How the Protestant Reformers are Still Changing the World

Month: January 2026

Third Man of the Reformation: Ulrich Zwingli

Key Protestant Reformers–(L to R) Ulrich Zwingli, Pierre Viret, John Knox, Martin Luther, John Calvin, Willaim Tyndale, and John Wycliffe

Written by Dr. Marcus J. Serven

“Christ is the only way to salvation for all who were, are, and ever shall be.” Zwingli, Sixty-Seven Articles, #3

Zwingli’s humble birthplace

Most Christians today know very little about the Protestant reformer, Ulrich Zwingli
(1484-1531). If you actually lived in Switzerland, however, you would esteem him as one of the more significant figures in Swiss history—one who brought Switzerland out of the darkness of Medievalism into the modern age. Born and raised in Wildhaus, a small rural village in the region of Toggenburg, Ulrich Zwingli was drawn into church service from an early age. He pursued orders within the Roman Catholic Church and he was ordained as a priest in 1506 (at 22 years old). Zwingli served as the pastor of a small rural congregation in Glaurus, Switzerland for ten years before he sought after more extensive training in biblical languages and theology. He settled at the Abbey of Einsiedeln and during his studies he was deeply stirred by reading the New Testament (in the Greek text) and the Early Church Fathers (in Latin and Greek). In time, Zwingli experienced an evangelical conversion and became the pastor of the church in Einsiedeln. As he began preaching the word of God, his popularity grew and he was noticed by others throughout Switzerland.

Zwingli as a young Pastor

As a result, Zwingli was invited to be a guest preacher in the Great Minster of Zurich (Ger. Grossmuenster). Following a series of sermons on the Gospel of Matthew, Zwingli was invited to become the pastor of the Great Minster and in a short time he became known as the “People’s Priest” (1519-on). Building his ministry on the clear exposition of the Bible, he was convicted to bring about many reforms within the church. In particular he advocated a great number of significant changes: the breaking of Lent, allowing the clergy to marry, encouraging a fresh translation of the Bible, revising the baptismal order, criticism of the Mass, the removal of images in churches (i.e. iconoclasm), severing the church from the control of the Papacy, the dissolution of monasteries, reforming the ministerial schools, establishing weekly Bible study groups for the clergy (which were called “prophesyings”), the termination of church music, the replacement of the Mass, establishing a quarterly Communion, ordering synodical church government, and setting-up church discipline under a shared clerical and lay control. These sweeping reforms kept him extremely busy, but they also awakened a small group of vocal citizens in Zurich who were opposed to his efforts.  Since he worked with the local magistrates at enforcing these reforms, he became known (along with Martin Bucer, Martin Luther, John Calvin, and several other reformers) as one of the “Magisterial Reformers.”

The beautiful city of Zurich, Switzerland
Swiss Sausages of the kind eaten by Zwingli and others at the “Sausage Supper” (1522)

In 1522 Zwingli participated in the “Affair of the Sausages” when he boldly stood against the Roman Catholic prohibition of eating meat during Lent. This simple Swiss dinner at the home of Christoph Frowschauer, kicked-off the Reformation in Zurich and represented a repudiation of Roman Catholic practices. On a more personal note, in early 1524 Zwingli secretly married Anna Reinhart (a local widow). A public ceremony occurred a few months later when they were married in the church on April 2, 1524. Over time they were blessed with four children—Regula, William, Huldrych, and Anna.

A year later in 1525 a small, but determined, group of young men in Zurich began advocating that only adult believers should be baptized, in contrast to the regular practice of infant baptism. Three out-spoken leaders emerged from this group: Conrad Grebel, Felix Manz, and Georg Blaurock. They called themselves “Anabaptists” (Gk. ana-baptizo = again baptized). A public disputation was held between Zwingli and the Anabaptist leaders, but the City Council favored the arguments for the validity of infant baptism presented by Zwingli. As a result, the Anabaptists were repressed, persecuted, arrested, imprisoned, banished, and some were even executed. Sadly, Zwingli encouraged this purge. Nevertheless, despite the persecution it was out of this small group that the Anabaptist movement emerged and rapidly spread throughout Europe. Martin Luther coldly referred to the Anabaptists as “Schwarmer” (i.e. like the bugs found under a rock). Moreover, Zwingli published an extensive critique of Anabaptism called, Refutation of the Tricks of the Catabaptists (i.e. the Anabaptists). Much later, in a more charitable manner, certain scholars of the Reformation referred to the Anabaptist sect as the “Radical Reformation” and “The Stepchildren of the Reformers.”

