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322 pages, Kindle Edition
First published October 18, 2004
"For Henry, the biblical mandate for this type of inaugurated eschatology was far too great to be overcast by endless evangelical debates over the nature of the millennium or the timing of the rapture."
"It is therefore the church’s duty to display in an evil age of self-seeking, pride, and animosity the life and fellowship of the Kingdom of God and of the Age to Come,” Ladd concluded. “This display of Kingdom life is an essential element in the witness of the church to the Kingdom of God.”"
"In short, the commitment to an “already” of the Kingdom protects against an otherworldly flight from political and social responsibility while the “not yet” chastens the prospects of such activity."
"We are afraid of the jeer about “pie in the sky,” and of being told that we are trying to “escape” from the duty of making a happy world here and now into dreams of a happy world elsewhere. But either there is “pie in the sky” or there is not. If there is not, then Christianity is false, for this doctrine is woven into its whole fabric."
"In a Kingdom-oriented soteriology, personal regeneration is paramount, not because of an anthropocentric worldview, but because regeneration is tied to God’s Christocentric purpose in saving the cosmos, a context presented by Jesus in the most familiar biblical treatment of regeneration, the discourse with Nicodemus (John 3:3-21)"