The Bible teaches that Jesus will one day literally reign from Jerusalem as the promised Son of David, fulfilling God’s covenant with David that his throne would be established forever (2 Samuel 7:12–16; Luke 1:32–33). The Old Testament prophets consistently point to this coming King who will rule from Zion, bringing justice, peace, and global worship of God (Isaiah 2:2–4; Isaiah 9:6–7; Micah 4:1–2; Zechariah 14:9–17). Jesus’ first coming fulfilled the promise of salvation through His death and resurrection, but His second coming will fulfill the promise of His visible earthly kingdom (John 3:16; Revelation 19:11–16). Though He currently reigns at the right hand of the Father in heaven with all authority, this is a real but partial reign awaiting its earthly manifestation (Ephesians 1:20–22). At His return, Jesus will judge the nations and establish a thousand-year kingdom on earth, reigning from Jerusalem as King of kings (Revelation 20:1–6; Revelation 19:16). After this, He will usher in the new creation where He reigns forever from the New Jerusalem, bringing an end to death, sorrow, and suffering (Revelation 21:1–4). Because this future reign is certain, we are called to humble ourselves now and take refuge in the coming King while there is still time (Psalm 2:12).
God created men
and women to rule the world (Genesis 1:26–27). When we rebelled, God promised a savior to redeem humanity (Genesis 3:15). As that promise grew in detail through the Old Testament, it became clear that He would be an eternally
righteous King. Scripture ends
with that King taking His rightful place in Jerusalem not just as the King of
Israel, but the King of kings (Revelation 19:16), the ruler over all rulers. Jesus will not only judge the nations (Matthew 25:31–32), wield an iron rod (Psalm
2:9), and ensure righteousness (Isaiah 11:4–5), but He will also make all
things new (Revelation 21:5). At that time creation will be restored to how God created it. Death will
become no more (Revelation 21:4a), and all pain and sorrow will eventually be
eradicated (Revelation 21:4b). In short, Jesus, in His humanity, will be on
Earth and do what men and women were created to do: rule this Earth perfectly.
His reign,
however, has already begun. When Jesus died for humanity’s sins, God raised Him and seated Him above everyone (Philippians 2:9–10). He is currently in Heaven
at the right hand of God, reigning and waiting for the day when the Father will
send Him to take His place on Earth. Because Jesus is the true King, our everyday lives are places where His reign is meant to be acknowledged and surrendered to right now. We don’t just wait for His future kingdom; we begin living as people shaped by it today: submitting our decisions, priorities, relationships, and ambitions to His authority. Do our lives reflect the King who is coming and already reigns in our hearts? He is the One who is in charge, whom we trust, and in whom we find refuge, and we live differently when we realize that every choice is either a surrender to His rule or a resistance against it. One day, what we chose to build our lives on will be fully revealed when the King who reigns in righteousness stands visibly over all the earth. Are you ready? Is He your king?