this universe together.
And the kingdom is not only some future event when Christ will return. No, the kingdom has power right now for our life. Paul is referring to the present spiritual sense of God reigning over his people and demonstrating his power in their lives. The joy, peace, love, and all the other fruit that is part of our lives. The power of God that moves through our life, giving us faith and the ability to live out that faith in all aspects of our life. It is now, we live it now in our lives.
As I was reading this verse and pondering all that it means, I started to think about what it means for how we should live. Yes, the verse means that the Kingdom of God has power for our present day lives and is not empty talk and speculation, but what does that mean for our own action? Christ came and inaugurated the Kingdom of God, it was started and he gave his followers the command to spread it and extend it. I love the image of a beachhead. In war, an army will have to establish a beachhead, a landing site that will be the staging area for the rest of the invasion or conquest. The Kingdom of God is invading this world, and it is our job as Christians and it is the Church job to hold and to expand beachhead that Christ gained for us. We await his return to complete the invasion, but right now we are called to make secure this beachhead and expand it. The Kingdom of God is ours to extend and it is ours to put into action.