Luther and Zwingli debate the nature of the Lord’s Supper at the Marburg Colloquy (1529)

In 1527 Zwingli participated in an important meeting with Martin Luther and other Reformers at Marburg, Germany. The purpose of this conciliatory gathering was to bring about an opportunity for the German Reformers to find common ground in their doctrines and practices with the Swiss Reformers. Good progress was being made until the participants came to the subject of the Lord’s Supper. At that point a severe disagreement took place between Luther and Zwingli over the “real presence of Christ” in the elements of the Lord’s Supper. Luther taught “Consubstantiation” (i.e. that Christ is present “in, with, and under” the elements). Zwingli, however, taught that the Lord’s Supper is merely a “Memorial Feast” (i.e. a time of remembering the sacrifice of Christ on the Cross for the sins of his people). In response, Luther loudly shouted the words of Jesus, “Hoc est corpus meum” (“this is my body”)! Luther angrily repeated this phrase over and over to Zwingli at the gathering and thereby ended the discussion. Sadly, any possibility of the Lutheran and Reformed theologians coming to an agreement on the real presence of Christ in the Lord’s Supper was destroyed. Rather than finding unity, this gathering brought about a breach between the Lutheran churches and the Reformed churches that still remains to this day.

Finally, in 1529 Zwingli participated in a military conflict between Zurich and the neighboring Roman Catholic cantons (i.e. the 1st Cappel War). The outcome was a uncertain and an armistice was negotiated. A few years later at the Second Battle of Cappel in 1531 Zwingli served as a chaplain to the army of Zurich. Unfortunately, he was encountered on the battlefield by enemy soldiers, was recognized, and immediately slain. The people of Zurich had lost their “People’s Priest” and they deeply mourned the loss. Zwingli was succeeded in Zurich by his assistant, Johan Heinrich Bullinger (1504-1575). A leading Reformation scholar, Dr. Geoffrey Bromiley, summarizes the numerous contributions that Zwingli made at reforming the church in Switzerland; he notes, 

Zwingli’s death at the 2nd Battle of Cappel (1531)
Ulrich Zwingli in his maturity

“Zwingli dismantled the corrupt medieval system. Like Luther, he stopped the hierarchical abuse of power and the financial racketeering associated with masses, indulgences, relics, and pilgrimages. He substituted the popular tongue for Latin and replaced the sacramentalist round by the expository preaching of a trained ministry. More radically than Luther, he simplified the liturgy, purging it of esthetic elements. He took a more drastic disciplinary action, set up synodical government, brought the laity more fully into church affairs, and secured tighter biblical control. Zwingli’s work had its defects. His services involved liturgical impoverishment, especially the odd exclusion of singing (later reversed). He tied church and state too closely together, working through the council, retaining tithes, and enforcing discipline by secular penalties. The discipline involved an unhealthy and petty legalism, and cantonal policy became subservient to religious ends, with disastrous results at Cappel. Theologically, Zwingli, like Luther, opposed the distortions linked to purgatory, merit, clericalism, sacramentalism, and tradition. He championed scriptural primacy, Christ’s all-sufficient work, justification by faith, election, and calling by Word and Spirit. Distinctive emphases include the clarity and power of Scripture, the Spirit as its true exegete, the covenant, divine sovereignty in providence and predestination, and the Eucharist as a visible word by which the Spirit nourishes those who partake in faith.”

— Geoffrey Bromiley, “Third Man of the Reformation” in Great Leaders of the Christian Faith, 200

This great Swiss champion served in the first wave of the Protestant Reformation (1515-1535). In time, Ulrich Zwingli would become known to many as “The Third Man of the Reformation” behind two other Protestant Reformers of note—Martin Luther and John Calvin. To this day, however, the people of the Reformed churches in Switzerland see him as an example of a mighty man of God. He led the way back to the gospel, which had been corrupted by the traditions of men, and restored a vibrant life-giving faith. In short, Zwingli reintroduced the Swiss people to their Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. And for that, they remain exceedingly grateful! 

Rising high above the city of Zurich, the lofty spires of the Grossmuenster Cathedral serve as an ongoing memorial to their beloved pastor–Ulrich Zwingli!

