βασιλεία,
-ας,
ἡ, (from
βασιλεύω; to be distinguished from
βασίλεια a queen; cf.
ἱερεία priesthood from
ἱερεύω, and
ἱέρεια a priestess from
ἱερεύς), [from Herodotus down];
1. royal power, kingship, dominion, rule:
Luke 1:33;
Luke 19:12,
15;
Luke 22:29;
John 18:36;
Acts 1:6;
Hebrews 1:8;
1 Corinthians 15:24;
Revelation 17:12; of the royal power of Jesus as the triumphant Messiah, in the phrase
ἔρχεσθαι ἐν τῇ βασαὐτοῦ,
i. e. to come in his kingship, clothed with this power:
Matthew 16:28;
Luke 23:42 [
εἰς τὴν β. L marginal reading Tr marginal reading WH text]; of the royal power and dignity conferred on Christians in the Messiah's kingdom:
Revelation 1:6 (according to Tr text WH marginal reading
ἐποίησεν ἡμῖν or L
ἡμῶν [yet
R G T WH text Tr marginal reading
ἡμᾶς]
βασιλείαν [
Rec. βασιλεῖς]);
τοῦ θεοῦ, the royal power and dignity belonging to God,
Revelation 12:10.
2. a kingdom i. e. the territory subject to the rule of a king:
Matthew 12:25;
Matthew 24:7;
Mark 3:24;
Mark 6:23;
Mark 13:8;
Luke 11:17;
Luke 21:10; plural:
Matthew 4:8;
Luke 4:5;
Hebrews 11:33.
3. Frequent in the
N. T. in reference to the Reign of the Messiah are the following phrases:
ἡ βασιλεία τοῦ θεοῦ (
דֶאֱלָהָא מַלְכוּתָא, Targ.
Isaiah 40:9;
Micah 4:7), properly,
the kingdom over which God rules;
ἡ βασιλεία τοῦ Χριστοῦ (דִמְשִׁיחָא מַלְכוּת, Targ. Jonath. ad
Isaiah 53:10),
the kingdom of the Messiah, which will be founded by God through the Messiah and over which the Messiah will preside as God's vicegerent;
ἡ βασ.
τῶν οὐρανῶν, only in Matthew, but very frequently [some 33 times],
the kingdom of heaven, i. e. the kingdom which is of heavenly or divine origin and nature (in rabbinical writings
מַלְכוּת הַשָׁמַיִם [מַלְכוּת הַשָׁ׳׳ — probably the
article should be stricken out; cf. Prof. Geo. F. Moore in the Andover Review for July 1887, p. 105] is
the rule of God, the theocracy viewed universally, not the Messianic kingdom); sometimes simply
ἡ βασιλεία:
Matthew 4:23, etc.;
James 2:5; once
ἡ βασ.
τοῦ Δαυείδ, because it was supposed the Messiah would be one of David's descendants and a king very like David,
Mark 11:10; once also
ἡ βασ.
τοῦ Χριστοῦ καὶ θεοῦ,
Ephesians 5:5. Relying principally on the prophecies of Daniel — who had declared it to be the purpose of God that, after four vast and mighty kingdoms had succeeded one another and the last of them shown itself hostile to the people of God, at length its despotism should be broken, and the empire of the world pass over for ever to the holy people of God (
Daniel 2:44;
Daniel 7:14,
18,
27) — the Jews were expecting a kingdom of the greatest felicity, which
God through the Messiah would set up, raising the dead to life again and renovating earth and heaven; and that in this kingdom they would bear sway for ever over all the nations of the world. This kingdom was called
the kingdom of God or
the kingdom of the Messiah; and in this sense must these terms be understood in the utterances of the Jews and of the disciples of Jesus when conversing with him, as
Matthew 18:1;
Matthew 20:21;
Mark 11:10;
Luke 17:20;
Luke 19:11. But Jesus employed the phrase
kingdom of God or
of heaven to indicate
that perfect order of things which he was about to establish, in which all those of every nation who should believe in him were to be gathered together into one society, dedicated and intimately united to God, and made partakers of eternal salvation. This kingdom is spoken of as now begun and actually present, inasmuch as its foundations have already been laid by Christ and its benefits realized among men that believe in him:
Matthew 11:12;
Matthew 12:28;
Matthew 13:41 (in this passage its earthly condition is spoken of, in which it includes bad subjects as well as good);
Luke 17:21;
1 Corinthians 4:20;
Romans 14:17 (where the meaning is, 'the essence of the kingdom of God is not to be found in questions about eating and drinking');
Colossians 1:13. But far more frequently the kingdom of heaven is spoken of as a future blessing, since its consummate establishment is to be looked for on Christ's solemn return from the skies, the dead being called to life again, the ills and wrongs which burden the present state of things being done away, the powers hostile to God being vanquished:
Matthew 6:10;
Matthew 8:11;
Matthew 26:29;
Mark 9:1;
Mark 15:43;
Luke 9:27;
Luke 13:28;
Luke 14:15;
Luke 22:18;
2 Peter 1:11; also in the phrases
εἰσέρχεσθαι εἰς τ.
βασ.
τ.
οὐρανῶν or
τ.
θεοῦ:
Matthew 5:20;
Matthew 7:21;
Matthew 18:3;
Matthew 19:23,
24;
Mark 9:47;
Mark 10:23,
24,
25;
Luke 18:24 [T Tr text WH
εἰσπορεύονται],
Luke 18:25;
John 3:5;
Acts 14:22;
κληρονόμος τῆς βασιλείας,
James 2:5;
κληρονομεῖν τ.
β.
τ.
θ.; see d. below. By a singular use
ἡ βασ.
