Royal Priesthood: Pathway To Kingdom Authority - Sample D. Atkin, G. Austin, S. Crosby
Royal Priesthood: Pathway To Kingdom Authority - Sample D. Atkin, G. Austin, S. Crosby
Royal Priesthood: Pathway To Kingdom Authority - Sample D. Atkin, G. Austin, S. Crosby
Copyright 2012
D. Atkin, G. Austin, S. Crosby
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The
need
for
such
a
book
as
this
has
increased
exponentially
during
recent
years,
to
stand
in
contrast
with
those
who
are
espousing
dominion
by
any
means
in
every
area
of
life.
We
agree
that
mountains
are
to
be
climbed
and
cities
are
to
be
gained.
The
method
and
manner
is
so
very
important.
The
emerging
kingdom
begins
in
the
inner
man:
He
who
rules
his
spirit
(is
better
than)
he
who
takes
a
city.1
Even
a
cursory
look
into
the
way
that
Jesus
led
should
reveal
the
inappropriateness
of
operating
the
church
by
worldly,
corporate
business
models,
or
to
believe
that
He
endorses
“takeover”
means
and
mentalities.
“If
My
kingdom
were
of
this
world,
My
servants
would
fight,
so
that
I
should
not
be
delivered
to
the
Jews;
but
now
My
kingdom
is
not
from
here.”2
Learning
Jesus,
being
taught
by
Him,3
quickly
reveals
that
the
church4
is
not
an
entity
to
be
operated,
but
a
body
for
His
present-‐day
incarnate
life—a
body
connected
to
and
under
the
authority
of
the
Head.
Jesus’
example
was
to
lead
by
serving
those
who
willingly
followed.
He
is
a
priest
forever
according
to
the
order
of
Melchizedek.5
You
are
the
ones
chosen
by
God,
chosen
for
the
high
calling
of
priestly
work,
chosen
to
be
a
holy
people,
God’s
instruments
to
do
His
work
and
speak
out
for
Him,
to
tell
others
of
the
night-‐and-‐day
difference
He
made
for
you—from
nothing
to
something,
from
rejected
to
accepted.6
It
is
a
privilege
to
be
chosen
for
the
high
calling
of
priestly
work—in
every
generation,
culture,
and
realm
of
life.
We
are
to
have
the
mind
of
Christ:
It
is
a
kingdom
principle
that
he
who
would
rise
up,
into
heavenly
places;
he
who
would
move
higher
in
Christ
must
seek
the
lowest
of
estates.
It
is
here,
in
the
low
places
of
the
valley
that
the
visitor
of
the
heights
of
God’s
splendor
finds
true
satisfaction,
walks
in
divine
righteousness
and
experiences
divine
peace
and
heavenly
joy
–
1
Proverbs 16:32b
2
John 18:36
3
Ephesians 4:17-24
4
Matthew 16:18
5
Hebrews 7:17
6
1 Peter 2:9-10 TM
for
in
these
is
the
kingdom
of
God
and
not
on
some
plane
beyond
and
invisible
to
the
physical,
temporal
world
of
men
about
us.
For
the
child
of
God,
the
route,
the
direction
towards
effectiveness
must
always
be
downward,
while
the
consequence
of
effectiveness
moves
us
upward.
When
we
live
as
Jesus
lived,
as
we
notice
what
He
noticed,
place
our
priorities
where
His
were
placed,
we
find
ourselves
moving
among
the
poor,
the
brokenhearted,
to
the
captives
and
towards
the
blind,
to
set
at
liberty
those
who
are
oppressed.7
Such
was
the
pre-‐determined
agenda
and
the
heart
of
the
Son
of
God,
the
Savior,
and
such
must
ours
be
if
we
are
to
possess
true,
kingdom
authority.
The
pathway
to
authority
is
along
the
avenue
of
service.
The
way
up,
never
forget,
is
the
way
down.