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His Early Years: Birth and Preparation (1484-1506) 

1484    Born on January 1st in Wildhaus (Toggenburg), a small village in the canton of St. Gallen, Switzerland 

1489    Zwingli begins his initial studies in Weesen, then in Basel, and later in Bern 

1498    He begins University studies in Vienna, and again at Basel under the reforming ministry of Thomas Wyttenbach (1472-1526)

In Glarus: His Ordination and Service as a Priest (1506-1516)

1506    Ordained into the Roman Catholic priesthood he serves as pastor for ten years at the village church in Glarus, Switzerland 

1510    He writes The Poetic Fable about the Ox, an allegorical poem criticizing the Swiss mercenary system

1513    Zwingli travels to Novara, Italy with troops from Glarus and witnesses first hand the horrors of warfare; as a result he rejects the Swiss mercenary system

1516    He writes The Labyrinth; a satirical allegory that criticizes the use of mercenaries to fight the wars of others

1516    He accompanies Glarus troops to Marignano, Italy 

1516    Zwingli visits in Basel with the Humanist Scholar, Desiderius Erasmus (c.1466-1536)

In Einsiedeln: His Conversion and Initial Efforts at Reform (1516-1518)

1516    He studies at the Abbey of Einsiedeln and comes to an evangelical faith; in particular he focuses his studies on the Greek New Testament and the Early Church Fathers

1516    In November Zwingli is appointed the pastor of the church in Einsiedeln

1518    He is offended by the peddling of indulgences by a Franciscan priest named Samson; he begins to doubt the authenticity and authority of the Roman Catholic Church 

In Zurich: Serving as the People’s Priest (1519-1528)

1519    On January 1st he begins the verse by verse exposition of Matthew’s Gospel (Lat. lectio continua); large crowds eagerly attend his preaching in Zurich

1519    Zwingli begins his public ministry as the “People’s Priest” (Ger. Leutpriester) at the Great Minster (Ger. Grossmuenster) in Zurich

1519    Zwingli strongly urges the magistrates of Zurich to rebuff Samson, the seller of indulgences, at the gates of the city; Samson returns to Italy in defeat

1522    The “Affair of the Sausages” takes place as a rejection of not eating meat during Lent; this event sparks the Protestant Reformation in Zurich

1522    Zwingli begins making numerous reforms in Zurich–to the worship service and to the morals of the people; many approve, but a few oppose his reforms

1523    The Zurich Disputation takes place and the city becomes Protestant

1523    Zwingli writes the Sixty-Seven Articles; Divine and Human Righteousness; and publishes a key sermon on The Clarity and Certainty of the Word of God .

1524    Zwingli secretly marries Anna Reinhart (a widow); a few months later they are married in a public ceremony on April 2, 1524

1525    The rise of the Anabaptist sect occurs in Zurich. A public disputation takes place, but the arguments of Zwingli prevail. The leaders of the Anabaptist movement are jailed, exiled, and some are even executed

1525    Zwingli writes three significant treatises True and False Religion; The Pastoral Office; and Baptism

1526    Zwingli writes a highly-valued treatise on nature of the Lord’s Supper

1526    The Baden Disputation—Zwingli suffers a setback when the Roman Catholic theologian John Eck prevails over Johannes Oecolampadius (a fellow-reformer); as a result Zwingli’s books are banned by the Papacy

1527    Zwingli writes Refutation of the Tricks of the Catabaptists (i.e. the Anabaptists)

1528    The Bern Disputation—Zwingli reverses the defeat suffered at Baden by his powerful preaching and argumentation; Bern becomes a Protestant canton

1528    Bern endorses Protestant reform efforts in Basel, Vaud, Neuchatel, and Geneva–leading over time to each canton identifying with the Protestants

At War: Theological and Military Conflicts (1529-1531) 

1529    First Cappel War—Roman Catholic cantons versus the Protestant cantons; an armistice is negotiated, but with no apparent victor

1529    The Marburg Colloquy takes place, but with no measurable results

1530    Zwingli writes An Account of the Faith (Lat. Fidei Ratio); he also publishes a key sermon on the doctrine of God’s Providence

1530    The Augsburg Diet. Zwingli writes his well-regarded treatise, Exposition of the Faith, for King Francis 1st of France with the hope that he could be won to the Reformation; this proves to be futile

1531    Second Cappel War begins and Zwingli dies in the battle (October 11, 1531); all of Zurich and the Protestant forces mourn his death

1531    Zwingli is succeeded by Heinrich Bullinger in December 1531; Bullinger becomes the Head Pastor of the Great Minster in Zurich and ably serves for the next 44 years

Resources for Further Study: 

Bainton, Roland H. The Reformation of the Sixteenth Century. Boston, MA: The Beacon Press, 1952.

