Wednesday, June 10, 2026

"For He Himself is our peace, who has made both one, and has broken down the middle wall of separation, 15 having abolished in His flesh the enmity, that is, the law of commandments contained in ordinances, so as to create in Himself one new man from the two, thus making peace, 16 and that He might reconcile them both to God in one body through the cross, thereby putting to death the enmity." Ephesians 2:14-16

At the heart of the gospel message is the revelation of the Kingdom, bringing humanity back together under one King. The cross was not only about individual forgiveness-- it was about reconciliation, restoration, and the creation of one new people in Messiah. Paul declares that Jesus “is our peace, who has made both one, and has broken down the middle wall of separation… so as to create in Himself one new man from the two.” This is one of the deepest revelations of the Kingdom: Jesus did not leave two redeemed peoples -- Jew and Gentile -- existing separately beside one another. Through the cross, He created one new man. Paul’s imagery was not abstract to his first-century audience -- it was visible in the Temple itself. A literal stone barrier stood separating the Court of the Gentiles from the inner courts reserved for Israel. Archaeologists have uncovered inscriptions from that wall warning Gentiles not to pass beyond it under penalty of death. The message was unmistakable: beyond this point, you do not belong. That barrier embodied exclusion, distance, and separation between Jew and Gentile. Yet Paul declares that through the cross, Jesus tore down that wall. The Greek word carries the sense of loosening, dissolving, and dismantling what once kept people apart. What once threatened death for crossing over has now been removed by the One who passed through death Himself. The barrier that declared separation has been replaced by the blood that declares access. This is the power of the Kingdom. The Hebrew concept of shalom is far greater than the absence of conflict -- it means wholeness, restored order, nothing missing and nothing broken. Jesus is our shalom. He did not merely come to create peace between two peoples; He came to restore them into unity under His reign. The Kingdom does not erase distinction, but it destroys division. Jew and Gentile are not absorbed into sameness, nor left separated in hostility -- they are reconciled together in the Messiah. Paul calls this heis kainos anthropos -- “one new man.” The word kainos means new in kind, unprecedented, something never seen before. There is another Greek word for new -- neos -- which simply means recent, the latest version of the same thing. Paul deliberately did not use neos. The cross was not merely an updated arrangement of Jew and Gentile existing side by side, nor an improved version of the old divisions. It brought forth something entirely new -- a new humanity joined together in the Messiah. And the word anthropos speaks collectively, revealing that this Kingdom reality is communal, not isolated. The one new man cannot exist in separation, because it is the very joining together of formerly divided peoples into one reconciled body under the reign of the King. This is why revival without reconciliation remains incomplete. The Kingdom cannot fully manifest where division still reigns. The prayer of Jesus was always toward oneness: “that they may be one.” Not uniformity, but unity rooted in Him. The cross stands not only as the place where sin was judged, but where hostility itself was put to death. Brothers & Sisters, the Kingdom of God is calling Jew and Gentile into reconciliation under one King. Jesus has already torn down the wall, so do not rebuild what He destroyed. The barrier that once declared death for crossing over has been shattered by the blood of Jesus, and now access has been opened through Him. Let His shalom heal every place where division once ruled. The same blood that reconciled you to God also reconciles you to one another. And as the one new man begins to emerge in fullness, the world will witness the true testimony of the Kingdom -- not two redeemed peoples standing apart, but one reconciled people revealing the reign of the King together. THE KINGDOM REVEALED IN ONE NEW MAN!

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