τοῦ κυρίου ἡ ἐπουράνιος God's heavenly kingdom, in
2 Timothy 4:18, denotes the exalted and perfect order of things which already exists in heaven, and into which true Christians are ushered immediately after death; cf.
Philippians 1:23;
Hebrews 12:22f. The phrase
βασ.
τῶν οὐρανῶν or
τοῦ θεοῦ, while retaining its meaning
kingdom of heaven or
of God, must be understood, according to the requirements of the context,
a. of the beginning, growth, potency, of the divine kingdom:
Matthew 13:31-33;
Mark 4:30;
Luke 13:18.
b. of its fortunes:
Matthew 13:24;
Mark 4:26.
c. of the conditions to be complied with in order to reception among its citizens:
Matthew 18:23;
Matthew 20:1;
Matthew 22:2;
Matthew 25:1.
d. of its blessings and benefits, whether present or future:
Matthew 13:44;
Luke 6:20; also in the phrases
ζητεῖν τὴν βασ.
τ.
θεοῦ,
Matthew 6:33 [L T WH omit
τ.
θεοῦ];
Luke 12:31 [
αὐτοῦ L text
T Tr WH]; δέχεσθαι τ.
βασ.
τ.
θ.
ὡς παιδίον,
Mark 10:15;
Luke 18:17;
κληρονομεῖν τ.
β.
τ.
θ.
Matthew 25:34;
1 Corinthians 6:9;
1 Corinthians 15:50;
Galatians 5:21; see in
κληρονομέω, 2.
e. of the congregation of those who constitute the royal 'city of God':
ποιεῖν τινας βασιλείαν,
Revelation 1:6 G T WH text Tr marginal reading [cf. 1 above];
Rev 5:10 (here R G
βασιλεῖς, so R in the preceding passage), cf.
Exodus 19:6. Further, the following expressions are noteworthy: of persons fit for admission into the divine kingdom it is said
αὐτῶν or
τοιούτων ἐστὶν ἡ βασ.
τῶν οὐρ. or
τοῦ θεοῦ:
Matthew 5:3,
10;
Matthew 19:14;
Mark 10:14;
Luke 18:16.
διδόναι τινὶ τ.
βασ. is used of God, making men partners of his kingdom,
Luke 12:32;
παραλαμβάνειν of those who are made partners,
Hebrews 12:28.
διὰ τὴν βασ.
τ.
οὐρ. to advance the interests of the heavenly kingdom,
Matthew 19:12;
ἕνεκεν τῆς βασ.
τ.
θ. for the sake of becoming a partner in the kingdom of God,
Luke 18:29. Those who announce the near approach of the kingdom, and describe its nature, and set forth the conditions of obtaining citizenship in it, are said
διαγγέλλειν τ.
βασ.
τ.
θ.
Luke 9:60;
εὐαγγελίζεσθαι τὴν β.
τ.
θ.
Luke 4:43;
Luke 8:1;
Luke 16:16;
περὶ τῆς βασ.
τ.
θ.
Acts 8:12;
κηρύσσειν τὴν βασ.
τ.
θ.
Luke 9:2;
Acts 20:25;
Acts 28:31;
τὸ εὐαγγέλιον τῆς βασ.
Matthew 4:23;
Matthew 9:35;
Matthew 24:14; with the addition of
τοῦ θεοῦ,
Mark 1:14 R L brackets.
ἤγγικεν ἡ βασ.
τ.
οὐρ. or
τοῦ θεοῦ, is used of its institution as close at hand:
Matthew 3:2;
Matthew 4:17;
Mark 1:15;
Luke 10:9,
11. it is said
ἔρχεσθαι i. e. to be established, in
Matthew 6:10;
Luke 11:2;
Luke 17:20;
Mark 11:10. In accordance with the comparison which likens the kingdom of God to a palace, the power of admitting into it and of excluding from it is called
κλεῖς τῆς β.
τ.
οὐρ.
Matthew 16:19;
κλείειν τὴν β.
τ.
οὐρ. to keep from entering,
Matthew 23:13 (
Matthew 23:14).
υἱοὶ τῆς βασ. are those to whom the prophetic promise of the heavenly kingdom extends: used of the Jews,
Matthew 8:12; of those gathered out of all nations who have shown themselves worthy of a share in this kingdom,
Matthew 13:38. (In the
O. T. Apocrypha
ἡ βασ.
τοῦ θεοῦ denotes
God's rule, the divine administration, Wis. 6:5; Wis. 10:10; Tobit 13:1; so too in
Psalm 102:19 (
Ps. 103:19);
Psalm 104:11-13 (
Ps. 105:11-13);
Daniel 4:33;
Daniel 6:26;
the universe subject to God's sway, God's royal domain, Song of the Three Children 32;
ἡ βασιλεία, simply,
the O. T. theocratic commonwealth, 2 Macc. 1:7.) Cf.
Fleck, De regno divino, Lipsius 1829;
Baumg.-Crusius, Biblical Theol., p. 147ff;
Tholuck, Die Bergrede Christi, 5te Aufl., p. 55ff [on
Matthew 5:3];
Cölln, Biblical Theol. i., p. 567ff, ii., p. 108ff;
Schmid, Biblical Theol. des
N. T., p. 262ff edition 4;
Baur, Neutest. Theol., p. 69ff;
Weiss, Biblical Theol. d.
N. T. § 13; [also in his Leben Jesu, book 4, chapter 2];
Schürer [Neutest. Zeitgesch. § 29 (especially par. 8) and references there; also] in the Jahrbb. für protest. Theol., 1876, pp. 166-187 (cf. Lipsius ibid. 1878, p. 189);
[B. D. American edition, under the word Kingdom of Heaven, and references there. Edersheim, Jesus the Messiah, i. 264ff.]