Bettenson, Henry. Documents of the Christian Church. Second Edition. London, Great Britain: Oxford University Press, 1963.

Bromiley, Geoffrey. “Third Man of the Reformation” in Great Leaders of the Christian Church. Edited by John D. Woodbridge. Chicago, IL: The Moody Press, 1988. 

Bromiley, Geoffrey, ed. Zwingli and Bullinger. The Library of Christian Classics. Vol. 24. Philadelphia, PA: The Westminster Press, 1953.

Douglas, J.D. ed. The New International Dictionary of the Christian Church. Revised Edition. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1978.

  • “Bucer (Butzer), Martin” by D. F. Wright
  • “Bullinger, Johann Heinrich” by Robert C. Walton 
  • “Erasmus, Desiderius” by Robert G. Clouse
  • “Luther, Martin” by Carl S. Meyer
  • “Marburg Colloquy (1529)” Robert G. Clouse
  • “Oecolampadius” by Robert G. Clouse 
  • “Zwingli, Ulrich” by Robert C. Walton 

Douglas, J. D. ed. Who’s Who In Christian History. Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 1992.

Dowley, Tim ed., The History of Christianity. Revised Edition. Oxford, Great Britain: Lion Publishers, 1990.

Estep, William R. The Anabaptist Story. Revised Edition. Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1975. 

Fox, John. Fox’s Book of Martyrs. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1967.

Gabler, Ulrich. Huldrych Zwingli: His Life and Work. Edinburgh, Scotland: T&T Clark, 1986. 

George, Timothy. Theology of the Reformers. Nashville, TN: The Broadman Press, 1988.

Houghton, S.M. Sketches from Church History. Carlisle, PA: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1980.

Jackson, Samuel Macauley, ed. Ulrich Zwingli (1484-1531): Selected Works. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1901.

Latourette, Kenneth Scott. A History of Christianity (Vol. 1). Revised Edition. New York, NY: Harper & Row Publishers, 1975.

Verduin, Leonard. The Reformers and Their Stepchildren. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1964.

Williams, George Hunston. The Radical Reformation. Philadelphia, PA: The Westminster Press, 1962

Wylie, James A. The History of Protestantism. 3 Volumes. Kilkeel, N. Ireland: Mourne Missionary Trust, 1990.

Dr. Marcus J. Serven, ThM and DMin

The Genevan Foundation – Copyright 2026 – All Rights Reserved

Rev. George Mueller: Minister to Street Children in Victorian England

Written by Dr. Marcus J. Serven

“Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.” Phil. 4:6

George Mueller (1805-1898), in my opinion, is one of the most remarkable men of faith in the 19th Century. Following his conversion in a prayer meeting at age twenty, he began to develop a great passion for the evangelization of the Jews. He subsequently left his native Germany and traveled to England to be trained as a missionary. In 1829 he associated with The London Society for Promoting Christianity Amongst the Jews. After relating to the society for less than a year, he received formal notice that they felt he was unfit to be a missionary because of his unwillingness to submit to the leadership of the society. This was an extremely humbling blow to his dreams and aspirations, but it can now be seen in hindsight that this was God’s way of breaking him of his pride and fierce independence. In George Mueller’s Bible the following verse is underlined, “The steps of a man are ordered by the Lord” (Ps. 37:23) and then in his own handwriting, “as well as his stops.” God’s providential hand had firmly closed the door on George Mueller becoming a missionary to the Jews—but what door would the Lord now open for him?

Shortly after his dismissal George Mueller started preaching in a small Plymouth Brethren congregation. There in 1830 he met and married his life’s partner, Mary Groves, and also made a life-time commitment to receive no salary from his ministry, simply living “by faith.” Little did he know that God was already preparing him for a ministry that would focus on meeting the needs of one of the most disadvantaged groups of society; the homeless “street children” of Victorian England. After witnessing first hand the deplorable state that many young children were in, Mueller determined—with God’s help—to be a “Father of the fatherless” (Ps. 68:5). What began as a small effort in 1832, when the Mueller’s opened their home for children to sleep on the floor at night and to receive a warm breakfast the next morning, eventually grew into five large homes on Ashley Down in Bristol, England. These purpose built dormitories cared for as many as 2,000 orphaned and abandoned children all at one time. Besides providing food for the orphans, Mueller’s ministry was also committed to providing clothing, Christian education, and vocational training. All this was accomplished “by faith” without any public solicitation for funds.

