Monday, January 26, 2026

From Jesus’ Proclamation to Expanding Beliefs about Jesus

 In its earliest phase, the Jesus movement was not centered on a complex belief system but on a simple conviction: God’s reign was breaking into history, and Jesus was the one through whom this was being announced and embodied. After his death, however, the focus of the community gradually shifted—from the message Jesus proclaimed to claims made about Jesus himself. This shift did not happen all at once; it unfolded in discernible stages.

The earliest Christian confession was remarkably brief: “Jesus is the Christ.” This was not yet a fully developed theology but a declaration of trust that the crucified Jesus had been vindicated by God. To call Jesus “Christ” (Messiah) was to affirm that God had acted through him in a decisive way. At this stage, faith was primarily recognition, not metaphysical explanation. The emphasis remained close to Jesus’ life, teaching, and the hope he inspired.

With Paul, the focus deepened and narrowed. Paul interpreted Jesus’ death as having saving significance: “Christ died for our sins.” Here, belief moved beyond recognition of Jesus’ role to acceptance of a specific theological meaning attached to his death. Salvation was increasingly understood not through participation in Jesus’ way of life, but through trust in what God had accomplished through the cross. While Paul still spoke of ethical transformation, the decisive act of salvation was now located in a past event to be believed rather than a present way to be lived.

The Letter to the Hebrews represents a further development. Jesus is no longer only the risen Christ or the crucified savior; he is portrayed as the heavenly high priest, seated at the right hand of God, mediating between God and humanity. This language draws heavily from Jewish temple imagery. Faith now requires acceptance of Jesus’ cosmic and ongoing priestly role, operating in a heavenly realm beyond history. The center of gravity shifts further away from Jesus’ earthly ministry toward his exalted, metaphysical status.

The Gospel of John takes the final and most radical step in this trajectory. Jesus is no longer merely Messiah, savior, or heavenly priest—he is the pre-existent Word, present with God at creation itself. Here, belief demands assent to Jesus’ divine origin and eternal existence. The Kingdom Jesus proclaimed fades into the background, replaced by a theology of identity: who Jesus is becomes more important than what he taught or did. Eternal life is linked explicitly to believing correct claims about Jesus’ nature.

Seen together, these stages reveal a clear pattern. As the movement expanded into the Greco-Roman world and encountered new philosophical and religious frameworks, faith became increasingly conceptual and doctrinal. Each stage added another layer of belief, moving from a historical confession to cosmic metaphysics. What began as a call to follow Jesus’ way of life gradually became a system requiring acceptance of progressively complex theological propositions.

This development does not necessarily represent bad faith or deliberate distortion; it reflects the community’s effort to make sense of Jesus after his death and to communicate his significance in changing contexts. Yet the cost of this expansion was significant. The more faith became defined by belief about Jesus, the more it risked drifting away from the Kingdom-centered vision that Jesus himself proclaimed—a vision grounded in justice, mercy, compassion, and transformed living.

In this light, a critical question emerges for Christianity today: Is faith primarily about believing increasingly elaborate claims about Jesus, or about living the way of life Jesus embodied and taught? Recovering the original Kingdom focus may require holding these later theological developments with humility, recognizing them as interpretations rather than foundations. Only then can the message of Jesus regain its original ethical and universal power.

The Kingdom of God and the Christian Church: A Comparative Reflection

At the heart of Jesus’ message stands the idea of the Kingdom of God. It was not presented as a religious institution, a system of beliefs, or a future reward alone, but as a living reality—one that called for an immediate transformation of life. Jesus spoke of the Kingdom as something near, already breaking into the present, and accessible to all who were willing to live by its values. In contrast, the Christian Church, as it developed over time, emerged as an organized institution shaped by doctrine, authority, and structure. While the Church traces its origin to Jesus, it is important to distinguish between the Kingdom he proclaimed and the institution that later arose in his name.

The Kingdom of God, as Jesus taught it, does not begin with belief or confession. It begins with response. People are invited to repent, to change their direction, to practice justice, forgive freely, love generously, and care for the poor and the excluded. Entry into the Kingdom is marked not by correct ideas but by transformed living. Jesus’ parables consistently emphasize action over assent: the Good Samaritan acts rightly without holding the “right” religious identity, and in the final judgment scene of Matthew 25, people are evaluated by what they did for the hungry, the stranger, and the prisoner, not by what they believed.

The Christian Church, on the other hand, gradually came to define itself through belief, belonging, and boundaries. Creeds, sacraments, and institutional authority became central markers of faith. This development was not without reason; the Church sought to preserve Jesus’ memory, teachings, and communal life. Yet in doing so, the focus often shifted from living the way of Jesus to affirming correct doctrines about him. Faith increasingly became a matter of believing certain claims rather than embodying a particular way of life.

Another key difference lies in inclusivity. The Kingdom of God is radically open. It transcends religious, ethnic, and moral boundaries, welcoming anyone who lives according to its values. The Church, by contrast, necessarily defines insiders and outsiders through membership and confession. While this can provide identity and continuity, it can also limit the universal reach of Jesus’ vision and, at times, foster division rather than unity.

The relationship between the Kingdom and the Church is therefore complex. Ideally, the Church exists to serve the Kingdom, not replace it. Wherever the Church practices humility, justice, compassion, and self-giving love, it becomes a sign of the Kingdom in the world. Wherever it prioritizes power, control, or doctrinal conformity over lived love, it risks obscuring the very reality Jesus proclaimed.

In essence, the Kingdom of God is the message and way of Jesus, while the Christian Church is a historical and human response to that message—sometimes faithful, sometimes flawed. Recovering the primacy of the Kingdom invites both the Church and the wider world to move beyond belief alone toward a shared commitment to justice, mercy, and love in action. In a deeply pluralistic world, this vision of the Kingdom remains one of the most compelling foundations for genuine human unity.