Christ
Jesus,
being
in
the
form
of
God,
did
not
consider
it
robbery
to
be
equal
with
God8
and
made
Himself
of
no
reputation,
taking
upon
Himself
the
form
of
a
bondservant,
and
came
in
the
likeness
of
men.9
Jesus
proclaimed
that
“the
works
that
I
do
He
(who
believes
in
Me)
will
do
also;
and
greater
works
than
these
will
he
do,
because
I
go
to
My
Father.”
Critical
to
the
“doing”
of
greater
works
is
that
the
believer
does
them
in
the
same
spirit
as
Christ
worked—“of
no
reputation,”
in
the
“form
of
a
bondservant,”
in
the
likeness
of
(common)
men.”
The
unsearchable
riches
of
grace
that
accrue
to
believers
can
obscure
God’s
eternal
purpose
for
His
children,
and
the
planet.
That
is,
if
we’re
not
careful,
we
can
preach
and
teach
a
human-‐
centered
gospel:
a
gospel
that
emphasizes
the
benefits
of
salvation
to
us,
and
neglects
what
Father
desires
to
accomplish
in
and
through
us,
for
Himself,
and
the
benefit
of
others.
Not
only
do
we
have
an
inheritance
in
Christ
and
in
the
heavenlies,
but
Father
also
has
an
inheritance
in
the
saints.10
It
can
be
hard
for
us
to
understand
that
His
plan
of
salvation
for
humanity
fulfills
something
in
His
plan
for
the
cosmos,
not
just
our
eternal
benefit.
That
is,
there’s
something
that
accrues
to
Him,
for
His
delight,
purposes,
and
satisfaction,
as
well
as
an
inheritance
that
accrues
to
us.
The
plan
of
God
is
not
just
to
“save
us
and
get
us
to
heaven.”
God
had,
and
has,
a
redemptive
plan
for
this
planet:
to
fill
it
with
a
quality
of
life
that
images
Himself—that
the
very
life
of
Jesus
would
be
found
in
mortal
flesh,11
on
planet
earth,
filling
the
earth
with
the
glory
of
sonship,
as
the
waters
cover
the
sea.
7
Luke
4:18
8
Philippians
2:6
9
vv
7
10
Eph. 1:18.
11
2 Cor. 4:11.
Yes,
Father
has
always
had
a
dream.
Jesus
is
the
firstfruit/seed
fulfillment
of
that
dream.
And
yet,
there
still
remains
a
fulfillment
in
scope
and
scale
that
involves
all
of
us
as
believers.
The
Seed
that
was
sown
in
death
and
resurrection
is
to
bear
fruit
and
multiply
in
us
and
through
us.
As
He
was
sent
(apostolically
seeded)
into
the
world,
so
are
we.
What
is
that
dream?
That
the
world
will
be
populated/filled
with
a
caring,
serving,
kingdom
of
priests
who
are
prophetically
empowered
by
His
death
and
resurrection
life.
As
the
scriptures
in
the
opening
of
this
chapter
plainly
indicate,
this
was
God’s
dream
from
the
beginning
of
His
calling
a
people
(a
nation)
unto
Himself
at
Sinai.
The
dream
finds
its
realization
in
the
glorious
new
covenant.
There
will
literally
be
on
earth,
a
new
“nation”—a
new
people
group,
a
new
race,
a
new
creation,
a
new
citizenry
whose
nature
is
regal,
whose
service
is
priesthood,
and
whose
empowerment
is
His
resurrection
life.
They
will
be
governed
by
the
Holy
Spirit,
serving
One
King,
under
His
rule,
representing
His
interests
to
humanity,
and
representing
humanity’s
needs
to
the
King:
a
royal
priesthood
of
new
creation
beings,
a
never-‐before-‐seen
race
of
humanity,
testifying
to
the
world
by
the
quality
of
their
life
and
existence
that
He
is
risen,
and
the
new
age
has
dawned.
The
end
has
begun.
The
kingdom
is
here:
partial,
but
present.12
God’s
dream
is
no
longer
a
future
hope,
but
a
present
reality.
That
dream
is
you
and
me,
in
Christ.
12
A present reality with a future consummation.