A girls class at the Bristol orphanage from the 1840’s 

Consider these typical examples of God’s provision from Mueller’s detailed diary,

August 18, 1838. I have not one penny in hand for the Orphans. In a day or two again many pounds will be needed. My eyes are up to the Lord. Evening. Before this day is over, I have received from a sister λ5. She had some time since put away her trinkets, to be sold for the benefit of the Orphans. This morning, whilst in prayer, it came to her mind, “I have this λ5, and owe no man anything, therefore it would be better to give the money at once, as it may be some time, before I can dispose of the trinkets.” She therefore brought it, little knowing that there was not a penny at hand, and that I had been able to advance only λ4 15s 5d for housekeeping in the Boy’s Orphan House, instead of the usual λ10; knowing also, that within a few days many pounds more will be needed.

August 20, 1838. The λ5 which I had received on the 18th, had been given for housekeeping, so that today I was again penniless. But my eyes were up to the Lord. I gave myself to prayer this morning, knowing that I should want again this week at least λ13, if not above λ20. Today I received λ12 in answer to prayer, from a lady who was staying at Clifton, whom I had never seen before.

August 23, 1838. Today I was again without one single penny, when λ3 was sent from Clapham, with a box of new clothes for the Orphans.

— Roger Steer, George Mueller: Delighted in God!, 89

These are the buildings that served the orphanage in Bristol, England. Today, they house a museum dedicated to the life and work of George Mueller, and a local Community College.

Mueller was convinced that God had “a bank which cannot break.” After the first five years of operating the orphan home “by faith” Mueller explained,

The chief end for which the Institution was established is that the Church of Christ at large might be benefited by seeing manifestly the hand of God stretched out on our behalf in the hour of need, in answer to prayer. Our desire, therefore, is not that we may be without trials of faith, but that the Lord graciously would be pleased to support us in the trial, that we may not dishonor Him by distrust. This way of living brings the Lord remarkably near. He is, as it were, morning by morning inspecting our stores, that accordingly He may send help. Great and more manifest nearness of the Lord’s presence I have never had, than when after breakfast there were no means for dinner, and then the Lord provided the dinner for more than one hundred persons; or when after dinner, there were no means for tea, and yet the Lord provided the tea; all this without one single human being having been informed about our need…

— Roger Steer, George Mueller: Delighted in God!, 107

During the course of sixty-six years of ministry there was never a day that the orphans went hungry or were ill-dressed. A debt never went unpaid. Through his ministry, the Scriptural Knowledge Institution, he tabulated that 1,453,153 pounds was raised for the work of the gospel. Asked his secret, Mueller replied, “There was a day when I died, utterly died,” and, as he spoke, he bent lower and lower until he almost touched the floor, “died to George Mueller, his opinions, preferences, tastes, and will—died to the world. Its approval or censure—died to the approval or blame even of my brethren and friends—and since then I have studied only to show myself approved unto God.” Here was a humble man of faith who served a faithful and generous Lord. He carried out his life and ministry by trusting God for the results, and therefore he became a powerful example of Christian piety to the entire world. His motto was simple: “The beginning of anxiety is the end of faith. The beginning of true faith is the end of anxiety.” The Lord blessed him in all that he endeavored. When anxious, he simply got on his knees and prayed that God would meet the need. And it can be demonstrated that the Lord never let him down.

Here is a picture of Rev. George Mueller and a favorite quote

Sources of Information:
Davey, C. “George Mueller: Brethren Philanthropist” in Great Leaders of the Christian Church. Edited by John D. Woodbridge. Chicago, IL: Moody Press, 1988.

Douglas, J. D., ed. The New International Dictionary of the Christian Church. Revised edition. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1978.

  • “George Mueller” by J. G. G. Norman
  • “Plymouth Brethren” by G. C. D. Howley

Douglas, J. D. and Philip W. Comfort, eds. Who’s Who in Christian History. Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 1992.

  • “George Muller” by Norman Hillyer

Steer, Roger. George Muller: Delighted in God! Wheaton, IL: Harold Shaw Publishers, 1975.

Dr. Marcus J. Serven, ThM and DMin

The Genevan Foundation – Copyright 2026 – All Rights Reserved


Is the Kingdom of God a Present-day Reality?

Written by Dr. Marcus J. Serven

“But if it is by the Spirit of God that I cast out demons, then the kingdom of God has come upon you.” Matthew 12:28

Jesus Christ instructs his followers to pray in this manner, “Pray then like this: Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name. Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven” (Matt. 6:9-10). Some Bible teachers have boldly taught that the Lord’s Prayer is not for this present age, but only for a future age (i.e. during an earthly millennium). I believe that their conclusion is a mistaken interpretation of the text. Jesus is clearly instructing his listeners—in their present-day circumstances—how they should pray to God. They are not to pray “like the hypocrites” so that “they may be seen by others,” but “in secret” so that “your Father who sees in secret will reward you” (Matt. 6:5-6). The context is entirely contemporaneous. It is spoken for Jesus’ followers in this present age. Therefore, the phrase “Your kingdom come, your will be done, as it in heaven” must also be interpreted as a present-day reality with the expectation that God’s kingdom will progressively grow during this current age. Moreover, the implication of this prayer is that the followers of Jesus will actually participate in kingdom-activity, not only by their prayers but by their work as “witnesses” (Acts 1:8) and as “ambassadors of Christ” (2 Cor. 5:20).

The question surrounding the present-day reality of the kingdom of God is a vital one for all Christians to answer. Generally, there have been two answers: (1) that the kingdom of God is entirely in the future and begins when Jesus Christ reigns in Jerusalem during an earthly millennium; or (2) that the kingdom of God is a present-day reality that is growing and expanding while Jesus Christ reigns at the right hand of God the Father in heaven (cf. Ps. 110:1; Matt. 12:28-29; Rev. 20:1-3). In my opinion, it is the second answer that makes the most sense in the immediate context of Jesus’ instructions about prayer—that the kingdom of God is a present-day reality. Consider the wise and thoughtful exegesis that Dr. Herman Ridderbos puts forward on this subject:

Dr. Herman Ridderbos (1909-2007)

“The question as to what constitutes the great change, viz., the coming of the kingdom which has begun with Jesus’ activity, finds its fundamental and unmistakable answer in the statement made in Matthew 12:28, Luke 11:20. Here Jesus speaks very emphatically of the presence of the kingdom: “If I cast out devils by the Spirit of God (Luke has: ‘with the finger of God’), then the kingdom of God has come unto you.” That the last words of this text must be rendered by the perfect “has come” is pretty well certain, in spite of the criticism of some writers. Apart from the linguistic question, it may be seen from the whole context, especially from what follows in Matthew. Jesus here answers the slander of the Pharisees who had said that he cast out devils by Beelzebub, the prince of devils. He shows the absurdity of the accusation by comparing the power of the devil with that of a kingdom or a town or a house, i.e., with an organically coherent unity. If one devil should cast out another, the kingdom of the devils would not stand but would fall asunder. But this does not happen. That is why there is only one explanation for Jesus’ power over the demons, viz., that by the Spirit (or the finger of God) he was able to cast them out. The opposite to Satan and his kingdom is God and the dominion that is at his disposal, viz., the kingdom of God. Its power and so its presence is the explanation of Jesus’ dominion over the demons. All this is further confirmed in Matthew 12:29 (cf. Mark 3:27) by what is said of the strong man whose house can only be looted after he himself has first been bound. In the same way the casting out of the devils proves the victory over the devil gained by Jesus and thus the break-through by the kingdom of heaven.”

— Herman Ridderbos, The Coming of the Kingdom, 61-62

Ridderbos offers a “rock-solid” exegetical explanation of the present-day reality of the kingdom of God. He doesn’t just offer his opinion, but he puts forward a clearly articulated defense of the subject based on the exegesis of several scriptural passages. This does not mean that all aspects of the kingdom of God are currently present. But that the kingdom of God “has come” [note the perfect tense of this verb, which refers to a past event but with ongoing results] while we live here on the earth (Matt. 12:28), and that in the future it will be fully consummated. This is a helpful alternative, I believe, to the wrong-headed view that the kingdom of God is entirely in the future. The truth is this–that the kingdom of God is present now during this current age (Mark 1:14-15; Luke 17:20-21), and by grace we who are alive get to participate in its growth and expansion (Matt. 5:14-16; Matt. 13:31-32; 2 Cor. 10:3-6). And that is a great privilege!

Here are four volumes by Herman Ridderbos that I greatly value!

Source: Ridderbos, Herman N. The Coming of the Kingdom. Translated by H. de Jongste. Edited by Raymond O. Zorn. Philadelphia, PA: The Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Company, 1962.

Dr. Marcus J. Serven, ThM and DMin

The Genevan Foundation – Copyright 2026 – All Rights Reserved

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Also, here is a related article on the “this age” and “the age to come” concept: